80 results on '"Memory -- Case studies"'
Search Results
2. Landscape as arena and spatial narrative in the New River Gorge National River's Coal Camps: a case study of the Elverton, West Virginia 1914 strike
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Leebrick, Rhiannon A. and Maples, James N.
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United States. National Park Service ,University of North Carolina Press ,Memory -- Case studies ,Mineral industry -- Case studies -- International economic relations ,Strikes -- Case studies ,Book publishing -- Case studies -- International economic relations ,National parks and reserves -- Case studies ,Mining industry -- Case studies -- International economic relations ,Geography ,Regional focus/area studies - Abstract
In this paper we examine a case study of Elverton, West Virginia as evidence of how external factors shape commemoration. Elverton was a small coal town and the site of [...]
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- 2015
3. Touring the African diaspora
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Finley, Cheryl
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Slave Ship (Play) ,Memory -- Case studies ,Literature/writing ,Travel, recreation and leisure - Abstract
Abstract This article examines the impact of art, performance, and technology on the global transformation of heritage tourism in recent years. Thanks to a series of case studies focusing on [...]
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- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Neglected memory: the recollection of Jews among poles. A case study of a town in southern Poland
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Wloszycka, Malgorzata
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Memory -- Case studies ,Jews -- Case studies ,Philosophy and religion ,Regional focus/area studies - Abstract
There are two general approaches towards the memory of Jews in contemporary Poland: collective remembrance and collective forgetting. These are presented as two extreme attitudes which represent the process of dealing with the memory of Jews in Poland. However, this division does not take into account a phenomenon which combines the two approaches. A case study of a small town in southern Poland, where Jews constituted a significant part of the pre-war population, illustrates the complexity of resurrecting memories of Jews in Poland. Nowadays, not only are there no Jews living in the town but also there is no visible evidence of any memory of them. Nevertheless, there is a neglected memory of the town's Jews. It exists in the collective memory preserved in the stories recalled by some of the citizens. The memory of Jewish inhabitants of the town is not intentionally hidden or renounced. The stories of Jews once living in the town are generally known by the vast majority of inhabitants and are passed from generation to generation. However, this remembrance is not incorporated into the collective memory and mythical foundations of the community. The meaning and importance of remembering the town's Jews is neglected and treated as a virtual rather than a real history of the community., Memory of the past, as well as the manner in which communities deal with it, tells us more about the current condition of these communities than about the past itself. [...]
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- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Autobiographical memory in posttraumatic stress disorder before and after treatment
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Sutherland, Kylie and Bryant, Richard A.
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Memory -- Case studies ,Post-traumatic stress disorder -- Influence ,Behavior therapy -- Usage ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Although overgeneral retrieval of autobiographical memories has been repeatedly demonstrated in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), no studies have indexed overgeneral retrieval before and after treatment of PTSD. Autobiographical memory was assessed in PTSD participants (n = 20) prior to commencing cognitive behaviour therapy and 6 months after therapy completion. Fifteen participants completed both assessments. Improvement in PTSD symptoms was significantly associated with improved retrieval of specific memories and decreased retrieval of categoric memories in response to positive cues. These data suggest that symptom reduction during treatment of PTSD leads to greater access to specific memories of positive experiences. Keyword: Posttraumatic stress disorder: Autobiographical memory: Cognitive behaviour therapy
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- 2007
6. Memory for object location: a span study in children
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Cestari, Vincenzo, Lucidi, Annalisa, Pieroni, Laura, and Rossi-Arnaud, Clelia
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Child psychology -- Case studies ,Psychology, Experimental -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The aim of the present study was to analyze the developmental changes in three spatial processes, namely, in positional reconstruction involving the retention of spatial locations per se (Positional encoding task), in the assignment of objects to positions (Object-to-position assignment task), and in the integration of these two (Combined task). A span procedure was used to assess the development of spatial memory in children aged 6, 8, and 10 years tested in these three tasks. The findings of the present study provide developmental spans for each relocation task. Results show an age-dependent improvement in all tasks, suggesting that spatial position is not automatically encoded. The results also show different developmental patterns for the relocation tasks considered, suggesting that spatial memory comprises a number of different component processes. L'objet de la presente etude etait d'analyser les changements dans le developpement de trois processus spatiaux, nommement en reconstruction positionnelle supposant la retention des emplacements spatiaux proprement dits (tache de codage positionnel), dans l'assignation d'objet a des positions (tache d'assignation objet-position) et dans l'integration de ces deux taches (une tache combinee). Une procedure de portee a ete utilisee pour evaluer le developpement de la memoire spatiale chez des enfants de 6, 8 et 10 ans testes dans ces trois taches. Les resultats de la presente etude revelent des portees de developpement pour chaque tache de relocalisation. Ils temoignent aussi d'une amelioration en fonction de l'age de toutes les taches, ce qui suggere que la position spatiale n'est pas codee automatiquement. Les resultats montrent aussi des modeles de developpement differents pour les taches de relocalisation examinees, ce qui suggere que la memoire spatiale est constituee de processus impliquant differentes composantes. DOI: 10.1037/cjep2007002
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- 2007
7. Growth points in research on memory and hippocampus
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Sutherland, Robert J., Lehmann, Hugo, Spanswick, Simon C., Sparks, Fraser T., and Melvin, Neal R.
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Amnesia -- Case studies ,Psychology, Experimental -- Case studies ,Hippocampus (Brain) -- Physiological aspects ,Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
We present an overview of two of our ongoing projects relating processes in the hippocampus to memory. We are trying to understand why retrograde amnesia occurs after damage to the hippocampus. Our experiments establish the generality of several new retrograde amnesia phenomena that are at odds with the consensus view of the role of the hippocampus in memory. We show in many memory tasks that complete damage to the hippocampus produces retrograde amnesia that is equivalent for recent and remote memories. Retrograde amnesia affects a much wider range of memory tasks than anterograde amnesia. Normal hippocampal processes can interfere with retention of a long-term memory stored outside the hippocampus. We conclude that the hippocampus competes with nonhippocampal systems during memory encoding and retrieval. Finally, we outline a project to understand and manipulate adult hippocampal neurogenesis in order to repair damaged hippocampal circuitry to recover lost cognitive functions.
