Results 321 to 330 of about 1,730,842 (369)

Autobiographical memory

Memory, 2020
Our autobiographical memory contains memories of events that have occurred during the course of our lifetime. It can be divided into episodic and semantic memories.
Michael C. Anderson
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

The effect of tourists’ autobiographical memory on revisit intention: does nostalgia promote revisiting?

, 2020
The phenomenon of tourist revisiting has attracted attention because of its economic benefits to tourist destinations. Under the guidance of the Stimuli–Organism–Response framework, this research considers travel photographs as stimuli, the relationships
Xingtai Zhang, Zhigan Chen, Hongyan Jin
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Autobiographical Memory

Encyclopedia of Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2019
Our autobiographical memory contains memories of events that have occurred during the course of our lifetime. It can be divided into episodic and semantic memories.
Robyn Fivush
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Errors in autobiographical memory

Clinical Psychology Review, 1998
Memory is always constructive. People create the past based on the information that remains in memory, their general knowledge, and the social demands of the retrieval situation. Thus, memories will often contain some small errors and occasionally some large errors.
Ira E. Hyman, Elizabeth F. Loftus
openaire   +3 more sources

Predictors of age-related and individual variability in autobiographical memory in childhood

Memory, 2019
Development of autobiographical memory is as a gradual process beginning in early childhood and continuing through late adolescence. Substantial attention has been paid to early childhood when first personal memories are formed; less attention has been ...
P. Bauer, M. Larkina
semanticscholar   +1 more source

On the origins of autobiographical memory

Behavioural Brain Research, 2003
Tolving argues that one form of explicit memory, autobiographical memory is uniquely human and has no nonhuman animal antecedents. We suggest that a form of memory used by humans and nonhuman animals, dead reckoning, shares a common limbic structure, including the cingulate cortex and hippocampus, and involves similar processes in recognition of self ...
Douglas G. Wallace, Ian Q. Whishaw
openaire   +3 more sources

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