Attention and successful episodic encoding: an event-related potential study.
about
The effect of anticipation and the specificity of sex differences for amygdala and hippocampus function in emotional memoryWhy do beliefs about intelligence influence learning success? A social cognitive neuroscience modelAttention demands of language production in adults who stutterAvailable processing resources influence encoding-related brain activity before an event.Eye movements predict recollective experience.Predicting conversion to dementia of the Alzheimer's type in a healthy control sample: the power of errors in Stroop color naming.Neuroelectric evidence for cognitive association formation: an event-related potential investigation.Real-time processing in picture naming in adults who stutter: ERP evidence.Levels of processing: past, present. and future?ERP dynamics underlying successful directed forgetting of neutral but not negative pictures.Emotion blocks the path to learning under stereotype threatConjunction illusions and conjunction fallacies in episodic memory.Cueing effects on semantic and perceptual categorization: ERPs reveal differential effects of validity as a function of processing stage.Fuzzy-Trace Theory and Lifespan Cognitive Development.Rumination and Rebound from Failure as a Function of Gender and Time on TaskDistinct patterns of neural activity during memory formation of nonwords versus words.The effects of an acute psychosocial stressor on episodic memorySensorimotor simulation and emotion processing: Impairing facial action increases semantic retrieval demands.On the processing of semantic aspects of experience in the anterior medial temporal lobe: an event-related fMRI study.EEG activity underlying successful study of associative and order information.Fractionation of the component processes underlying successful episodic encoding: a combined fMRI and divided-attention study.Effects of level of processing but not of task enactment on recognition memory in a case of developmental amnesia.Transferring voice effects in recognition memory from remembering to knowing.Production benefits both recollection and familiarity.Spatial metaphor processing during temporal sequencing comprehension.The influence of recollection and familiarity in the formation and updating of associative representations.Familiarity, but not recollection, supports the between-subject production effect in recognition memory.Stuck in the past: neural events that predict intrusions from prior trials.Event-related potentials during encoding: Comparing unitization to relational processing.Mismaking memories: neural precursors of memory illusions in electrical brain activity.The component structure of ERP subsequent memory effects in the Von Restorff paradigm and the word frequency effect in recall.Verbal Learning and Memory in Cannabis and Alcohol Users: An Event-Related Potential Investigation.Electrophysiological Anomalies in Face-Name Memory Encoding in Young Binge Drinkers.Evidence that disrupted orienting to evaluative social feedback undermines error correction in rejection sensitive women.The neural fate of neutral information in emotion-enhanced memory.Masked repetition priming hinders subsequent recollection but not familiarity: A behavioral and event-related potential study.Manipulating the focus of attention in working memory: Evidence for a protection of multiple items against perceptual interference.Age-related changes in the control of episodic retrieval: an ERP study of recognition memory in children and adults.An electrophysiological investigation of preparatory attentional control in a spatial Stroop task.Feedback-related brain activity predicts learning from feedback in multiple-choice testing.
P2860
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P2860
Attention and successful episodic encoding: an event-related potential study.
description
2001 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2001年の論文
@ja
2001年学术文章
@wuu
2001年学术文章
@zh
2001年学术文章
@zh-cn
2001年学术文章
@zh-hans
2001年学术文章
@zh-my
2001年学术文章
@zh-sg
2001年學術文章
@yue
2001年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Attention and successful episodic encoding: an event-related potential study.
@en
Attention and successful episodic encoding: an event-related potential study.
@nl
type
label
Attention and successful episodic encoding: an event-related potential study.
@en
Attention and successful episodic encoding: an event-related potential study.
@nl
prefLabel
Attention and successful episodic encoding: an event-related potential study.
@en
Attention and successful episodic encoding: an event-related potential study.
@nl
P1476
Attention and successful episodic encoding: an event-related potential study.
@en
P2093
P356
10.1016/S0926-6410(00)00066-5
P577
2001-03-01T00:00:00Z