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  2. Multimodal Feature Integration in the Angular Gyrus during Episodic…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Bonnici2016%20JNeurosci.pdf
    18 May 2016: The results offer new insights into theintegrative processes subserved by AnG and its contribution to our subjective experience of remembering. ... Therefore, the findings offer new insights into the integrative processes subserved by AnG and how its
  3. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2008.02.026

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Ally2008%20Npsygia.pdf
    31 May 2008: cteb. Fig. 3. Younger adult old/new scalp topography maps for the three condit. ... fs(. ig. 9. Old/new scalp topography maps for parietal lesion patient R1, collapsed acrorward.
  4. fMRI Evidence for Separable and Lateralized PrefrontalMemory…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Dobbins2004%20JOCN.pdf
    3 Aug 2004: In comparison. to standard old/new recognition, both source memory and theJOF task examined here require more precise mnemonicjudgments. ... TMS) over the right dorsolateral PFC during picturerecognition has been shown to elevate false alarm ratesto new
  5. Brain Mechanisms Underlying the Subjective Experience of Remembering

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2022%20ARP.pdf
    4 Jan 2022: With neuroimaging have come new opportunitiesto study regional specialization across the entire brain, allowing researchers greater flexibility incomparing and contrasting the cognitive functions of different brain regions. ... determining that the
  6. Reflections of Oneself: Neurocognitive Evidence for Dissociable…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Bergstrom2015%20CerebCortex.pdf
    17 Aug 2015: Responses weregiven on a 4-point confidence scale (“sure old”, “unsure old”, “unsurenew”, and “sure new”). ... 001; Conceptual New:t(17) = 2.96, P = 0.009) than the Control condition.
  7. ORIGINAL PAPER Reality Monitoring and Metamemory in Adults with ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Cooper2016%20JADD.pdf
    10 May 2016: ditions was counterbalanced across the 6 blocks. Presen-. tation of the word pairs as old or new was counterbalanced,. ... performed on confidence ratings and time taken to cor-. rectly reject new words also showed no difference between.
  8. nsm014 217..226

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Gilbert2007%20SCAN.pdf
    3 Sep 2007: These resultsgeneralized from one task to the other, suggesting a new axis of functional organization within MPFC. ... DISCUSSIONThese results confirm a new axis of functional organization. within MPFC, with the most rostral part preferentially.
  9. RECOGNITION-INDUCED UPDATING OF FACE MEMORIES 1 Active Recognition…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Plummer2021%20PsyArXiv.pdf
    25 Oct 2021: exposure to erroneous face information. We developed a new paradigm where we controlled. ... tasks) than to make non-repeated (new) errors (i.e. select a different distractor).
  10. Evidence in cortical folding patterns for prenatal predispositions to …

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Rollins2020%20TranslPsy.pdf
    10 Nov 2020: with 5000 repetitions. For each iteration, the LGI par-cellations of each participant were randomly assigned toone of three new groups with equivalent sample size tothe original study groups (H+, H,
  11. Metacognitive Awareness and the Subjective Experience of Remembering…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Siena2024%20JOCN.pdf
    12 Jan 2024: Metacognitive Awareness and the Subjective Experience of Remembering in Aphantasia. Michael J. Siena. Jon S. Simons. Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EF, United Kingdom. In press, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
  12. Psychopharmacology (2005) 181: 445–457DOI 10.1007/s00213-005-0001-z…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Honey2005%20Psychopharm.pdf
    25 Oct 2005: for detection of new and shallow items),and so were modelled as a combined parameter, D1. ... Thus, we add to the growing evidence that ketaminedisrupts the encoding of new information into episodicmemory.
  13. Long-Term Memory for the Terrorist Attack of September 11:Flashbulb…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Hirst2009%20JEPG.pdf
    12 May 2009: Phelps, Department of Psychol-ogy, New York University; Randy L. Buckner and Daniel L. ... 44, a difference that did not appear in the New Yorker sampleon either survey ( ps.
  14. Neuropsychology2001, Vol. 15 No. 1, 101-114 Copyright 2001 by ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2001%20Neuropsy.pdf
    23 Feb 2001: These results support the view that new episodic learning typicallydraws on information from both perceptual and semantic systems. ... 1975), onemight have concluded that new episodic learning for faces isconsistently affected in semantic dementia.
  15. Neurocase (2000) Vol. 6, pp. 211—230 © Oxford University ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2000%20Neurocase.pdf
    12 Jan 2001: Standardized assessment leaving intact the ability to encode and retrieve new memoriesNone specified. ... Transient semantic amnesia:Episodic memory in transient globalamnesia: encoding, storage, or retrieval a new syndrome?deficit?
  16. 2C_fnbeh-03-053.indd

