Search
Search Funnelback University
Did you mean people alumni |u:www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk?
21 -
40 of
75
search results for People aliens |u:www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk
where 2
match all words and 73
match some words.
Results that match 1 of 2 words
-
Abstract
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Bergstrom2013%20BiolPsychol.htm29 Oct 2021: We examined whether people could use retrieval suppression to conceal neural evidence of incriminating memories as indexed by Event-Related Potentials (ERPs). ... When people were motivated to suppress crime retrieval, their memory-related ERP effects -
Abstract
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2001%20Neuropsy.htm29 Oct 2021: An effect of semantic knowledge on recognition memory became apparent only when perceptually different photographs of the famous people were used at study and test. -
Abstract
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Vogelsang2018%20JOCN.htm29 Oct 2021: in press). Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 30, 667-679. People can employ adaptive strategies to increase the likelihood that previously encoded information will be successfully retrieved. -
Abstract
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2004%20PsychAging.htm29 Oct 2021: The present study examined the effects of aging on specific source memory (e.g., remembering which of four people spoke a word) and "partial" source memory (e.g., remembering the gender -
Abstract
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Cooper2017%20Cognition.htm29 Oct 2021: People with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) exhibit subtle deficits in recollection, which have been proposed to arise from encoding impairments, though a direct link has yet to be demonstrated. -
Abstract
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Bergstrom2015%20CerebCortex.htm29 Oct 2021: Research links the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) with a number of social cognitive processes that involve reflecting on oneself and other people. -
Abstract
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/GarrisonMoseley2017%20Cortex.htm29 Oct 2021: 2017). Cortex, 91, 197-207. ( joint first-authors). People with schizophrenia who hallucinate show impairments in reality monitoring (the ability to distinguish internally generated information from information obtained from external sources) -
read discuss contribute at www.thepsychologist.org.uk 187 media ‘The…
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/media/psy0312.pdf22 Feb 2012: In three weeks, over 27,000 people took part. ‘It was great funcollaborating with The Guardian,’ Simons told us. ... Thanks to lots of publicity by them,and hundreds of people sharing and re-tweeting the weblink around the world, we hadan -
2 2 S T Y L I S T ...
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/media/STY439_HORROR.pdf5 Nov 2018: Their behavioural recruitment. is powered by live social data. on two billion people in over. ... Dr Simons says there are many reasons people hate scary situations such as watching horror. -
717 Schizophrenia Bulletin vol. 45 no. 4 pp. 717–719, ...
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Waters2019%20SchizBul.pdf19 Jun 2019: One example includes evidence of categorical differ-ences within people presenting with psychosis-like expe-riences in the general population. ... Another challenge is to understand the therapeutic needs of people with different hallucination subtypes so -
BACKPAGES Bat spat New research explores the neurological basis ...
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/media/Wellcome_Science_Nov06.pdf24 Jul 2008: Writing in Science in July 2006, Greg Miller tells thestrange story of the Chamorros people of Guam.1. ... Certainly thereare people who think this is so far out,” acknowledgesJohn Weiss, a neuroscientist at the University ofCalifornia, Irvine. -
Metacognitive Awareness and the Subjective Experience of Remembering…
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Siena2024%20JOCN.pdf12 Jan 2024: episodic recall is impaired in people with aphantasia. A mixed design was employed in which. ... how vividly participants can visualise different scenarios involving people and scenes. -
jcn01814 687..698
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Kwon2022%20JOCN.pdf15 Mar 2022: Such healthy people who are prone tohallucinations may misattribute imagined stimuli as real,for example, exhibiting externalization bias. ... example, memory precision tends to be relatively low, par-ticipants are more likely to misattribute -
1 Amnesia Jon S. Simons and Kim S. Graham ...
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2000%20Chapter.pdf17 Jan 2001: and their meanings, facts, concepts, objects and people; typically retrieved without recollection of. -
Thursday, 21 February 2013, 9.30am-3pm The Old Library, Emmanuel ...
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/CAMM/CAMM_programme.pdf19 Feb 2013: thinking about oneself and other people) and episodic memory (e.g. recollecting contextual details of an event). ... New research is to be starting soon to investigate rehab needs among people with Multiple Sclerosis. -
RECOGNITION-INDUCED UPDATING OF FACE MEMORIES 1 Active Recognition…
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Plummer2021%20PsyArXiv.pdf25 Oct 2021: subsequent attempts to remember. For example, when people are asked to repeatedly recall. ... Watanabe & Soraci, 2004). Furthermore, people’s memory is enhanced by the opportunity to. -
733 Schizophrenia Bulletin vol. 45 no. 4 pp. 733–741, ...
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Garrison2019%20SchizBul.pdf19 Jun 2019: In sum, we replicated earlier findings of shorter PCS in patients with hallucinations, but did not find this char-acteristic in nonclinical people with hallucinations. ... Distinct pro-cessing of ambiguous speech in people with non-clinical auditory -
Evidence in cortical folding patterns for prenatal predispositions to …
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Rollins2020%20TranslPsy.pdf10 Nov 2020: Functionalneuroimaging studies have consistently reported altera-tions in the brain’s resting state networks in people whoexperience hallucinations, particularly in the saliencenetwork, which engages the anterior cingulate and ante-rior insula -
Neuropsychology2001, Vol. 15 No. 1, 101-114 Copyright 2001 by ...
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2001%20Neuropsy.pdf23 Feb 2001: without any time pressure, toname each of the famous people and to provide identifying infor-mation about them. ... phase revealed that she was unfamiliarwith some of the famous people used in the test and was. -
Exploring the neurocognitive basis of episodic recollection in autism
www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Cooper2019%20PsychonBulRev.pdf20 Mar 2019: Additionally, people with ASD commonly exhibit inflex-ible behavior, fixated interests, and hypersensitivity to sensoryinput, as defined by the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria. ... However, whereas for most people. 166 Psychon Bull Rev (2019) 26:163–181.
Search history
Recently clicked results
Recently clicked results
Your click history is empty.
Recent searches
Recent searches
Your search history is empty.