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- 2006
8. Directed forgetting in incidental learning and recognition testing: support for a two-factor account
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Sahakyan, Lili and Delaney, Peter F.
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Memory -- Case studies ,Learning ability -- Case studies ,Inhibition -- Case studies ,Psychology, Experimental -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Instructing people to forget a list of items often leads to better recall of subsequently studied lists (known as the benefits of directed forgetting). The authors have proposed that changes in study strategy are a central cause of the benefits (L. Sahakyan & P. F. Delaney, 2003). The authors address 2 results from the literature that are inconsistent with their strategy-based explanation: (a) the presence of benefits under incidental learning conditions and (b) the absence of benefits in recognition testing. Experiment 1 showed that incidental learning attenuated the benefits compared with intentional learning, as expected if a change of study strategy causes the benefits. Experiment 2 demonstrated benefits using recognition testing, albeit only when longer lists were used. Memory for source in directed forgetting was also explored using multinomial modeling. Results are discussed in terms of a 2-factor account of directed forgetting. Key words: directed forgetting, intentional forgetting, study strategies, multinomial modeling, inhibition
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- 2005
9. Interactive visual and postvisual processes and their roles in form-specific memory
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Marsolek, Chad J. and Andresen, David R.
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Vision -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology, Experimental ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Effects of depth of encoding on form-specific memory were examined. After viewing words (e.g., 'bear') presented centrally during initial encoding, participants completed word stems (e.g., 'BEA') presented laterally and pattern masked during subsequent test. When the encoding task was perceptual, letter-case specific memory was not observed, unlike in previous experiments without pattern masking. However, when the encoding task required both perceptual and conceptual processing, letter-case specific memory was observed in direct right-hemisphere, but not in direct left-hemisphere, test presentations, like in previous studies without pattern masking. Results were not influenced by whether stems were completed to form the first words that came to mind or words explicitly retrieved from encoding. Depth of encoding may influence form-specific memory through interactive processing of visual and postvisual information.
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- 2005
10. Modulating the phonological similarity effect: the contribution of interlist similarity and lexicality
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KarlseN, Paul Johan and Lian, Arild
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Memory -- Case studies ,Phonetics ,Perception ,Similarity (Psychology) ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The classical phonological similarity effect (PSE) was studied with words and nonwords in two immediate serial recall (ISR) tasks. The relative contributions of intralist and interlist interference were compared, and differential effects on item and order memory were observed. PSE occurred with words and was reversed with nonwords. In addition, PSE was modulated by interlist similarity, which enhanced recall of rhyme items and impaired recall of distinct items. Finally, interlist similarity reduced item recall of words, whereas it improved serial recall of nonwords. The latter finding rules out the hypothesis that the reverse PSE for nonwords is due to interlist interference. It is concluded that two opposing effects of phonological intralist similarity cause the interaction between PSE and lexicality in ISR. With words, the positive effect on item recall is usually masked by a much more disruptive effect on position accuracy. With nonwords, however, the positive effect often masks the negative one. These findings are discussed in relation to current models of verbal short-term memory.
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- 2005
11. The importance of material-processing interactions in inducing false memories
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Chan, Jason C.K., McDermott, Kathleen B., Watson, Jason M., and Gallo, David A.
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Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Deep encoding, relative to shallow encoding, has been shown to increase the probability of false memories in the Deese/Roediger-McDermott (DRM) paradigm (Thapar & McDermott, 2001; Toglia, Neuschatz, & Goodwin, 1999). In two experiments, we showed important limitations on the generalizability of this phenomenon; these limitations are clearly predicted by existing theories regarding the mechanisms underlying such false memories (e.g., Roediger, Watson, McDermott, & Gallo, 2001). Specifically, asking subjects to attend to phonological relations among lists of phonologically associated words (e.g., weep, steep, etc.) increased the likelihood of false recall (Experiment 1) and false recognition (Experiment 2) of a related, nonpresented associate (e.g., sleep), relative to a condition in which subjects attended to meaningful relations among the words. These findings occurred along with a replication of prior findings (i.e., a semantic encoding task, relative to a phonological encoding task, enhanced the likelihood of false memory arising from a list of semantically associated words), and they place important constraints on theoretical explanations of false memory.
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- 2005
12. The recall of missing items
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Murdock, Bennet and Smith, David, American novelist
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Recollection (Psychology) -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
In two experiments, we studied the recall of missing items. Short lists of common words were presented once and were followed immediately by a random permutation of all but one of the presented items. The task of the subject was to recall the missing item--that is, the item present in the study set but missing from the probe set. Experiment 1 replicated the high accuracy with five-item lists originally reported by Yntema and Trask (1963) and showed that the latencies were quite short (about 750 msec). Experiment 2 varied list length unpredictably mad showed that accuracy was a function of both list length (four, five, or six items) and serial position. Latency was again quite short but was essentially independent of list length and serial position. It was possible to simulate most of the effects with the power set model with no flee parameters (i.e., parameters that varied with the experimental manipulations). The results seemed to be more consistent with a direct access model (the power set model of TODAM; Murdock, 1995) than with a simple search or serial-scanning model.
- Published
- 2005
13. The dynamics of scaling: a memory-based anchor model of category rating and absolute identification
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Petrov, Alexander A. and Anderson, John R.
