Literature DB >> 8817460

Confabulation and the control of recollection.

P W Burgess1, T Shallice.   

Abstract

It is argued that current models of memory do not adequately account for the confabulations that are found in the recall of certain neurological patients. A model of the relation between control processes and memory involved in recalling autobiographical episodes is put forward. It is based on detailed analysis of the protocols of healthy volunteers' autobiographical recollections of recent everyday events. It is held that damage to different components of the model fits with the different patterns of performance found in confabulators, and examples of the errors that confabulators make are discussed in terms of those made by normal subjects.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8817460     DOI: 10.1080/096582196388906

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Memory        ISSN: 0965-8211


  60 in total

1.  Recollection and familiarity in recognition memory: an event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging study.

Authors:  R N Henson; M D Rugg; T Shallice; O Josephs; R J Dolan
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  1999-05-15       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Electrophysiological dissociation of retrieval orientation and retrieval effort.

Authors:  William G K Robb; Michael D Rugg
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2002-09

3.  Hippocampal function in healthy carriers of the CLU Alzheimer's disease risk variant.

Authors:  Susanne Erk; Andreas Meyer-Lindenberg; Carola Opitz von Boberfeld; Christine Esslinger; Knut Schnell; Peter Kirsch; Manuel Mattheisen; Thomas W Mühleisen; Sven Cichon; Stephanie H Witt; Marcella Rietschel; Markus M Nöthen; Henrik Walter
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2011-12-07       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  The false memory syndrome: experimental studies and comparison to confabulations.

Authors:  M F Mendez; I A Fras
Journal:  Med Hypotheses       Date:  2010-12-21       Impact factor: 1.538

5.  Routes to the past: neural substrates of direct and generative autobiographical memory retrieval.

Authors:  Donna Rose Addis; Katie Knapp; Reece P Roberts; Daniel L Schacter
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2011-10-06       Impact factor: 6.556

6.  Distinct roles for lateral and medial anterior prefrontal cortex in contextual recollection.

Authors:  Jon S Simons; Sam J Gilbert; Adrian M Owen; Paul C Fletcher; Paul W Burgess
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2005-02-23       Impact factor: 2.714

Review 7.  Functional neuroanatomy of remote episodic, semantic and spatial memory: a unified account based on multiple trace theory.

Authors:  Morris Moscovitch; R Shayna Rosenbaum; Asaf Gilboa; Donna Rose Addis; Robyn Westmacott; Cheryl Grady; Mary Pat McAndrews; Brian Levine; Sandra Black; Gordon Winocur; Lynn Nadel
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 2.610

8.  The functional neuroanatomy of autobiographical memory: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Eva Svoboda; Margaret C McKinnon; Brian Levine
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2006-06-27       Impact factor: 3.139

Review 9.  Real-world cognitive--and metacognitive--dysfunction in schizophrenia: a new approach for measuring (and remediating) more "right stuff".

Authors:  Danny Koren; Larry J Seidman; Morris Goldsmith; Phillip D Harvey
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2006-01-05       Impact factor: 9.306

10.  Stress Disrupts Human Hippocampal-Prefrontal Function during Prospective Spatial Navigation and Hinders Flexible Behavior.

Authors:  Thackery I Brown; Stephanie A Gagnon; Anthony D Wagner
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2020-04-02       Impact factor: 10.834

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