Iris Trinkler
University College London
10 Papers
41 Citations
Iris Trinkler is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Episodic memory & Recognition memory. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 10 publications. Previous affiliations of Iris Trinkler include École Normale Supérieure & French Institute of Health and Medical Research.
Chat about Author
Papers
Feeling of presence in Parkinson's disease.
Gilles Fénelon,Thierry Soulas,Laurent Cleret de Langavant,Iris Trinkler,Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi +4 more
TL;DR: Although FP is not a sensory perception, projection of the sensation into the extrapersonal space, along with the frequent co-occurrence of elementary visual hallucinations and the strong association with visual hallucinations or illusions, supports its hallucinatory nature.
112
Neural bases of autobiographical support for episodic recollection of faces.
Iris Trinkler,John A. King,Christian F. Doeller,Christian F. Doeller,Michael D. Rugg,Neil Burgess,Neil Burgess +6 more
TL;DR: The results indicate a dissociation between the involvement of retrosplenial vs. mid/posterior cingulate and precuneus in memory tasks and that, during recognition memory experiments, the hippocampus supports incidental retrieval of pre‐experimental knowledge about the stimuli presented.
66
Heterotopagnosia: When I point at parts of your body.
Laurent Cleret de Langavant,Iris Trinkler,Iris Trinkler,Pierre Cesaro,Pierre Cesaro,Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi +5 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that heterotopagnosia is a disorder of communicative function conveyed by pointing but not by grasping is supported and it is suggested that communicative pointing might require a specific representation of the addressee's body and point of view, a heterocentric representation.
39
•Book Chapter
Part or parcel? Contextual binding of events in episodic memory
Iris Trinkler,John A. King,Hugo J. Spiers,Neil Burgess +3 more
- 01 Jan 2006
TL;DR: This chapter investigates the binding of the context of an event with the event's content in episodic memory using a computer-based virtual reality paradigm involving pseudo-realistic simulated events and argues against the idea that whole events are the units of episodi memory.
21
Viewing another person's body as a target object: a behavioural and PET study of pointing.
Laurent Cleret de Langavant,Iris Trinkler,Iris Trinkler,Philippe Remy,Philippe Remy,Bérangère Thirioux,Joseph McIntyre,Alain Berthoz,Emmanuel Dupoux,Emmanuel Dupoux,Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi +10 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that the specificity of pointing at another person's body goes beyond the visuo-spatial features of the human body and might rather rely on its communicative capacity.
21