Jm. Danion et al., AFFECTIVE VALENCE OF WORDS, EXPLICIT AND IMPLICIT MEMORY IN CLINICAL DEPRESSION, Journal of affective disorders, 34(3), 1995, pp. 227-234
Explicit and implicit memory for affectively valenced words (positive,
negative or neutral) were investigated in 30 patients suffering from
a major depressive episode (DSM-III-R criteria) and 30 normal control
subjects. Explicit memory was assessed with a free-recall and a recogn
ition task and implicit memory with a word-stem completion task. Depre
ssed and control subjects recalled more emotional, i.e., positive and
negative, words than neutral ones. They recognized less negative than
neutral words. In contrast, to recall and recognition performance, wor
d-completion performance was not sensitive to the affective valence of
words: depressed and control subjects exhibited equivalent priming of
positive, negative and neutral words. These results indicate that, in
depressed and normal subjects, the affective valence of words influen
ces memory when conscious, intentional recollection is required but is
devoid of effect when such a recollection is not required.