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Corlett2009%20FrontiersBN.pdf
    11 Dec 2009: Correspondence:Philip R. Corlett, Yale University Medical School, Abraham Ribicoff Research Facility, Connecticut Mental Health Centre, New Haven, CT, USA. ... Kandel, E. R. (1999). Biology and the future of psychoanalysis: a new intel-lectual framework
  17. Failing to Get the Gist: Reduced False Recognition of ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2005%20Neuropsy.pdf
    2 Jun 2005: Failing to Get the Gist: Reduced False Recognition of Semantic Associatesin Semantic Dementia. Jon S. SimonsUniversity College London. Andy C. H. Lee and Kim S. GrahamMedical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit. Mieke VerfaellieBoston
  18. jcn20036 447..457

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2008%20JOCN.pdf
    18 Jan 2008: Separable Forms of Reality Monitoring Supportedby Anterior Prefrontal Cortex. Jon S. Simons1, Richard N. A. Henson2, Sam J. Gilbert3,and Paul C. Fletcher1. Abstract. & Reality monitoring refers to the process of discriminatingbetween internally and
  19. MS3977_0875-0888_Budson(2v)_3LT

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Budson2007%20Cortex.pdf
    3 Sep 2007: As previously, we reportmemory for two different types of information. Wefirst report their memory for how they personallyheard the news of the attacks; this personalinformation is similar to the “personal receptioncontext” ... Next we report their
  20. Impaired Recollection of Visual Scene Details in Adults With ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Cooper2015%20JAbnPsychol.pdf
    21 Sep 2015: If the participant responded “NEW”, the program movedstraight on to the next trial. ... Old-new scene discrimination can beachieved by overall scene familiarity and was predicted to belargely intact in ASC.
  21. PII: S0749-596X(02)00003-7

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2002%20JML.pdf
    25 Jul 2002: covitch, 2001). The preservation of recent autobiographical. memories in semantic dementia suggests that new. ... forced choice recognition memory test for three (of the four) patients who showed significantly impaired new learning.
  22. Memory and Emotions for the September 11, 2001, Terrorist ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Budson2004%20Neuropsy.pdf
    26 Apr 2004: Third, how would these groupscompare in their memory for the factual details of the events ofSeptember 11th (factual information is similar to the “ news” or“ core event” of Larsen, N. ... It should be noted that our distinction betweenpersonal
  23. Declines in Representational Quality and Strategic Retrieval…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Trelle2017%20JEPLMC.pdf
    21 Dec 2017: the presence (‘familiar old’) or absence (‘unfamiliar new’) offamiliarity for the presented object. ... The Yes/Notest display depicts examples of ‘new’ trials containing similar foil objects.See the online article for the color version of
  24. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2006.01.005

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2006%20Neuropsygia.pdf
    22 May 2006: In M. Brandimonte, G. O. Einstein,& M. A. McDaniel (Eds.), Prospective memory: theory and applications.Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
  25. 14769632203281 1..18

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Richter2016%20eLife.pdf
    20 Oct 2016: New York University, United. States. Copyright Richter et al. This. article is distributed under the. ... revealed by the use of continuous memory measures, shed new light on the distinct contributions.
  26. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2005.02.004

