Further dissociating the processes involved in recognition memory: an FMRI study.
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In search of a recognition memory engramNeural Basis of Repetition Priming during Mathematical Cognition: Repetition Suppression or Repetition Enhancement?Unique brain areas associated with abstinence control are damaged in multiply detoxified alcoholics.Distinguishing familiarity-based from source-based memory performance in patients with schizophrenia.Memory retrieval and the parietal cortex: a review of evidence from a dual-process perspective.Modulation of emotional appraisal by false physiological feedback during fMRI.Correlations between fMRI activation and individual psychotic symptoms in un-medicated subjects at high genetic risk of schizophrenia.Allelic variation of calsyntenin 2 (CLSTN2) modulates the impact of developmental tobacco smoke exposure on mnemonic processing in adolescents.The hippocampus is coupled with the default network during memory retrieval but not during memory encoding.Retrieval search and strength evoke dissociable brain activity during episodic memory recall.Repetition Enhancement of Amygdala and Visual Cortex Functional Connectivity Reflects Nonconscious Memory for Negative Visual Stimuli.Influence of emotional expression on memory recognition bias in schizophrenia as revealed by fMRI.The neural substrates of memory suppression: a FMRI exploration of directed forgetting.An fMRI investigation of posttraumatic flashbacks.What goes down must come up: role of the posteromedial cortices in encoding and retrieval.Time to go our separate ways: opposite effects of study duration on priming and recognition reveal distinct neural substrates.Increased functional connectivity between dorsal posterior parietal and ventral occipitotemporal cortex during uncertain memory decisionsCommon and unique neural activations in autobiographical, episodic, and semantic retrieval.Recognition memory and the medial temporal lobe: a new perspective.Dissociable temporo-parietal memory networks revealed by functional connectivity during episodic retrieval.Alcohol affects neuronal substrates of response inhibition but not of perceptual processing of stimuli signalling a stop response.BDNF val66met polymorphism affects aging of multiple types of memory.Neural correlates of recognition memory in children with febrile seizures: evidence from functional magnetic resonance imagingDissociation of the neural correlates of recognition memory according to familiarity, recollection, and amount of recollected information.Brain activation during associative short-term memory maintenance is not predictive for subsequent retrievalFunctional significance of striatal responses during episodic decisions: recovery or goal attainment?Brain activation patterns during visual episodic memory processing among first-degree relatives of schizophrenia subjectsDevelopmental differences in the neural correlates of relational encoding and recall in children: an event-related fMRI study.Acute alcohol effects on attentional bias are mediated by subcortical areas associated with arousal and salience attribution.Don't be Too Strict with Yourself! Rigid Negative Self-Representation in Healthy Subjects Mimics the Neurocognitive Profile of Depression for Autobiographical Memory.Posterior parietal cortex and episodic retrieval: convergent and divergent effects of attention and memoryPosterior midline and ventral parietal activity is associated with retrieval success and encoding failureNeural substrates of successful working memory and long-term memory formation in a relational spatial memory task.Conscious processing during retrieval can occur in early and late visual regions.EPS Mid-Career Award 2011. Are there multiple memory systems? Tests of models of implicit and explicit memory.Memory effects of speech and gesture binding: cortical and hippocampal activation in relation to subsequent memory performance.FMRI hypoactivation during verbal learning and memory in former high school football players with multiple concussions.Voluntary explicit versus involuntary conceptual memory are associated with dissociable fMRI responses in hippocampus, amygdala, and parietal cortex for emotional and neutral word pairs.Neural mechanisms underlying the reward-related enhancement of motivation when remembering episodic memories with high difficulty.Transcranial direct current stimulation over the parietal cortex alters bias in item and source memory tasks.
P2860
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P2860
Further dissociating the processes involved in recognition memory: an FMRI study.
description
2005 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2005年の論文
@ja
2005年論文
@yue
2005年論文
@zh-hant
2005年論文
@zh-hk
2005年論文
@zh-mo
2005年論文
@zh-tw
2005年论文
@wuu
2005年论文
@zh
2005年论文
@zh-cn
name
Further dissociating the processes involved in recognition memory: an FMRI study.
@en
type
label
Further dissociating the processes involved in recognition memory: an FMRI study.
@en
prefLabel
Further dissociating the processes involved in recognition memory: an FMRI study.
@en
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
Further dissociating the processes involved in recognition memory: an FMRI study.
@en
P2093
Michael D Rugg
Michael Hornberger
Richard N A Henson
P2860
P304
P356
10.1162/0898929054475208
P577
2005-07-01T00:00:00Z