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Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
A memory-based scaling model--ANCHOR--is proposed and tested. The perceived magnitude of the target stimulus is compared with a set of anchors in memory. Anchor selection is probabilistic and sensitive to similarity, base-level strength, and recency. The winning anchor provides a reference point near the target and thereby converts the global scaling problem into a local comparison. An explicit correction strategy determines the final response. Two incremental learning mechanisms update the locations and base-level activations of the anchors. This gives rise to sequential, context, transfer, practice, and other dynamic effects. The scale unfolds as an adaptive map. A hierarchy of models is tested on a battery of quantitative measures from 2 experiments in absolute identification and category rating.
- Published
- 2005
14. Effects of category diversity on learning, memory, and generalization
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Hahn, Ulrike, Bailey, Todd M., and Elvin, Lucy B.C.
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Memory -- Case studies ,Learning -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
In this study, we examined the effect of within-category diversity on people's ability to learn perceptual categories, their inclination to generalize categories to novel items, and their ability to distinguish new items from old. After learning to distinguish a control category from an experimental category that. was either clustered or diverse, participants performed a test of category generalization or old-new recognition. Diversity made learning more difficult, increased generalization to novel items outside the range of training items, and made it difficult to distinguish such novel items from familiar ones. Regression analyses using the generalized context model suggested that the results could be explained in terms of similarities between old and new items combined with a rescaling of the similarity space that varied according to the diversity of the training items. Participants who learned the diverse category were less sensitive to psychological distance than were the participants who learned a more clustered category.
- Published
- 2005
15. A strict test of the phonological loop hypothesis with Libyan data
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Shebani, Mustafa F.A., Van De Vijver, Fons J.R., and Poortinga, Ype H.
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Phonetics -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Arabic language -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
In Arabic, there are two ways, differing in length, of pronouncing each digit. This feature of word pairs that are conceptually identical but of different length allows for a stricter test of the phonological loop hypothesis than has been reported previously. Libyan schoolchildren, both boys and girls, of two grades took part in a quasi-experimental study in which shorter and longer digits and shorter and longer words were presented in recall and pronunciation tasks. The results confirmed the validity of the phonological loop model in that memory span was longer for shorter stimuli. Analysis of the data with structural equation modeling showed that only 17% of the individual-level variation in memory span could be explained by pronunciation speed. In an analysis of covariance, it was determined that pronunciation speed could account for a substantial proportion of the variation found across age (8-year-olds vs. 10-year-olds), stimulus modality (digits vs. words), and stimulus length (short vs. long), but not for gender differences.
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- 2005
16. False recognition across meaning, language, and stimulus format: conceptual relatedness and the feeling of familiarity
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Fazendeiro, Tedra, Winkielman, Piotr, Luo, Chun, and Lorah, Christopher
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Recognition (Psychology) -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Domestic relations -- Psychological aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Four experiments examined contributions of conceptual relatedness and feelings of familiarity to false recognition. Participants first studied lists of unrelated items (e.g., table, lock) followed by a recognition test with three types of items: (1) studied items (e.g., table), (2) semantically related lures (e.g., key), and (3) unrelated lures (e.g., cup). Participants falsely recognized more related than unrelated lures when the stimuli were words (Experiment 1A) and pictures (Experiment 1B), when the studied items and related lures differed in language (Experiment 2), and when they differed in perceptual format (Experiment 3). In Experiment 4, an attribution manipulation, designed to make feelings of familiarity nondiagnostic for memory judgments, eliminated the false-recognition effect obtained in Experiment 3. Overall, the study suggests that conceptual relatedness produces false recognition even in the absence of shared perceptual surface features between study and test items, and it does so by generating feelings of familiarity.
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- 2005
17. Recognition memory and introspective remember/know judgments: evidence for the influence of distractor plausibility on 'remembering' and a caution about purportedly nonparametric measures
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Benjamin, Aaron S.
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Recognition (Psychology) -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
One popular technique in the study of human recognition memory involves the elicitation of remember and know judgments and the attribution of those judgments to qualitative states of memory retrieval. An alternative view, reviewed here, implicates quantitative, but not qualitative, differences in evidence as the basis for those two judgments. That theory makes two clear and testable predictions: that of criterion shifts in 'remembering' and that of isodiscriminability across different response sets. In this experiment, the makeup of the distractor set in a recognition test is shown to influence overall recognition criterion and also rates of 'remember' responses. The second potion of the article demonstrates how A' is a poor choice of a measure to test the prediction of isodiscriminability. When this measure is corrected (Equation 7) to make it more consistent with current knowledge about the receiver-operating characteristic in recognition memory, it reveals that there is no difference in discriminability between 'remember' and all positive responses.
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- 2005
18. A refined model of sleep and the time course of memory formation
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Walker, Matthew P.
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Sleep -- Psychological aspects ,Memory -- Case studies ,Learning -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Research in the neurosciences continues to provide evidence that sleep plays a role in the processes of learning and memory. There is less of a consensus, however, regarding the precise stages of memory development during which sleep is considered a requirement, simply favorable, or not important. This article begins with an overview of recent studies regarding sleep and learning, predominantly in the procedural memory domain, and is measured against our current understanding of the mechanisms that govern memory formation. Based on these considerations, I offer a new neurocognitive framework of procedural learning, consisting first of acquisition, followed by two specific stages of consolidation, one involving a process of stabilization, the other involving enhancement, whereby delayed learning occurs. Psychophysiological evidence indicates that initial acquisition does not rely fundamentally on sleep. This also appears to be true for the stabilization phase of consolidation, with durable representations, resistant to interference, clearly developing in a successful manner during time awake (or just time, per se). In contrast, the consolidation stage, resulting in additional/enhanced learning in the absence of further rehearsal, does appear to rely on the process of sleep, with evidence for specific sleep-stage dependencies across the procedural domain. Evaluations at a molecular, cellular, and systems level currently offer several sleep specific candidates that could play a role in sleep-dependent learning. These include the upregulation of select plasticity-associated genes, increased protein synthesis, changes in neurotransmitter concentration, and specific electrical events in neuronal networks that modulate synaptic potentiation. Keywords: consolidation; enhancement; learning; memory; plasticity; sleep; stabilization
- Published
- 2005
19. Mechanisms of memory stabilization: are consolidation and reconsolidation similar or distinct processes?
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Alberini, Cristina M.
