Showing 1 - 7 results of 7 for search '"Remember Then"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
  1. 1

    The neural correlates of everyday recognition memory. by Milton, F, Muhlert, N, Butler, C, Benattayallah, A, Zeman, A

    Published 2011
    “…We used a novel automatic camera, SenseCam, to create a recognition memory test for real-life events. Adapting a 'Remember/Know' paradigm, we asked healthy undergraduates, who wore SenseCam for 2 days, in their everyday environments, to classify images as strongly or weakly remembered, strongly or weakly familiar or novel, while brain activation was recorded with functional MRI. …”
    Journal article
  2. 2

    An fMRI study of long-term everyday memory using SenseCam. by Milton, F, Muhlert, N, Butler, C, Smith, A, Benattayallah, A, Zeman, A

    Published 2011
    “…Using fMRI we assessed recollection and familiarity memory using the remember/know procedure. Recollection evoked no medial temporal lobe (MTL) activation compared to familiarity and new responses. …”
    Journal article
  3. 3

    Brief wakeful resting boosts new memories over the long term. by Dewar, M, Alber, J, Butler, C, Cowan, N, Della Sala, S

    Published 2012
    “…The degree to which people can remember prose after 7 days is significantly affected by the cognitive activity that they engage in shortly after new learning takes place. …”
    Journal article
  4. 4

    An fMRI study of long-term everyday memory using SenseCam by Milton, F, Muhlert, N, Butler, C, Smith, A, Benattayallah, A, Zeman, A

    Published 2011
    “…Using fMRI we assessed recollection and familiarity memory using the remember/know procedure. Recollection evoked no medial temporal lobe (MTL) activation compared to familiarity and new responses. …”
    Journal article
  5. 5

    Binding deficits in memory following medial temporal lobe damage in patients with voltage-gated potassium channel complex antibody-associated limbic encephalitis. by Pertzov, Y, Miller, T, Gorgoraptis, N, Caine, D, Schott, J, Butler, C, Husain, M

    Published 2013
    “…However, in the last decade several investigations have reported that patients with medial temporal lobe damage exhibit an abnormally large number of errors when required to remember visual information over brief intervals. But the nature of the deficit and the type of error associated with medial temporal lobe lesions remains to be fully established. …”
    Journal article
  6. 6

    Self, memory, and imagining the future in a case of psychogenic amnesia. by Rathbone, C, Ellis, J, Baker, I, Butler, C

    Published 2015
    “…Results are discussed with reference to models of self and memory and processes involving remembering and imagining.…”
    Journal article
  7. 7

    Encoding-related brain activity and accelerated forgetting in transient epileptic amnesia by Atherton, K, Filippini, N, Zeman, A, Nobre, A, Butler, C

    Published 2018
    “…Furthermore, patients demonstrated reduced deactivation of posteromedial cortex regions upon viewing subsequently remembered stimuli as compared to subsequently forgotten ones. …”
    Journal article