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  2. The Effects of Hippocampal Lesions on MRI Measures of Structural and…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Henson2016%20Hippocampus.pdf
    19 Oct 2016: 6). 24. 812. 53/. 4.44. (57). 2. 3.32. 2.31. /3. 99(5. ... 79). 21. 590. 97/. 1.24. (79). 20. 851. 03/. 1.17. (88).
  3. Brain Mechanisms Underlying the Subjective Experience of Remembering

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2022%20ARP.pdf
    4 Jan 2022: Annual Review of Psychology. Brain Mechanisms Underlyingthe Subjective Experience ofRememberingJon S. Simons,1 Maureen Ritchey,2. and Charles Fernyhough31Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EB, United Kingdom;email:
  4. Healthy Ageing Reduces the Precision of Episodic Memory Retrieval ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Korkki2020%20PsychAging.pdf
    28 Jan 2020: Participants completed 24 location retrieval trials ineach block. Both encoding and retrieval trials were separated by acentral fixation cross of 1 s. ... 872Rey-Osterrieth complex figure immediate 24.82 (5.53) 19.20 (7.59). 008Rey-Osterrieth complex
  5. RECOGNITION-INDUCED UPDATING OF FACE MEMORIES 1 Active Recognition…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Plummer2021%20PsyArXiv.pdf
    25 Oct 2021: RECOGNITION-INDUCED UPDATING OF FACE MEMORIES. 24. choose aspects of their learning experience even when those choices are irrelevant for later.
  6. Event-related potential evidence for separable automatic and…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Bergstrom2012%20BrainRes.pdf
    30 Apr 2012: Article history:Accepted 18 March 2012Available online 24 March 2012. Interference between competing memories is a major source of retrieval failure, yet,surprisingly little is known about how competitive memory activation ... 4. Experimental procedures.
  7. Long-Term Memory for the Terrorist Attack of September 11:Flashbulb…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Hirst2009%20JEPG.pdf
    12 May 2009: Walking around to see what you could see ___(i) Other ___. Demographics 24. Home of origin?25. Permanent residence? 165LONG-TERM RETENTION OF FLASHBULB MEMORIES. ... 05, d. 24, adifference also found by Pezdek (2003). Inasmuch as our differ-ence did not
  8. Executive function and high ambiguity perceptual discrimination…

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Gellersen2021%20Cognition.pdf
    12 Jan 2021: A total of 60 trials were included in each task, 36 of which belonged to the high and 24 to the low ambiguity condition. ... 42, p<.001, ηp2=0.24) confirmed that age-related differences in the Yes/No test were driven by an increase in false alarms
  9. Memory and Emotions for the September 11, 2001, Terrorist ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Budson2004%20Neuropsy.pdf
    26 Apr 2004: 0005. The three-way interaction was notsignificant, F(10, 315) 1.24, MSE 0.721, p. ... 05. 03. 03. Total. 24 1.00. 68 1.00. 81 1.00Factual recognition.
  10. Multimodal imaging reveals the spatiotemporal dynamics of recollection

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Bergstrom2013%20NeuroImage.pdf
    18 Mar 2013: 39 8 52 34 4.63 5.7Right Middle frontal gyrus 9 42 32 31 32 3.97 4.09Left Superior frontal gyrus 10 24 56 2 19 3.79 ... cingulate cortex24 6 23 5 13 3.72. Right Superior frontalgyrus. 8 24 11 49 11 3.7.
  11. Neurocase (2000) Vol. 6, pp. 211—230 © Oxford University ...

    www.memlab.psychol.cam.ac.uk/pubs/Simons2000%20Neurocase.pdf
    12 Jan 2001: Shrinkage of anterogradeterm perceptual priming during an acute episode of apparent total lossand retrograde memory loss was plotted at four separate intervals throughoutof memory.the acute recovery process, and also 24

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