Yves Corson
University of Nantes
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Featured researches published by Yves Corson.
Psychological Science | 2007
Yves Corson; Nadège Verrier
The effects of mood on false memories have not been studied systematically until recently. Some results seem to indicate that negative mood may reduce false recall and thus suggest an influence of emotional valence on false memory. The present research tested the effects of both valence and arousal on recall and recognition and indicates that the effect is actually due to arousal. In fact, whether participants∗ mood is positive, negative, or neutral, false memories are significantly more frequent under conditions of high arousal than under conditions of low arousal.
Psychology and Aging | 2016
Fabienne Colombel; Marine Tessoulin; Anne-Laure Gilet; Yves Corson
Empirical evidence suggests an increased production of false memories with advancing age. The activation-monitoring theory proposes that strategic monitoring processes influence the probability of false recall in the DRM paradigm. In the present study, we examined the hypothesis that a low level of inhibition may impair the efficient use of monitoring processes during information retrieval and thus increase the production of false memories in aging. Accordingly, we conducted a study in which older adults with low or high levels of inhibition performed a standard DRM task or an inclusion DRM task that disables monitoring processes. The results indicated that low inhibitory capacities were associated with fewer correct recalls and increased production of critical lures (false memories), suggesting difficulties in using monitoring processes at the time of retrieval. Our findings also showed that the relationship between Age and the production of critical lures in a standard DRM task is mediated by Inhibition. These results are interpreted as suggesting that inhibitory abilities may partly be linked to the impairment of monitoring processes in the elderly. (PsycINFO Database Record
Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2016
Christelle Evrard; Fabienne Colombel; Anne-Laure Gilet; Yves Corson
OBJECTIVES The present study examines the question of the activation of the critical lure (CL) in Alzheimers patients with a Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM)-like task. More precisely, older adults and Alzheimers patients performed a lexical decision task in which they were asked to categorize strings of letters as words or nonwords. Contrary to the DRM paradigm in which the activation of the CL is inferred from its production at recall, such a lexical decision task does not require the joint use of intentional recovery strategies and source-monitoring processes that are known to be particularly impaired in Alzheimers patients. The performance at the lexical decision therefore reflects the activation of the CL without contamination from such strategic processes. METHOD Twenty-nine older adults and 25 Alzheimers patients performed a lexical decision task with DRM lists intermixed with neutral words and nonwords. RESULTS Analysis indicated that older adults as well as Alzheimers patients showed shorter lexical decision latencies for CLs than for other types of words. DISCUSSION Contrary to the existing literature, our results suggest that the activation of the CL is preserved in Alzheimers patients at mild to moderate stages of the disease.
Emotion | 2015
Franck Techer; Christophe Jallais; Alexandra Fort; Yves Corson
Anger is a negative and highly aroused emotion. Previous research has revealed that a high level of arousal can induce the participant in a physical preparation and self-awareness. The aim of this research was to study the influence of anger on the attentional network using the Attention Network Test-Interactions (ANT-I). This test has been developed in order to assess 3 attentional networks: alerting, orienting, and executive control. Here, participants were induced in anger using the autobiographic recall procedure or in a neutral mood before the realization of the ANT-I. As expected, the results showed a better alerting score for the angry group. The possible origin of this alerting gain related to the high level of arousal is discussed. The results obtained should enlighten the interaction between emotion and the functioning of the attentional system. They also may be relevant for applied fields related to anger.
Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2016
Anne-Laure Gilet; Christelle Evrard; Fabienne Colombel; Elisa Tropée; Célia Marie; Yves Corson
Objectives This study explores the activation of the critical lure (CL) and its production in Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) tasks in Alzheimers disease and aging. In a previous lexical decision task including DRM lists, we showed that the activation of the CL occurs normally in Alzheimers patients. Here, we reproduce this study and add a production (DRM) task in order to compare both processes in the same groups of participants. Method Eighteen older adults and 20 Alzheimers patients performed a conventional DRM task, followed by a lexical decision task with DRM lists intermixed with neutral words and nonwords. Results Analyses indicated that Alzheimers patients produced significantly fewer CLs than older participants in the DRM task, but that they showed, like older adults, shorter lexical decision latencies for CLs than for other types of words. Discussion This study provides evidence that the low production of CLs regularly documented in Alzheimers patients in the DRM paradigm is not necessarily explained by their nonactivation. The results are discussed in the light of the hypothesis of a rapid disappearance of the episodic mnemonic trace of the CLs in Alzheimers patients.
Psychological Research-psychologische Forschung | 2018
Christelle Evrard; Anne-Laure Gilet; Fabienne Colombel; Elodie Dufermont; Yves Corson
Why do some Alzheimer’s patients produce fewer false memories than healthy older participants in the Deese–Roediger–McDermott paradigm, which was especially designed for the study of false memories in a laboratory setting? Using a very simple methodology, this study examines a new explanatory factor inherent in the paradigm itself: the order of presentation of the words in the lists. A sample comprising 149 participants (36 younger, 40 middle-aged, 37 healthy older adults, and 36 Alzheimer’s patients) performed a DRM task with either a classic descending forward associative strength (FAS) presentation order of the words or an ascending FAS presentation order. The results showed that this simple manipulation influenced the production of false memories in Alzheimer’s patients only. Contrary to the other participants, Alzheimer’s patients produced significantly more critical lures in the ascending FAS condition than in the descending FAS condition. These new data, interpreted in the light of serial position effects, invite a reconsideration of the relevance of the DRM paradigm for comparing the production of false memories in Alzheimer’s patients and healthy older participants.
Neuroscience Letters | 2017
Franck Techer; Christophe Jallais; Yves Corson; Fabien Moreau; Daniel Ndiaye; Bruno Piechnick; Alexandra Fort
Driver internal state, including emotion, can have negative impacts on road safety. Studies have shown that an anger state can provoke aggressive behavior and impair driving performance. Apart from driving, anger can also influence attentional processing and increase the benefits taken from auditory alerts. However, to our knowledge, no prior event-related potentials study assesses this impact on attention during simulated driving. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the impact of anger on attentional processing and its consequences on driving performance. For this purpose, 33 participants completed a simulated driving scenario once in an anger state and once during a control session. Results indicated that anger impacted driving performance and attention, provoking an increase in lateral variations while reducing the amplitude of the visual N1 peak. The observed effects were discussed as a result of high arousal and mind-wandering associated with anger. This kind of physiological data may be used to monitor a drivers internal state and provide specific assistance corresponding to their current needs.
Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2011
Yves Corson; Aurélia Mahé; Nadège Verrier; Fabienne Colombel; Luc Jagot
This article presents two experiments using the DRM paradigm and examining the effects of variations in the depth of processing on the occurrence of false memories at recall. Contrary to what is generally observed, the results of the first experiment indicate that deep processing, maximizing the possibility of implication of distinctive characteristics, leads to an increase of the recall of hits without increasing the recall of lures. The second experiment uses instructions of inclusion requiring participants to recall not only the presented items but also all the words that were activated in memory both during the encoding and retrieval phases. These instructions, which deactivate the strategy of control of the source, support the notion that deep processing favours the activation of distinctive characteristics that facilitate the process of discrimination during the identification of the source.
Personality and Individual Differences | 2009
Yves Corson; Nadège Verrier; Andreana Bucic
Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2006
Yves Corson