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Memory -- Case studies ,Neurology -- Case studies ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Consolidation of new memories depends on a crucial phase of protein synthesis. It is widely held that, once consolidated, memories are stable and resilient to disruption. However, established memories become labile when recalled and require another phase of protein synthesis to be maintained. Therefore, it has been proposed that when a memory is reactivated it must undergo additional consolidation (reconsolidation) to persist. To determine whether reconsolidation recapitulates consolidation, in the past few years several groups have investigated whether the same molecules and pathways mediate the formation of a memory and its maintenance after reactivation. At first glance, the results appear conflicting: although both processes appear to engage the same molecules and mechanisms, brain areas involved in consolidation after initial training are not required for reconsolidation. In addition, the formation of a memory and its maintenance after reactivation seem to have distinctive temporal molecular requirements. This review concludes with a working model that could explain the apparent controversy of memory vulnerability after reactivation.
- Published
- 2005
20. Recent Research from University of Hertfordshire Highlight Findings in Brain Injury (Using a Wearable Camera To Support Everyday Memory Following Brain Injury: a Single-case Study)
- Subjects
Brain research -- Case studies ,Brain -- Case studies -- Injuries ,Memory -- Case studies ,Arts and entertainment industries ,Business ,University of Hertfordshire -- Reports - Abstract
2021 DEC 24 (VerticalNews) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Entertainment Newsweekly -- Fresh data on Central Nervous System Diseases and Conditions - Brain Injury are presented in [...]
- Published
- 2021
21. Asymmetric interference effects in fragment completion: the consequences of recognition failures and successes
- Author
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Pilotti, Maura, Chodorow, Martin, and Thornton, Kendell C.
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Memory -- Case studies - Abstract
We examined the extent to which implicit and explicit memory performance is susceptible to the effects of proactive and retroactive interference produced by orthographic similarity. Participants studied target and nontarget words that were orthographically similar or dissimilar. At test, they were given fragments of the target words intermixed with fragments of nonstudied words. Participants' initial task was to determine whether each fragment was a studied word. If they recognized it, they were to complete the fragment with the studied word; if not, they were to complete the fragment with the first word that came to mind. Completion rates including both recognized and nonrecognized target fragments provided evidence of proactive but not retroactive interference. The implicit processing engaged by the nonrecognized target fragments was found to be the primary source of the proactive interference effect.
- Published
- 2004
22. Contraction bias in memorial quantifying judgment: does it come from a stable compressed memory representation or a dynamic adaptation process?
- Author
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Jou, Jerwen, Leka, Gary E., Rogers, Dawn M., and Matus, Yolanda E.
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies - Abstract
A common response bias in psychophysical judgments is regression toward the mean (overestimation of small and underestimation of large values, or the response contraction bias). The same bias is observed in magnitude estimation from memorized quantities. Participants estimated alphabetic interval distances between 2 letters for different levels of interletter distances. The underestimated and overestimated values and the point of least error changed, depending on the level of alphabetic distances judged; furthermore, their estimation showed a progressively increasing tendency toward the mean, rendering the estimation progressively less accurate as the estimation task was repeated. We conclude that the regression toward the mean in memorial quantifying judgment derives from a cognitive adaptation process rather than from a permanent, compressed memory representation of the stimuli. Two opposing views on the adaptive meaning of this judgment bias are discussed.
- Published
- 2004
23. Consolidation-like effects in flashbulb memories: evidence from September 11, 2001
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Weaver, Charles A., III and Krug, Kevin S.
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies - Abstract
After September 11, 2001, we distributed flashbulb memory questionnaires at 5 different dates: within 48 hr (T1) and at 1 week (T2), 1 month (T3), 3 months (T4), and 1 year (T5). We scored responses for self-reported memory (veracity unverified), memory accuracy (recollection-matched T1 response), and memory consistency (recollection-matched prior responses other than T1). Self-reported memory and subjective confidence remained near ceiling, although the accuracy declined. However, memories given a week or more after September 11 were consistent throughout. We hypothesize that flashbulb memories follow a consolidation-like process: Some details learned later are incorporated into the initial memory, and many others are discarded. After this process, memories stabilize. Therefore, the best predictor of flashbulb memories at long intervals is not the memory as initially reported but memories reported a week or more after the event.
- Published
- 2004
24. Detection of repeated trigrams: evidence of all-or-none learning
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Glass, Arnold, Lian, Arild, and Lau, James
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies - Abstract
Two experiments investigated trigram detection in a continuous recognition task. In Experiment 1 consonant trigrams were presented visually, one at a time, with occasional repetition of a trigram after an interval of 0, 2, 4, 8, or 16 other trigrams. Subjects were told to respond with a button press every time they saw a repeated trigram. If a subject responded to a repeated trigram, it was not repeated again. However, if a subject did not respond to a repeated trigram, it was repeated again at the same interval for up to 3 repetitions. For all intervals greater than 0, the probability of noticing a repeated trigram did not increase with the number of repetitions. In Experiment 2 meaningless shape trigrams were presented, and occasionally a trigram was repeated after an interval of 0, 1, or 2 trigrams. For both intervals greater than 0, the probability of noticing a repeated trigram did not increase with the number of repetitions. The results demonstrate that a repeated input does not necessarily leave a permanent trace in memory.
- Published
- 2004
25. The distinctiveness of emotion concepts: a comparison between emotion, abstract, and concrete words
- Author
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Altarriba, Jeanette and Bauer, Lisa M.
