Prefrontal-posterior coupling while observing the suffering of other people, and the development of intrusive memories
Prefrontal-posterior coupling while observing the suffering of other people, and the development of intrusive memories
Witnessing the suffering of others, for instance, in hospital emergency rooms but also through televised images in news or reality programs, may be associated with the occurrence of later intrusive memories. The factors contributing to why some people develop intrusive memories and others do not are still poorly understood. N = 121 healthy women were exposed to film scenes showing the suffering of dying, severely injured, and mourning people while their EEG was recorded. Individuals showing greater decreases of functional coupling between prefrontal and posterior cortices (greater decreases of EEG beta coherences) reported more intrusive memories of the witnessed events. This was shown for intrusions in the short term (immediately after viewing the film) as well as in the medium term (intrusive memories over 1 week). The findings illuminate brain mechanisms involved in the encoding of information in ways that make intrusive memories more likely.
546-555
Reiser, E.M.
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Weiss, E.M.
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Schulter, G.
48ee862f-c0c9-4c3e-a2a7-fbb1fb75d9d0
Holmes, E.A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Fink, A.
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Papousek, I.
97ed695f-3e06-4c08-8a1d-ca7c537d5755
24 February 2014
Reiser, E.M.
d980cdbb-fb3f-4345-b74c-352f3d22ba08
Weiss, E.M.
d2730c07-bf3e-4120-8cd3-0490c0e9c3a3
Schulter, G.
48ee862f-c0c9-4c3e-a2a7-fbb1fb75d9d0
Holmes, E.A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Fink, A.
c7db4071-e367-49f9-bd0f-cc1bcac746c2
Papousek, I.
97ed695f-3e06-4c08-8a1d-ca7c537d5755
Reiser, E.M., Weiss, E.M., Schulter, G., Holmes, E.A., Fink, A. and Papousek, I.
(2014)
Prefrontal-posterior coupling while observing the suffering of other people, and the development of intrusive memories.
Psychophysiology, 51 (6), .
(doi:10.1111/psyp.12197).
Abstract
Witnessing the suffering of others, for instance, in hospital emergency rooms but also through televised images in news or reality programs, may be associated with the occurrence of later intrusive memories. The factors contributing to why some people develop intrusive memories and others do not are still poorly understood. N = 121 healthy women were exposed to film scenes showing the suffering of dying, severely injured, and mourning people while their EEG was recorded. Individuals showing greater decreases of functional coupling between prefrontal and posterior cortices (greater decreases of EEG beta coherences) reported more intrusive memories of the witnessed events. This was shown for intrusions in the short term (immediately after viewing the film) as well as in the medium term (intrusive memories over 1 week). The findings illuminate brain mechanisms involved in the encoding of information in ways that make intrusive memories more likely.
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Published date: 24 February 2014
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Local EPrints ID: 508140
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508140
ISSN: 0048-5772
PURE UUID: 0311de65-f00d-4a75-bb43-e6aba905541e
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Date deposited: 13 Jan 2026 18:05
Last modified: 14 Jan 2026 03:12
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Author:
E.M. Reiser
Author:
E.M. Weiss
Author:
G. Schulter
Author:
E.A. Holmes
Author:
A. Fink
Author:
I. Papousek
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