Showing 321 - 340 results of 815 for search '"amnesia"', query time: 0.08s Refine Results
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    A Consilient Approach to Horror Video Games by Mathias Clasen, Jens Kjeldgaard-Christiansen

    Published 2016-10-01
    Subjects: “…We discuss the benefits and pitfalls of such an approach, illustrating our discussion with an analysis of the horror video game Amnesia: The Dark Descent. We argue that recent theoretical and empirical developments in the evolutionary social sciences can make sense of how and why horror games so effectively foster immersion and predictable psychophysiological responses. …”
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    Article
  13. 333

    Rehebbilitating Memory by Ryan, Tomas John, Tonegawa, Susumu

    Published 2018
    “…Amnesia is a deficit of memory function that can result from trauma, stress, disease, drug use, or ageing. …”
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    Article
  14. 334

    Dissociable roles for cortical and subcortical structures in memory retrieval and acquisition by Mitchell, A, Browning, P, Wilson, C, Baxter, MG, Gaffan, D

    Published 2008
    “…The relationship between anterograde and retrograde amnesia remains unclear. Previous data from both clinical neuropsychology and monkey lesion studies suggest that damage to discrete subcortical structures leads to a relatively greater degree of anterograde than retrograde amnesia, whereas damage to discrete regions of cortex leads to the opposite pattern of impairments. …”
    Journal article
  15. 335

    Dissociable roles for cortical and subcortical structures in memory retrieval and acquisition. by Mitchell, A, Browning, P, Wilson, C, Baxter, MG, Gaffan, D

    Published 2008
    “…The relationship between anterograde and retrograde amnesia remains unclear. Previous data from both clinical neuropsychology and monkey lesion studies suggest that damage to discrete subcortical structures leads to a relatively greater degree of anterograde than retrograde amnesia, whereas damage to discrete regions of cortex leads to the opposite pattern of impairments. …”
    Journal article
  16. 336

    Transient amnesic syndromes. by Bartsch, T, Butler, C

    Published 2013
    “…Critical clinical distinctions, such as between transient global amnesia (TGA) and transient epileptic amnesia (TEA), as well as important clues to the underlying pathophysiology, have recently been revealed. …”
    Journal article
  17. 337

    Novel forms of forgetting in temporal lobe epilepsy by Zeman, A, Butler, C, Muhlert, N, Milton, F

    Published 2013
    “…Transient Epileptic Amnesia (TEA) is a recently defined subtype of temporal lobe epilepsy, principally affecting people in middle age with a male predominance. …”
    Journal article
  18. 338

    Novel forms of forgetting in temporal lobe epilepsy. by Zeman, A, Butler, C, Muhlert, N, Milton, F

    Published 2013
    “…Transient Epileptic Amnesia (TEA) is a recently defined subtype of temporal lobe epilepsy, principally affecting people in middle age with a male predominance. …”
    Journal article
  19. 339

    Transient amnesic syndromes by Bartsch, T, Butler, C

    Published 2013
    “…Critical clinical distinctions, such as between transient global amnesia (TGA) and transient epileptic amnesia (TEA), as well as important clues to the underlying pathophysiology, have recently been revealed. …”
    Journal article
  20. 340

    Sensory-specific satiety is intact in amnesics who eat multiple meals. by Higgs, S, Williamson, A, Rotshtein, P, Humphreys, G

    Published 2008
    “…The data suggest that sensory-specific satiety can occur in the absence of explicit memory for having eaten and that impaired sensory-specific satiety does not underlie the phenomenon of multiple-meal eating in amnesia. Overeating in amnesia may be due to disruption of learned control by physiological aftereffects of a recent meal or to problems utilizing internal cues relating to nutritional state.…”
    Journal article