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2022
Mental time travel research has given rise to an ongoing debate between causal and simulation theories of memory, which has, in turn, triggered a debate between continuist and discontinuist views of the relationship between remembering experienced past events and imagining possible future events.
Perrin, Denis +3 more
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Mental time travel research has given rise to an ongoing debate between causal and simulation theories of memory, which has, in turn, triggered a debate between continuist and discontinuist views of the relationship between remembering experienced past events and imagining possible future events.
Perrin, Denis +3 more
openaire +4 more sources
Mental time travel in psychiatric disorders
PsyCh Journal, 2023AbstractMental time travel (MTT) refers to the ability to mentally re‐experience the past and pre‐experience the future. Here we briefly review impairments in MTT, its underlying cognitive and neural mechanisms, and ways to improve MTT in psychiatric patients. Future research directions on MTT are discussed.
Ya Wang +3 more
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Mental Time Travel as Self-Affirmation
Personality and Social Psychology Review, 2023Academic Abstract This article integrates and advances the scope of research on the role of mental time travel in bolstering the self. We propose that imagining the self in the future (prospection) or in the past (retrospection) highlights central and positive self-aspects.
Elena Stephan, Constantine Sedikides
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Schizotypy and mental time travel
Consciousness and Cognition, 2010Mental time travel is the capacity to imagine the autobiographical past and future. Schizotypy is a dimensional measure of psychosis-like traits found to be associated with creativity and imagination. Here, we examine the phenomenological qualities of mental time travel in highly schizotypal individuals.
Hannah, Winfield, Sunjeev K, Kamboj
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WIREs Cognitive Science, 2010
AbstractTwelve years on from Suddendorf and Corballis's mental time travel (MTT) hypothesis, the debate as to whether episodic cognition is unique to humans remains unresolved. In this article, we review the evidence for mental time travel in nonhuman animals and the empirical methods used in this field.
Lucy G, Cheke, Nicola S, Clayton
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AbstractTwelve years on from Suddendorf and Corballis's mental time travel (MTT) hypothesis, the debate as to whether episodic cognition is unique to humans remains unresolved. In this article, we review the evidence for mental time travel in nonhuman animals and the empirical methods used in this field.
Lucy G, Cheke, Nicola S, Clayton
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Fellow travellers: Working memory and mental time travel in rodents
The impairment of mental time travel is a severe cognitive symptom in patients with brain lesions and a number of neuropsychiatric disorders. Whether animals are also able to mentally travel in time both forward and backward is still a matter of debate. In this regard, we have proposed a continuum of mental time travel abilities across different animal
Ekrem Dere +2 more
exaly +5 more sources
The comparative study of mental time travel
Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2009People regularly travel through time mentally to remember and reconstruct past events and to anticipate and plan future events. We suggest that a bi-cone structure best describes human mental time travel (MTT) abilities. Experiments with scrub-jays, rats and non-human primates have investigated whether MTT is uniquely human by examining the abilities ...
William A, Roberts, Miranda C, Feeney
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Mental time travel in animals?
Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2003Are humans alone in their ability to reminisce about the past and imagine the future? Recent evidence suggests that food-storing birds (scrub jays) have access to information about what they have stored where and when. This has raised the possibility of mental time travel (MTT) in animals and sparked similar research with other species. Here we caution
Suddendorf, Thomas, Busby, Janie
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