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Emotions -- Case studies - Abstract
Are the concepts represented by emotion words different from abstract words in memory? We examined the distinct characteristics of emotion concepts in 3 separate experiments. The first demonstrated that emotion words are better recalled than both concrete and abstract words in a free recall task. In the second experiment, ratings of abstract, concrete, and emotion words were compared on concreteness, imageability, and context availability scales. Results revealed a difference between all 3 word types on each of the 3 scales. The third experiment investigated priming in a lexical decision task for homogeneous (abstract-abstract and emotion-emotion) and heterogeneous (abstract-emotion and emotion--abstract) associated word pairs. Priming occurred only for the homogeneous and heterogeneous abstract-emotion word pair conditions. Possible explanations for these findings are discussed in terms of the circumplex, hierarchical, and semantic activation models. The results are most consistent with the predictions of the semantic activation model.
- Published
- 2004
26. Retroactive effects of irrelevant speech on serial recall from short-term memory
- Author
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Norris, Dennis, Page, Michael P.A., and Baddeley, Alan D.
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Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology, Experimental ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The authors report 5 serial-recall experiments. In 4 of the 5 experiments, they show that irrelevant sound (IS) has a retroactive effect on material already in memory. In Experiment 1, IS presented during a filled retention interval had a reliable effect on list recall. Four further experiments, 3 of which used retroactive IS, showed that IS continued to have an effect on recall following a long, filled retention interval. Articulatory suppression during visual input was found to abolish the long-lasting, retroactive effect of IS, supporting the idea that IS affects the phonological-loop component of short-term memory. IS also, therefore, seems to affect a longer term memory system with which the loop interacts.
- Published
- 2004
27. Modeling the effects of prior knowledge on learning incongruent features of category members
- Author
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Heit, Evan, Bott, Lewis, and Briggs, Janet
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Learning -- Case studies ,Psychology, Experimental ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The authors conducted 3 experiments addressing the issue of how observations and multiple sources of prior knowledge are put together in category learning. In Experiments 1 and 2, learning was faster for critical features, which were predictable on the basis of prior knowledge, than for filler features, and this advantage increased as more observations were made. In addition, learning was fastest for incongruent features that could only be predicted using knowledge from other domains. In Experiment 3, presenting contradictory features that violated prior knowledge led to rote learning rather than use of prior knowledge. The results were simulated with the Baywatch model, which addresses how observations of category members lead to recruitment and selection of sources of prior knowledge.
- Published
- 2004
28. Interactive dimensions in the construction of mental representations for text
- Author
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Rapp, David N. and Taylor, Holly A.
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology, Experimental ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
To detail the structure and format of memory for texts, researchers have examined whether readers monitor separate text dimensions for space, time, and characters. The authors proposed that the interactivity between these individual dimensions may be as critical to the construction of complex mental models as the discrete dimensions themselves. In the present experiments, participants read stories in which characters were described as traveling from a start to a final location. During movement between locations, characters engaged in activities that could take either a long or short amount of time to complete. Results indicate that accessibility for the spatial locations was a function of the passage of time. The authors interpret this as evidence that the interactive nature of text dimensions affects the structure of representations in memory.
- Published
- 2004
29. The effects of age, glucose ingestion and gluco-regulatory control on episodic memory
- Author
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Riby, Leigh Martin, Meikle, Andrew, and Glover, Cheryl
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Aged -- Health aspects ,Eating (Physiology) -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Health ,Psychology and mental health ,Seniors ,Social sciences - Published
- 2004
30. Memory for targets in a multi-level simulated-environment: a comparison between able-bodied and physically disabled children
- Author
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Wilson, Paul N., Foreman, Nigel, Stanton, Danae, and Duffy, Hester
- Subjects
Physically disabled children -- Case studies ,Crippled children -- Case studies ,Child psychology -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health ,Case studies - Abstract
Two groups of children, one able-bodied and the other with physical disabilities, explored a symmetrical three-tiered virtual building that contained six distinctive target objects, two on each storey. In a subsequent test, the target objects were removed and participants were asked to make judgments of the directions to the former target locations from each floor in turn. At each test site, judgments were required for targets that were formerly on the same floor and for those on higher and lower floors. Relative tilt error scores suggested a bias for both groups, in that targets that were higher than the test location were judged as consistently lower than their actual position, whereas targets that were lower than the test location were judged as higher than their actual position. Absolute tilt errors revealed an asymmetry in both groups, with more accurate tilt errors for judgments directed to lower than higher floors. The relevance of these results for the source of the asymmetry is discussed., To understand spatial cognition it is useful to make a distinction between two spatial reference frames: first, allocentric, or environmental, reference frames are those in which spatial information is processed [...]
- Published
- 2004
31. Testing theories of recognition memory by predicting performance across paradigms
- Author
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Smith, David G. and Duncan, Matthew J.J.
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Recognition (Psychology) -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Signal-detection theory (SDT) accounts of recognition judgments depend on the assumption that recognition decisions result from a single familiarity-based process. However, fits of a hybrid SDT model, called dual-process theory (DPT), have provided evidence for the existence of a second, recollection-based process. In 2 experiments, the authors tested predictions of DPT and SDT by comparing the invariance of parameter estimates between yes/no (Y/N) and 2-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) testing paradigms. Both experiments showed DPT recollection estimates in Y/N to be poorly correlated with recollection estimates in 2AFC. In Experiment 2, SDT predictions explained more variance than DPT predictions. The authors evaluate and discuss the extent to which each model possesses theoretical validity versus computational flexibility in curve fitting.
- Published
- 2004
32. On the auditory modality superiority effect in serial recall: separating input and output factors
- Author
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Cowan, Nelson, Saults, J. Scott, and Brown, Gordon D.A.
