functional retrograde amnesia
... shock. The problem of organic retrograde amnesia was addressed by early students of memory pathology [l, 23, and has received a great deal of attention in recent experimental research [3, 41. Retrograde amnesia can also occur in the absence of detectable brain pathology as a consequence of severe ps ...
... shock. The problem of organic retrograde amnesia was addressed by early students of memory pathology [l, 23, and has received a great deal of attention in recent experimental research [3, 41. Retrograde amnesia can also occur in the absence of detectable brain pathology as a consequence of severe ps ...
Memory metaphors in cognitive psychology
... evaluated, and the role of analogical explanation in psychology is briefly considered. One result of the increasing number of analogical models is the proliferation of hypothetical mental constructs that are only loosely connected to behavioral measures. It is a natural impulse, when confronted with ...
... evaluated, and the role of analogical explanation in psychology is briefly considered. One result of the increasing number of analogical models is the proliferation of hypothetical mental constructs that are only loosely connected to behavioral measures. It is a natural impulse, when confronted with ...
Cerebral Cortex July 2009;19:1539--1548 doi:10.1093/cercor/bhn191 Advance Access publication November 2, 2008
... Structural images were acquired using a high-resolution sagittal, T1weighted magnetization prepared rapid gradient echo sequence (1 3 1 3 1.25 mm voxels). Functional images (140 per run) were collected with an asymmetric spin echo, echo-planar imaging sequence sensitive to blood oxygen level--depend ...
... Structural images were acquired using a high-resolution sagittal, T1weighted magnetization prepared rapid gradient echo sequence (1 3 1 3 1.25 mm voxels). Functional images (140 per run) were collected with an asymmetric spin echo, echo-planar imaging sequence sensitive to blood oxygen level--depend ...
Neural Substrates Related to Motor Memory with Multiple
... temporoparietal junction; TMS, transcranial magnetic stimulation; TR, repetition time. ...
... temporoparietal junction; TMS, transcranial magnetic stimulation; TR, repetition time. ...
The Problem State: A Cognitive Bottleneck in
... in the driving task, participants had to memorize the turns to take at the next intersections in one condition, while in the other condition, arrows pointed out the route. In the navigation task, the two conditions differed in whether the participants had to memorize the full address before entering ...
... in the driving task, participants had to memorize the turns to take at the next intersections in one condition, while in the other condition, arrows pointed out the route. In the navigation task, the two conditions differed in whether the participants had to memorize the full address before entering ...
Working Memory in the Prefrontal Cortex
... task is an example of a task that is considered to require reference memory. In this task, the subject’s behavioral response to a particular visual stimulus is always rewarded throughout the experiment. Therefore, the formation of an association between a particular visual stimulus and a particular ...
... task is an example of a task that is considered to require reference memory. In this task, the subject’s behavioral response to a particular visual stimulus is always rewarded throughout the experiment. Therefore, the formation of an association between a particular visual stimulus and a particular ...
Chapter 9 – Memory
... called iconic memory, lasting no more than 1/10th of a second. Delayed signal by more than half a second, iconic memory would be gone. Echoic memory – sensory of auditory stimuli, recalled within 3 or 4 seconds. Ex. “what did I just say?” Working/Short – Term Memory Unless our working memory meani ...
... called iconic memory, lasting no more than 1/10th of a second. Delayed signal by more than half a second, iconic memory would be gone. Echoic memory – sensory of auditory stimuli, recalled within 3 or 4 seconds. Ex. “what did I just say?” Working/Short – Term Memory Unless our working memory meani ...
A Thesis Entitled The Effects of Depth of Processing and
... possible versus those who did not had approximately the same recall performance. The only factor found to impact recall was the participants’ level of processing. It is worth mentioning that while LOP effects can be very robust they do have clear constraints. Challis, Velichovsky, and Craik (1996) f ...
... possible versus those who did not had approximately the same recall performance. The only factor found to impact recall was the participants’ level of processing. It is worth mentioning that while LOP effects can be very robust they do have clear constraints. Challis, Velichovsky, and Craik (1996) f ...
Enactment versus conceptual encoding: Equivalent item
... that the object be identified and involve retrieval of some information about its typical attributes. Both encoding tasks also involve a self-initiated strategy to produce an acceptable response because the actions to be performed are selected by the participant rather than the experimenter, and it ...
