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Abstract Recognition memory is perhaps the simplest and most widely studied measure of episodic memory. Behavioral and neural studies have examined a variety of different types of recognition tasks and shown that recognition judgments can be based on two functionally and neurally separable processes (i.e., the recollection of qualitative
Andrew P. Yonelinas +2 more
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Andrew P. Yonelinas +2 more
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Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 1992
Recent years have seen an expanded interest in recognition memory tasks. This resurgence of interest has also renewed concerns with measurement problems. Comparing 4 models of recognition memory, Snodgrass and Corwin (1988) found that measures of bias from the distribution-free (nonparametric) model were inadequate. However, their analysis was based on
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Recent years have seen an expanded interest in recognition memory tasks. This resurgence of interest has also renewed concerns with measurement problems. Comparing 4 models of recognition memory, Snodgrass and Corwin (1988) found that measures of bias from the distribution-free (nonparametric) model were inadequate. However, their analysis was based on
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Clathrin proteins and recognition memory
Neuroscience, 1997Strong converging evidence indicates that the intermediate and medial part of the hyperstriatum ventrale (IMHV) of the chick forebrain is a site of recognition memory for the learning process of imprinting. Clathrin proteins have been implicated in synaptic plasticity.
R O, Solomonia +3 more
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Visualizing recognition memory
Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 1999Recognition memory – indicated by the judgment of the familiarity versus the novelty of an event – has been the target of many recent neuropsychological investigations, using a variety of techniques in several different species. Although much progress has been made, there exist between studies significant points of disagreement.
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Tactile Recognition Memory in Infants
Child Development, 1980This experiment was conducted to determine whether infants can recognize the shapes of objects by touch alone. 25 1-year-olds were administered 2 tasks, each of which consisted of a familiarization stage followed by a recognition test stage. The familiarization stage of both tasks was identical in that infants manipulated objects in the light. The test
A W, Gottfried, S A, Rose
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Associative components of recognition memory
Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 2000Recent results indicate that visual recognition memory (as assessed by habituation and dishabituation of the orienting response) is influenced by associative knowledge, and that this influence is mediated by the hippocampus. A standard, associative model of learning has been recently reported to provide a parsimonious explanation for these results.
R C, Honey, M, Good
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Facilitation of Infants' Recognition Memory
Child Development, 1978Infant's recognition memory, defined by novelty preferences, was found to be improved by providing 5--7-month-old infants with discriminable but related targets during the familiarization period. Facilitation of recognition was found for both photos of faces and for abstract patterns.
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Object recognition memory in zebrafish
Behavioural Brain Research, 2016The novel object recognition, or novel-object preference (NOP) test is employed to assess recognition memory in a variety of organisms. The subject is exposed to two identical objects, then after a delay, it is placed back in the original environment containing one of the original objects and a novel object.
Zacnicte, May +7 more
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Recognition memory in alzheimer's disease
Neurobiology of Aging, 1985Recognition memory for several types of stimulus material was examined in patients clinically diagnosed as having early Alzheimer's disease and in normal elderly controls. Although performance deficits were demonstrated for verbal and abstract stimuli (geometric shapes and histology slides), memory for faces was relatively intact in the patient group ...
S A, Hart, C M, Smith, M, Swash
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Disordered recognition memory: Recollective confabulation
Cortex, 2013Recollective confabulation (RC) is encountered as a conviction that a present moment is a repetition of one experienced previously, combined with the retrieval of confabulated specifics to support that assertion. It is often described as persistent déjà vu by family members and caregivers. On formal testing, patients with RC tend to produce a very high
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