Younger and older adults' memory of past feelings surrounding an election

Memory. 2024 Jan-Feb;32(1):11-24. doi: 10.1080/09658211.2023.2272780. Epub 2024 Jan 2.

Abstract

People often misremember their past feelings, especially when recalling their prior mood as opposed to their specific emotions in response to events. A previous study also found that the direction of memory errors varies based on feeling type; younger adults overestimated the intensity of prior moods but underestimated the intensity of prior event-specific emotions. This study aimed to replicate these patterns and test whether they vary with age. In doing so, we also tested whether an age-related positivity effect would emerge, such that older adults would be relatively more likely to overestimate past positive feelings and underestimate past negative feelings. Using a sample of American voters, who reported their feelings following the 2020 United States presidential election, we found that both younger and older adults subsequently overestimated the intensity of their past mood in the week following the election but were relatively accurate in recalling the intensity of their prior emotions about the election result. Unexpectedly, among election losers, we also observed an age-related negativity effect in recall for prior mood. When faced with negative real-world events, older adults may not show the same positivity biases that are observed in lab studies.

Keywords: Age differences; emotions; memory-experience gap; mood; positivity effect.

MeSH terms

  • Affect*
  • Aged
  • Aging / psychology
  • Emotions* / physiology
  • Humans
  • Mental Recall / physiology
  • Politics
  • United States