... that the object be identified and involve retrieval of some information about its typical attributes. Both encoding tasks also involve a self-initiated strategy to produce an acceptable response because the actions to be performed are selected by the participant rather than the experimenter, and it ...
neurobiology of reconstructed memory
... involved in memory are, in contrast to the hippocampus, functional at birth, allowing a variety of forms of learning to occur (e.g., Bayer, 1980; Humphrey, 1968). Thus, much can be learned early in life, but we do not store (and hence cannot retrieve) information about the time and place in which th ...
... involved in memory are, in contrast to the hippocampus, functional at birth, allowing a variety of forms of learning to occur (e.g., Bayer, 1980; Humphrey, 1968). Thus, much can be learned early in life, but we do not store (and hence cannot retrieve) information about the time and place in which th ...
Memory (Encoding, Storage, Retrieval)
... as well as for virtually any other type of material—words, faces and names, poetry, historical dates, and so on. Twelve years ago, before he started training his memory abilities, he had a digit span of 7, just like most of us. Simon has been training his abilities for about 10 years as of this writ ...
... as well as for virtually any other type of material—words, faces and names, poetry, historical dates, and so on. Twelve years ago, before he started training his memory abilities, he had a digit span of 7, just like most of us. Simon has been training his abilities for about 10 years as of this writ ...
The Contribution of Executive Function to Source
... Developmental investigations of source memory reveal that children have difficulty recollecting the contextual details associated with an event. For example, 6-year-olds, compared with 9-year-olds and adults, are worse at discriminating between self-generated memories of performed and imagined actio ...
... Developmental investigations of source memory reveal that children have difficulty recollecting the contextual details associated with an event. For example, 6-year-olds, compared with 9-year-olds and adults, are worse at discriminating between self-generated memories of performed and imagined actio ...
The Theory of Mind Atlas - Theory of Mind Inventory
... the ability to engage in future thinking is associated with the capacity for episodic memory (recalling past events) and, 2) both areas tend to be impaired in ASD (Jackson & Atance, 2008; Lind, Bowler, & Raber, 2014; Lind, Williams, Bowler, & Peel, 2014; Terret et al., 2013; but see Crane, Lind, & B ...
... the ability to engage in future thinking is associated with the capacity for episodic memory (recalling past events) and, 2) both areas tend to be impaired in ASD (Jackson & Atance, 2008; Lind, Bowler, & Raber, 2014; Lind, Williams, Bowler, & Peel, 2014; Terret et al., 2013; but see Crane, Lind, & B ...
The Precarious Present
... maturational suspension seen in such syndromes as Borderline Personality Disorder and other severe attachment disorders in which the “self” may be stuck in the first decade of life. ...
... maturational suspension seen in such syndromes as Borderline Personality Disorder and other severe attachment disorders in which the “self” may be stuck in the first decade of life. ...
Investigating Influence of Suggestive Misinformation in the
... focuses on the vast capacities and triumphs of our brain to encode and recall, the past decades have seen a growing interest in how the mind fails- its pitfalls and limitations. Memory is malleable and situations, stories, details, and events that seem genuine can infiltrate memory with tools as sim ...
... focuses on the vast capacities and triumphs of our brain to encode and recall, the past decades have seen a growing interest in how the mind fails- its pitfalls and limitations. Memory is malleable and situations, stories, details, and events that seem genuine can infiltrate memory with tools as sim ...
Standard Consolidation Theory versus Multiple Trace - UvA-DARE
... because it is impossible: however much we would wish to, we do not remember those first few days. But from about our fourth year of life, we all, gradually, do become able to save things in our memory and keep them there, forever. Places, houses, situations, feelings, people, will live in our minds, ...
... because it is impossible: however much we would wish to, we do not remember those first few days. But from about our fourth year of life, we all, gradually, do become able to save things in our memory and keep them there, forever. Places, houses, situations, feelings, people, will live in our minds, ...
Odor-evoked Autobiographical Memories
... asked to name each odour and indicate whether each odour evoked a personal memory. When a memory was evoked, subjects were asked to describe this briefly and rate it on each of five ratings scales (emotionality, clarity, specificity, rarity, age). Herz and Cupchik’s results characterize odourevoked ...
... asked to name each odour and indicate whether each odour evoked a personal memory. When a memory was evoked, subjects were asked to describe this briefly and rate it on each of five ratings scales (emotionality, clarity, specificity, rarity, age). Herz and Cupchik’s results characterize odourevoked ...