Journal Article10.1016/J.CORTEX.2012.10.003
Functional independence within the self-memory system: new insights from two cases of developmental amnesia.
Laurence Picard,Claire Mayor-Dubois,Philippe Maeder,Sandrine Kalenzaga,Sandrine Kalenzaga,Maria Abram,Céline Duval,Francis Eustache,Eliane Roulet-Perez,Pascale Piolino +9 more
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TL;DR: These two new cases support a modular account of the medial-temporal lobe with episodic memory and recollection depending on the hippocampus, and semantic memory and familiarity on adjacent cortices, and highlight developmental episodic and semantic functional independence within the self-memory system.
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About: This article is published in Cortex. The article was published on 01 Jun 2013. The article focuses on the topics: Semantic memory & Episodic memory.
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Citations
Memory reconsolidation, emotional arousal, and the process of change in psychotherapy: New insights from brain science.
TL;DR: The core idea of this paper is that therapeutic change in a variety of modalities, including behavioral therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, emotion-focused therapy, and psychodynamic psychotherapy, results from the updating of prior emotional memories through a process of reconsolidation that incorporates new emotional experiences.
Why do we remember? the communicative function of episodic memory
Johannes B. Mahr,Gergely Csibra +1 more
TL;DR: It is argued that episodic memory should be understood as a distinctive epistemic attitude taken toward an event simulation and has a metarepresentational format and should not be equated with beliefs about the past.
Severely deficient autobiographical memory (SDAM) in healthy adults: A new mnemonic syndrome
TL;DR: Three healthy, high functioning adults with the reverse pattern: lifelong severely deficient autobiographical memory (SDAM) with otherwise preserved cognitive function are reported: these individuals function normally in day-to-day life, even though their past is experienced in the absence of recollection.
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Sameness and the self: philosophical and psychological considerations
TL;DR: To achieve a successful resolution of the issue of the self as a temporal continuant the authors need to draw a sharp distinction between the feeling of the sameness of one's self and the evidence marshaled in support of that feeling.
Item-location binding in working memory: Is it hippocampus-dependent?
TL;DR: Findings indicate a clear dissociation between working memory and long-term memory, with no evidence for a critical hippocampal contribution to item-location binding in working memory.
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