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1
Artificial Subjectivity: Personal Semantic Memory Model for Cognitive Agents
In: Applied Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 4; Pages: 1903 (2022)
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2
Are multi-modal lexical representations forgotten in an all-or-none manner? ...
Crowley, Rebecca. - : Open Science Framework, 2022
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3
Emerging themes in the development of prospective memory during childhood
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4
Gesturing at Encoding Enhances Episodic Memory Recall for Older Adults.
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5
The limits of episodic encoding of talker voice attributes across diverse voices ...
Clapp, William. - : Open Science Framework, 2021
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6
Internal Validity of Two Promising Methods of Altering Temporal Orientation among Cigarette Smokers
In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health; Volume 18; Issue 23; Pages: 12601 (2021)
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7
Spatial cognition in landscape designations in the area of the Old European Hydronymy
Lühr, Rosemarie. - : Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, 2021
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8
Are multi-modal lexical representations retrieved in an all-or-none manner? ...
Crowley, Rebecca. - : Open Science Framework, 2021
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9
Lexical Association Technic - Autobiographical stimulation ...
NIVEAU, Noémie. - : Open Science Framework, 2021
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10
Data for: Rethinking Bilingual Enhancement and Dominance Effects in Associative Learning of Foreign Language Vocabulary: The Role of Proficiency in the Mediating Language ...
Francis, Wendy. - : Mendeley, 2020
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11
Data for: Rethinking Bilingual Enhancement and Dominance Effects in Associative Learning of Foreign Language Vocabulary: The Role of Proficiency in the Mediating Language ...
Francis, Wendy. - : Mendeley, 2020
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12
The neural underpinnings of shared meaning between speakers and listeners of naturalistic language ...
Heidlmayr, Karin; Weber, Kirsten; Takashima, Atsuko. - : Radboud University, 2020
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13
An item's status in semantic memory determines how it is recognized : dissociable patterns of brain activity observed for famous and unfamiliar faces
Abstract: This work was supported by a grant from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, United Kingdom (BB/L023644/1). ; Are all faces recognized in the same way, or does previous experience with a face change how it is retrieved? Previous research using human scalp-recorded Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) demonstrates that recognition memory can produce dissociable brain signals under a variety of circumstances. While many studies have reported dissociations between the putative ‘dual processes’ of familiarity and recollection, a growing number of reports demonstrate that recollection itself may be fractionated into component processes. Many recognition memory studies using lexical materials as stimuli have reported a left parietal ERP old/new effect for recollection; however, when unfamiliar faces are recollected, an anterior effect can be observed. This paper addresses two separate hypotheses concerning the functional significance of the anterior old/new effect: perceptual retrieval and semantic status. The perceptual retrieval view is that the anterior effect reflects reinstatement of perceptual information bound up in an episodic representation, while the semantic status view is that information not represented in semantic memory pre-experimentally elicits the anterior effect instead of the left parietal effect. We tested these two competing accounts by investigating recognition memory for unfamiliar faces and famous faces in two separate experiments, in which same or different pictures of studied faces were presented as test items to permit brain activity associated with retrieving face and perceptual information to be examined independently. The difference in neural activity between same and different picture hits was operationalized as a pattern of activation associated with perceptual retrieval; while the contrast between different picture hits and correct rejection of new faces was assumed to reflect face retrieval. In Experiment 1, using unfamiliar faces, the anterior old/new effect (500–700 ms) was observed for face retrieval but not for perceptual retrieval, challenging the perceptual retrieval hypothesis. In Experiment 2, using famous faces, face retrieval was associated with a left parietal effect (500–700 ms), supporting the semantic representation hypothesis. A between-subjects analysis comparing scalp topography across the two experiments found that the anterior effect observed for unfamiliar faces is dissociable from the left parietal effect found for famous faces. This pattern of results supports the hypothesis that ; Publisher PDF ; Peer reviewed
Keyword: Behavioral Neuroscience; Cognitive Neuroscience; Episodic memory; ERPs; Experimental and Cognitive Psychology; Face recognition; NDAS; RC0321; RC0321 Neuroscience. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry; Recognition memory; Recollection; Semantic memory
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10023/19400
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2018.08.004
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14
Towards a model-theoretic framework for describing the semantic aspects of cognitive processes
In: ADCAIJ: Advances in Distributed Computing and Artificial Intelligence Journal; Vol. 8 No. 4 (2019); 83-96 ; ADCAIJ: Advances in Distributed Computing and Artificial Intelligence Journal; Vol. 8 Núm. 4 (2019); 83-96 ; 2255-2863 ; 10.14201/ADCAIJ201984 (2020)
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15
Disentangling bare nouns and nominals introduced by a partitive article
Ihsane, Tabea. - : Brill (Leiden, 2020. : Boston), 2020
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16
On the Nature of Everyday Prospection: A Review and Theoretical Integration of Research on Mind-Wandering, Future Thinking, and Prospective Memory
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17
On the Nature of Everyday Prospection: A Review and Theoretical Integration of Research on Mind-Wandering, Future Thinking, and Prospective Memory
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18
Towards a hybrid model of speech prosody
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19
Animacy and threat in recognition memory
In: UNF Faculty Publications (2020)
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20
Explaining short-term memory phenomena with an integrated episodic/semantic framework of long-term memory
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