- Subjects
Recollection (Psychology) -- Case studies ,Modality (Logic) -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The modality effect in immediate recall refers to superior recall of the last few items within lists presented in spoken as opposed to printed form. The locus of this well-known effect has been unclear. N. Cowan, J. S. Saults, E. M. Elliott, and M. Moreno (2002) introduced a new method to distinguish between the effects of input serial position, output serial position, and the number of items yet to be recalled and found that large modality effects occurred only in conditions in which delay and interference at output (from items already recalled) was high. The authors replicated that finding, even when the response period included output interference acoustically similar to the spoken stimuli to be recalled. However, the authors found that output delay and interference act only by lowering the level of performance to a more sensitive range. The modality effect thus originates during encoding of the list to be recalled, not during output.
- Published
- 2004
33. Cue-focused and reflexive-associative processes in prospective memory retrieval
- Author
-
McDaniel, Mark A., Einstein, Gilles O., Guynn, Melissa J., and Breneiser, Jennifer
- Subjects
Recognition (Psychology) -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Recollection (Psychology) -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Several theories of event-based prospective memory were evaluated in 3 experiments. The results depended on the association between the target event and the intended action. For associated target-action pairs (a) preexposure of nontargets did not reduce prospective memory, (b) divided attention did not reduce prospective memory, (c) prospective memory was better than when the target event and intended action were not associated, and (d) prospective memory was characterized by retrieval of the precise intended action. These results converge on the view that retrieval is mediated by a reflexive-associative process. In contrast, for unassociated pairs (a) preexposure of nontargets reduced prospective memory, and (b) divided attention reduced prospective memory. These results implicate cue-focused retrieval processes and are most consistent with a discrepancy-plus-search model. The entire pattern implicates both can-focused and reflexive-associative processes and more generally supports a multiprocess framework of prospective memory (M. A. McDaniel & G. O. Einstein, 2000).
- Published
- 2004
34. Capacity to consent to treatment: empirical comparison of three instruments in older adults with and without dementia
- Author
-
Moye, Jennifer, Karel, Michele J., Azar, Armin R., and Gurrera, Ronald J.
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Dementia -- Case studies ,Decision-making -- Case studies ,Competition (Psychology) -- Case studies ,Health ,Seniors - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to compare adults with and without dementia on capacities to consent to treatment as assessed by three instruments. Design and Methods: Eighty-eight older adults with mild to moderate dementia were compared with 88 matched controls on four indices of legal competency to consent to medical treatment as assessed with three capacity instruments. Results: Mean performance of adults with dementia on a legal standard of understanding treatment information was impaired relative to controls on all instruments, and it was also impaired for an appreciation standard on one instrument and a reasoning standard on two instruments. However, in categorical ratings, most adults with dementia were within the normal range on all decisional capacities. Legal standards were operationalized differently across the three instruments for the capacities of appreciation and reasoning. Implications: Most adults with mild dementia can participate in medical decision making as defined by legal standards, although memory impairments may limit demonstration of understanding of diagnostic and treatment information. In dementia, assessments of reasoning about treatment options should focus on whether a person can describe salient reasons for a specific choice, whereas assessments of appreciation of the meaning of diagnostic and treatment information should focus on whether a person can describe the implications of various choices for future states. More research is needed to establish the reliability and validity of assessment tools and of capacity constructs. Key Words: Decision making, Competency, Memory, Risks and benefits
- Published
- 2004
35. Autobiographical memories for the September 11th attacks: reconstructive errors and emotional impairment of memory
- Author
-
Schmidt, Stephen R.
- Subjects
World Trade Center and Pentagon Attacks, 2001 ,Memory -- Case studies ,College students -- Psychological aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
College students were asked about their personal memories from September 11, 2001. Consistency in reported features over a 2-month period increased as the delay between the initial test and 9/11 increased. Central features (e.g., Where were you?) were reported with greater consistency than were peripheral features (What were you wearing?) but also contained a larger proportion of reconstructive errors. In addition, highly emotional participants demonstrated poor prospective memory and relatively inconsistent memory for peripheral details, when compared with less emotional participants. Highly emotional participants were also more likely to increase the specificity of their responses over time but did not exhibit greater consistency for central details than did less emotional participants. The results demonstrated reconstructive processes in the memory for a highly consequential and emotional event and emotional impairment of memory processing of incidental details.
- Published
- 2004
36. Cultural life scripts structure recall from autobiographical memory
- Author
-
Berntsen, Dorthe and Rubin, David C.
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Life cycle, Human ,Human growth ,Culture ,Civilization ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Three classes of evidence demonstrate the existence of life scripts, or culturally shared representations of the timing of major transitional life events. First, a reanalysis of earlier studies on age norms shows an increase in the number of transitional events between the ages of 15 and 30 years, and these events are associated with narrower age ranges and more positive emotion than events outside this period. Second, 1,485 Danes estimated how old hypothetical centenarians were when they had been happiest, saddest, most afraid, most in love, and had their most important and most traumatic experiences. Only the number of positive events showed an increase between the ages of 15 and 30 years. Third, undergraduates generated seven important events that were likely to occur in the life of a newborn. Pleasantness and whether events were expected to occur between the ages of 15 and 30 years predicted how frequently events were recorded. Life scripts provide an alternative explanation of the reminiscence bump. Emphasis is on culture, not individuals.
- Published
- 2004
37. Asymmetric interference in implicit memory: effects of study-test awareness and stimulus order
- Author
-
Pilotti, Maura, Chodorow, Martin, and Tan, Jocelyn
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Awareness -- Case studies - Abstract
This study examined the extent to which fragment completion performance is susceptible to the effects of two different forms of interference (proactive and retroactive) and whether any of these effects depend on participants' awareness of the relationship between study and test. Unaware participants were found to be susceptible to proactive but not retroactive interference. Aware participants did not show evidence of susceptibility to either form of interference. These results contribute to the debate about whether implicit memory is immune to interference effects by demarcating the limits of such an immunity.