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2005%20Neuropsygia.pdf
    10 Sep 2005: Dolan, & C. J.Price (Eds.),Human brain function (2nd ed.). New York: Academic.
  27. A 3D explainability framework to uncover learning patterns and…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Mamalakis2023%20arXiv.pdf
    12 Sep 2023: ROC curve cha ra cteristics of simple-3D-MHL. (b). Simple-3D-CNN New dataset.
  28. Identifying Age-Invariant and Age-Limited Mechanisms for…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Trelle2015%20PsychAging.pdf
    8 Jun 2015: Identifying Age-Invariant and Age-Limited Mechanisms for EnhancedMemory Performance: Insights From Self-Referential Processing in. Younger and Older Adults. Alexandra N. TrelleUniversity of Cambridge, United Kingdom. Richard N. HensonMRC Cognition
  29. Multimodal imaging reveals the spatiotemporal dynamics of recollection

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Bergstrom2013%20NeuroImage.pdf
    18 Mar 2013: Following the parietal old/new effect, intentional recollection isalso often associated with enhanced negative slow-drifts over poste-rior electrodes (e.g. ... than old/new recognitiondecisions (Wolk et al., 2007), similar to the PPC fMRI
  30. 17 Rostral Prefrontal Brain Regions (Area 10): A Gateway ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Burgess2006%20DV_chapter.pdf
    13 Feb 2007: aWAIS–R. enjoyed premorbidly. Shallice and Burgess (1991) invented two new tests of multi-tasking to assess these problems. ... This chapter also presents a new information-processing hypothesis of rostral PFCfunction and some empirical supporting
  31. Event-related potential evidence for separable automatic and…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Bergstrom2012%20BrainRes.pdf
    30 Apr 2012: B R A I N R E S E A R C H 1 4 5 5 ( 2 0 1 2 ) 9 0 – 1 0 2. Available online at www.sciencedirect.com. www.elsevier.com/locate/brainres. Research Report. Event-related potential evidence for separable automatic andcontrolled retrieval processes in
  32. 09-Spco-chap09.qxd

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Burgess2005%20MM_chapter.pdf
    27 Jul 2005: The second presents a new theoreticalaccount of its function that synthesises this evidence. ... has to formulate a way of behav-ing, or “create a new schema” in the terminology of the Shallice and Burgessmodel, beyond that directly signalled by the
  33. awf247 2523..2536

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2002%20Brain.pdf
    29 Oct 2002: Recollection-based memory in frontotemporal dementia 2527. (proportion of old' items minus proportion of new' items.
  34. OP-BRCM210087 1..14

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Gellersen2021%20BrainComms.pdf
    13 May 2021: Memory precision of object-location binding isunimpaired in APOE e4-carriers with spatialnavigation deficits. Helena M. Gellersen,1 Gillian Coughlan,2 Michael Hornberger3 and Jon S. Simons1. Research suggests that tests of memory fidelity, feature
  35. A Ten-Year Follow-Up of a Study of Memory for ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Hirst2015%20JEPG.pdf
    8 Jun 2015: Wealso collected an additional “new” sample of individuals who hadnever participated in the project. ... Theyserved as controls for the returning participants. This new group islabeled “4 only” in Table 1.
  36. Performance-Related Activity in Medial Rostral Prefrontal Cortex(Area …

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Gilbert2006%20JEPHPP.pdf
    22 Feb 2006: Participants mentally counted upward inincrements of 7 from this initial number, pressing a button with their indexfinger each time they thought of a new number. ... D. G. J. etc.”). Again, participants pressed a button withtheir index finger each time
  37. © 2003 Nature Publishing Group R E V I ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2003%20NatureRevNsci.pdf
    1 Aug 2003: other models indicating that new connections between hippocampus and neocorticalareas are created every time an EPISODIC MEMORY trace isretrieved59. ... such as the fornix, but the existing evidence is consistentwith the idea that the hippocampus is more
  38. Executive function and high ambiguity perceptual discrimination…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Gellersen2021%20Cognition.pdf
    12 Jan 2021: between distributions for old and new items and allow comparison be-tween YN and FC tasks (Bayley, Wixted, Hopkins, & Squire, 2008; Trelle et al., 2017).
  39. Exploring the neurocognitive basis of episodic recollection in autism

