Literature DB >> 15949520

Disordered memory awareness: recollective confabulation in two cases of persistent déjà vecu.

Christopher J A Moulin1, Martin A Conway, Rebecca G Thompson, Niamh James, Roy W Jones.   

Abstract

We describe two cases of false recognition in patients with dementia and diffuse temporal lobe pathology who report their memory difficulty as being one of persistent déjà vecu--the sensation that they have lived through the present moment before. On a number of recognition tasks, the patients were found to have high levels of false positives. They also made a large number of guess responses but otherwise appeared metacognitively intact. Informal reports suggested that the episodes of déjà vecu were characterised by sensations similar to those present when the past is recollectively experienced in normal remembering. Two further experiments found that both patients had high levels of recollective experience for items they falsely recognized. Most strikingly, they were likely to recollectively experience incorrectly recognised low frequency words, suggesting that their false recognition was not driven by familiarity processes or vague sensations of having encountered events and stimuli before. Importantly, both patients made reasonable justifications for their false recognitions both in the experiments and in their everyday lives and these we term 'recollective confabulation'. Thus, the patients are characterised by false recognition, overextended recollective experience, and recollective confabulation. These features are accounted for in terms of disrupted control of memory awareness and recollective states, possibly following brain damage to fronto-temporal circuits and we extend this account to normally and abnormally occurring states of déjà vu and vecu and related memory experiences.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15949520     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2004.12.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  9 in total

Review 1.  Recognition without identification, erroneous familiarity, and déjà vu.

Authors:  Akira R O'Connor; Chris J A Moulin
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2010-06       Impact factor: 5.285

Review 2.  Memory distortion: an adaptive perspective.

Authors:  Daniel L Schacter; Scott A Guerin; Peggy L St Jacques
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2011-09-09       Impact factor: 20.229

3.  Cognitive correlates of metamemory in Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Danielle Shaked; Meagan Farrell; Edward Huey; Janet Metcalfe; Sarah Cines; Jason Karlawish; Elizabeth Sullo; Stephanie Cosentino
Journal:  Neuropsychology       Date:  2014-05-12       Impact factor: 3.295

Review 4.  The cognitive neuroscience of constructive memory: remembering the past and imagining the future.

Authors:  Daniel L Schacter; Donna Rose Addis
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2007-05-29       Impact factor: 6.237

5.  The awareness of novelty for strangely familiar words: a laboratory analogue of the déjà vu experience.

Authors:  Josephine A Urquhart; Akira R O'Connor
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2014-11-11       Impact factor: 2.984

6.  Entropy, Amnesia, and Abnormal Déjà Experiences.

Authors:  Lana Frankle
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-07-27

7.  Déjà experiences in temporal lobe epilepsy.

Authors:  Nathan A Illman; Chris R Butler; Celine Souchay; Chris J A Moulin
Journal:  Epilepsy Res Treat       Date:  2012-03-20

Review 8.  Constructive memory: past and future.

Authors:  Daniel L Schacter
Journal:  Dialogues Clin Neurosci       Date:  2012-03       Impact factor: 5.986

9.  Persistent psychogenic déjà vu: a case report.

Authors:  Christine E Wells; Chris J A Moulin; Paige Ethridge; Nathan A Illman; Emma Davies; Adam Zeman
Journal:  J Med Case Rep       Date:  2014-12-08
  9 in total

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