- Published
- 2004
38. Impairments in Premorbid Knowledge Recall in Patients with Hemispheric and Intraventricular Brain Damage
- Author
-
Buklina, S. B.
- Subjects
Brain damage -- Complications and side effects ,Brain damage -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Byline: S. B. Buklina (1) Keywords: arteriovenous malformations; memory impairments; knowledge recall; information encoding and decoding Abstract: A total of 104 patients with hemispheric arteriovenous malformations (AVM in the frontal, parietal, and temporal lobes), along with 21 patients with craniopharyngiomas and 21 patients with aresorptive hydrocephalus, were studied. Impairments of the recall of knowledge acquired before disease onset were found in 12 patients with hemispheric AVM. All had suffered severe intraventricular hemorrhage. Similar memory defects were noted in three patients with craniopharyngiomas and 12 with hydrocephalus. These patients had lesions of the mediobasal (periventricular) parts of the brain (frontal and parietal lobes), predominantly of the right hemisphere, as well as the diencephalic regions. The syndrome of selective retrograde amnesia in lesions of these structures was characterized by impairment of the recall of dates and, less frequently, details of event content and autobiography. It is emphasized that processes of recall of the sequence and selectivity of traces during actualization of 'old' knowledge played the greater role in the mechanism of development of these impairments. The possible roles of the right and left hemispheres, as well as the diencephalic area, in the information encoding and decoding are discussed. Author Affiliation: (1) Academician N. N. Burdenko Science Research Institute of Neurosurgery, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, Moscow Article History: Registration Date: 12/10/2004
- Published
- 2003
39. Descriptions and identifications of strangers by youth and adult eyewitnesses
- Author
-
Pozzulo, Joanna D. and Warren, Kelly L.
- Subjects
Eyewitness identification -- Case studies ,Eyewitness identification -- Psychological aspects ,Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health ,Social sciences - Abstract
Two studies varying target gender and mode of target exposure were conducted to compare the quantity, nature, and accuracy of free recall person descriptions provided by youths and adults. In addition, the relation among age, identification accuracy, and number of descriptors reported was considered. Youths (10-14 years) reported fewer descriptors than adults. Exterior facial descriptors (e.g., hair items) were predominant and accurately reported by youths and adults. Accuracy was consistently problematic for youths when reporting body descriptors (e.g., height, weight) and interior facial features. Youths reported a similar number of descriptors when making accurate versus inaccurate identification decisions. This pattern also was consistent for adults. With target-absent lineups, the difference in the number of descriptors reported between adults and youths was greater when making a false positive versus correct rejection.
- Published
- 2003
40. Dissociation and memory fragmentation: experimental effects on meta-memory but not on actual memory performance
- Author
-
Kindt, Merel and van den Hout, Marcel
- Subjects
Dissociation (Psychology) -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The relation between state dissociation and fragmentary memory was investigated by assessing both actual memory performance and meta-memory. From a sample of 330 normal subjects, two subsamples were selected on basis of trait dissociation, as measured by the Dissociative Experience Scale. Twenty subjects scoring above 30 and 20 subjects scoring below 10 were selected. Subjects watched an extremely aversive film, after which state dissociation was measured by the Peri-traumatic Dissociative Experience Scale. Four hours later memory fragmentation was assessed in two ways. Actual fragmentation was measured by a sequential memory task, and perceived fragmentation (meta-memory) was measured using a visual analogue scale. Subjects who tended to dissociate during the film judged their recollections of the film as more fragmentary. Although this finding is in line with clinical reports given by trauma victims, it was not sustained by objective evidence. That is, no effect was observed of state dissociation on the sequential memory task. The present findings suggest that the claim that dissociation induces memory fragmentation may have to be confined to meta-memory. Implications of this divergence between actual memory and meta-memory are discussed. Keywords: Dissociation; Memory; Fragmentation; Actual memory performance and meta-memory
- Published
- 2003
41. Do landmarks help or hinder women in route learning?
- Author
-
Gwinn, Heather M., Fernando, Shona, James, Sufiy, and Wilson, Josephine F.
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Women -- Case studies ,Women -- Psychological aspects ,Learning -- Case studies ,Learning -- Methods ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Previous research on route learning has demonstrated that men learn routes faster and with fewer errors than women, whereas women are able to recall more landmarks along the route. The present study was aimed at investigating whether landmarks help or hinder women when they learn a route. 47 female and 37 male undergraduate students were randomly assigned to one of two conditions, in which they learned a route on a map with landmarks (the Landmark condition) or with no landmarks (the No-Landmark condition). Men outperformed women in the Landmark condition, learning the route in less time, with fewer errors, and in fewer trials than women did. In contrast, in the No-Landmark condition, no significant differences were found between men and women on the route-learning measures. Men learned the route faster and more accurately when landmarks were present than when they were not, but the performance of women was not affected by the presence or absence of landmarks. These results suggest that men and women may employ landmarks differently when learning a route. Men may use the positions of landmarks to make distance and direction judgments, whereas women may label the landmarks and memorize these labels, which interferes with learning the route.
- Published
- 2002
42. Feeling-of-knowing for proper names
- Author
-
Izaute, Marie, Chambres, Patrick, and Larochelle, Serge
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Memory -- Psychological aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The main objective of the presented study was to study feeling-of-knowing (FOK) in proper name retrieval. Many studies show that FOK can predict performance on a subsequent criterion test. Although feeling-of-knowing studies involve questions about proper names, none make this distinction between proper names and common names. Nevertheless, the specific character of proper names as a unique label referring to a person should allow participants to target precisely the desired verbal label. Our idea here was that the unique character of proper name information should result in more accurate FOK evaluations. In the experiment, participants evaluated feeling-of-knowing for proper and common name descriptions. The study demonstrates that FOK judgments are more accurate for proper names than for common names. The implications of the findings for proper names are briefly discussed in terms of feeling-of-knowing hypotheses.