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Cooper2019%20PsychonBulRev.pdf
    20 Mar 2019: Therefore,flexibly adapting to new environments and cognitive demandscan be extremely challenging for these individuals. ... Additionally, two EEGstudies have observed attenuated frontal ERPs across all timepoints during memory retrieval in ASD with
  40. oup_cercor_bhw350 34..45 ++

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Boschin2017%20CerebCortex.pdf
    3 Apr 2017: this process, new electrophysiology studies in the macaquemonkey have shown that conflict-sensitive neurons are indeedobserved in the monkey ACC when the task is designed in sucha way as to elicit ... optimalperformance. Lesion studies in the macaque
  41. jcn99757 932..948

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Gilbert2006%20JOCN.pdf
    14 Jun 2006: Functional Specialization within Rostral PrefrontalCortex (Area 10): A Meta-analysis. Sam J. Gilbert1, Stephanie Spengler1, Jon S. Simons1,J. Douglas Steele2, Stephen M. Lawrie3, Christopher D. Frith1,. and Paul W. Burgess1. Abstract. & One of the
  42. doi:10.1016/S1053-8119(03)00096-X

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2003%20NeuroImage.pdf
    19 Jul 2003: exemplars is a reliable outcome, andcan be reproduced in a new experiment.
  43. oup_cercor_bhw417 888..902 ++

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Cooper2017%20CerebCortex.pdf
    3 Apr 2017: 2004; Cooper et al. 2016), oridentifying similar items as old or new (Cooper et al.
  44. XGE-2023-0878 200..223

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Gellersen2024%20JEPG.pdf
    22 Jan 2024: Second, capitalizing on our new experi-mental paradigm, we aim to examine the trial-by-trial relationshipbetween item and contextual memory fidelity. ... Precision Memory Task. We designed a new paradigm to assess different aspects of mem-ory fidelity,
  45. Meta-analytic Evidence for the Plurality of Mechanisms in…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Rollins2019%20EClinMed.pdf
    20 Mar 2019: EClinicalMedicine 8 (2019) 57–71. Contents lists available at ScienceDirect. EClinicalMedicinejournal homepage: https://www.journals.elsevier.com/. eclinicalmedicine. Research Paper. Meta-analytic Evidence for the Plurality of Mechanisms in
  46. jcn01770 2328..2341

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Korkki2021%20JOCN.pdf
    8 Oct 2021: new, remember/know),thus providing novel insight into the encoding mecha-nisms supporting the acquisition of precise episodicmemories.
  47. Healthy Ageing Reduces the Precision of Episodic Memory Retrieval ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Korkki2020%20PsychAging.pdf
    28 Jan 2020: not (“new”). ... Despite often preservedability to recognize studied items as previously encountered, and toidentify dissimilar novel items as new, older adults are also typi-cally impaired in mnemonic discrimination of studied items fromperceptually
  48. Prefrontal control of attention to threat

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Peers2013%20FrontHumNeurosci.pdf
    5 Feb 2013: ORIGINAL RESEARCH ARTICLEpublished: 05 February 2013. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00024. Prefrontal control of attention to threatPolly V. Peers1, Jon S. Simons 2 and Andrew D. Lawrence1,3. 1 MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UK2
  49. Neurocase(1999) Vol. 5, pp. 379–406 ©Oxford University Press 1999 ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons1999%20Neurocase.pdf
    12 Jan 2001: New York: Hoeber, 1946. Otsuki M, Soma Y, Sato M, Homma A, Tsuji S.
  50. PII: S0028-3932(01)00155-5

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Nestor2002%20Neuropsygia.pdf
    14 Jan 2002: More specifically, the hippocampalcomplex helps bind together activated neocortical com-ponents of a recently experienced event and is, there-fore, initially critical for the retrieval of new memories.Over time, repeated ... The patients in the early
  51. The Effects of Hippocampal Lesions on MRI Measures of Structural and…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Henson2016%20Hippocampus.pdf
    19 Oct 2016: Case histories and previous cognitiveassessments are described below; the new neuropsychologicaldata acquired for the present study are reported in the Resultssection. ... Nonetheless, shehad difficulty orienting to new environments, and demonstrat-ed

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