- Published
- 2002
43. Pointage d'une position memorisee et contexte visuel
- Author
-
Priout, Pierre, Guedon, Olivier, Proteau, Luc, and Gauthier, Gabriel M.
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Memory -- Psychological aspects ,Visual perception -- Case studies ,Visual perception -- Psychological aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Cette etude porte sur l'utilisation des signaux visuels de l'environnement stationnaire pour controler un geste d'atteinte d'une cible memorisee. La question est de savoir si des indices de l'environnement sont utilises pour indiquer rapidement avec l'index la position de la cible codee en memoire. La cible a pointer etait presentee sur un fond uniforme noir ou un fond fait de bandes verticales noires et blanches. Ce dernier pouvait etre stationnaire ou decale instantanement vers la droite ou vers la gauche au moment de l'extinction de la cible ou au depart du mouvement de la main. Les resultats montrent trois effets principaux: 1) la vision de la main pendant le geste ameliore la precision finale, 2) le fond visuel decale degrade la performance de pointage des participants uniquement lorsque la main n'est pas visible pendant le geste et toujours de la meme facon quelle que soit la direction du decalage, et 3) les effets de l'absence de vision de la main et du fond structure sur la precision du pointage dependent de la distance separant la cible de la main. L'effet systematique du fond decale sur la localisation manuelle suggere un role de l'environnement meconnu dans la retention de la cible. Les resultats suggerent en outre qu'un fond structure stationnaire est utilise pour soutenir la memoire de la position de la cible. L'utilisation du fond structure est plus prononcee lorsque la cible apparait en vision pripherique plutot qu'en vision centrale ce qui suggere une localisation a partir d'une memoire relative de la position peripherique de la cible.
- Published
- 2002
44. The relation of speeded and unspeeded reasoning with mental speed
- Author
-
Wilhelm, Oliver and Schulze, Ralf
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Memory -- Evaluation ,Reasoning -- Case studies ,Reasoning -- Methods ,Reasoning -- Psychological aspects ,Cognition -- Case studies ,Cognition -- Evaluation ,Psychology and mental health - Published
- 2002
45. Enhancement of images of possible memories of others during exposure to circumcerebral magnetic fields: correlations with ambient geomagnetic activity
- Author
-
Persinger, M.A., Cook, C.M., and Tiller, S.G.
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Memory -- Physiological aspects ,Memory -- Environmental aspects ,Magnetic fields -- Case studies ,Magnetic fields -- Psychological aspects ,Magnetic fields -- Physiological aspects ,Perception -- Case studies ,Perception -- Environmental aspects ,Perception -- Physiological aspects ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
On the basis of results from a special subject who reported information at a distance during exposure to weak, circumcerebral magnetic fields rotating within the horizontal plane, we designed an experiment to discern if the subjective narratives of normal people exposed to these fields could be similar to the comments of emotionally related individuals who were concurrently generating shared memories about a randomly selected stimulus. Blind matching of the comments indicated that the proportions of 44 students who accurately paired the narratives of the field-exposed subject and the comments of the stimulus person as congruent were statistically significant for 5 of the 7 pairs whose narratives were of sufficient length for analysis. The ratings for congruence of the pairs of verbal behaviors for the 7 pairs of subjects were negatively correlated (rho = -.72) with the geomagnetic activity during the 24-hr. interval within which the experiences were conducted. The results suggested consciousness might also be an insulator to myriad stimuli which might be accessible when brain activity is modified by circumcerebral magnetic fields with temporal configurations in the order of 20 msec.
- Published
- 2002
46. Reliability estimates for the immediate and delayed memory tasks
- Author
-
Mathias, Charles W., Marsh, Dawn M., and Dougherty, Donald M.
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Recovered memory (Psychology) -- Case studies ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The Immediate and Delayed Memory Tasks are variations of the Continuous Performance Test. While previous research with the tasks has focused on group performance across multiple blocks and sessions, reliability estimates have not been established. We estimated reliability (1) between blocks of a single testing session (N=106), (2) across four sessions within a single testing day (N=20), and (3) across sessions on four consecutive testing days (N=20). Analyses indicated that the primary variable of interest, i.e., commission of errors, showed acceptable reliability within and across testing periods.
- Published
- 2002
47. Reports from University Gottingen Provide New Insights into Memory Research (Memory In the Shadow of a Family History of Resistance: a Case Study of the Significance of Collective Memories for Intergenerational Memory In Austrian Families)
- Subjects
Family -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Health - Abstract
2021 MAY 31 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Pain & Central Nervous System Week -- Investigators publish new report on Memory Research. According to news reporting [...]
- Published
- 2021
48. Using a wearable camera to support everyday memory following brain injury: a single case study (Updated April 6, 2021)
- Subjects
Brain -- Case studies -- Injuries ,Memory -- Case studies ,Health - Abstract
2021 APR 23 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Health & Medicine Week -- According to news reporting based on a preprint abstract, our journalists obtained the [...]
- Published
- 2021
49. Research Data from Sodertorn University Update Understanding of Memory Research (Making and Contesting Far Right Sites of Memory. a Case Study On Romania)
- Subjects
Memory -- Case studies ,Government ,Political science - Abstract
2021 MAR 4 (VerticalNews) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Politics & Government Week -- Investigators discuss new findings in Memory Research. According to news reporting originating in [...]
- Published
- 2021
50. Investigators from University of Innsbruck Have Reported New Data on Memory Research [Transcultural Memory and Literary Translation: Mapping the Field (With a Case Study On Lydie Salvayre's Pas Pleurer and Its Spanish Translation)]
- Subjects
Translating and interpreting -- Case studies ,Memory -- Case studies ,Health - Abstract
2021 MAR 1 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Pain & Central Nervous System Week -- Current study results on Memory Research have been published. According to [...]
- Published
- 2021
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