نتایج جستجو برای: memory strength

تعداد نتایج: 460559  

Journal: :international journal of behavioral science 0
alireza moradi department of clinical psychology, faculty of psychology and educational sciences, university of kharazmi, tehran, iran bita afsardeir department of clinical psychology, faculty of psychology and educational sciences, university of science and culture, tehran, iran hadi parhoon department of clinical psychology, faculty of psychology and educational sciences, university of kharazmi, tehran, iran haleh sanaei 4department of clinical psychology, faculty of psychology and educational sciences university of shiraz (international division), shiraz, iran

introduction: this study aims to compare the cognitive performance of patients with multiple sclerosis (ms) in the field of autobiographical, prospective and working memory compared to normal people. method: in a causal-comparative study using convenience sampling 200 patients with ms (100 were affected less and 100 were affected more than 2 years (and 100 healthy individuals were matched regar...

Journal: :Attention, perception & psychophysics 2012
Paul S Mattson Lisa R Fournier Lawrence P Behmer

We investigated whether binding among perception and action feature codes is a preliminary step toward creating a more durable memory trace of an action event. If so, increasing the frequency of a particular event (e.g., a stimulus requiring a movement with the left or right hand in an up or down direction) should increase the strength and speed of feature binding for this event. The results fr...

Journal: :Psychological review 2007
Daniel R Kimball Troy A Smith Michael J Kahana

The authors report a new theory of false memory building upon existing associative memory models and implemented in fSAM, the first fully specified quantitative model of false recall. Participants frequently intrude unstudied critical words while recalling lists comprising their strongest semantic associates but infrequently produce other extralist and prior-list intrusions. The authors develop...

2013
David E. Huber Heidi E. Ziemer Richard M. Shiffrin Kim Marinelli

Recognition of an item from a list is typically modeled by assuming that the representations of the items are activated in parallel and combined or summed into a single measure (sometimes termed 'familiarity' or 'degree-ofmatch') on which a recognition decision is based. The present research asks whether extra items (length), or extra repetitions (strength), increase this activation measure. Ac...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2015
Thomas Niewalda Birgit Michels Roswitha Jungnickel Sören Diegelmann Jörg Kleber Thilo Kähne Bertram Gerber

Adverse life events can induce two kinds of memory with opposite valence, dependent on timing: "negative" memories for stimuli preceding them and "positive" memories for stimuli experienced at the moment of "relief." Such punishment memory and relief memory are found in insects, rats, and man. For example, fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) avoid an odor after odor-shock training ("forward c...

Journal: :Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience 2008
Martin Wiesmann Alumit Ishai

We used event-related fMRI to investigate whether recollection- and familiarity-based memory judgments are modulated by the degree of visual similarity between old and new art paintings. Subjects performed a flower detection task, followed by a Remember/Know/New surprise memory test. The old paintings were randomly presented with new paintings, which were either visually similar or visually dif...

Journal: :Memory & cognition 1991
K Murnane R M Shiffrin

When some items on a list are strengthened by extra study time or repetitions, recognition of other, unrelated, list items is not harmed (Ratcliff, Clark, & Shiffrin, 1990). Shiffrin, Ratcliff, and Clark (1990) accounted for this list-strength finding with a model assuming that different items are stored separately in memory, but that repetitions are accumulated together into a single stronger ...

Journal: :Memory & cognition 2012
Jeffrey J Starns Corey N White Roger Ratcliff

Criss (Cognitive Psychology 59:297-319, 2009) reported that subjective ratings of memory strength showed a mirror effect pattern in which strengthening the studied words increased ratings for targets and decreased ratings for lures. She interpreted the effect on lure items as evidence for differentiation, a process whereby lures produce a poorer match to strong than to weak memory traces. Howev...

2017
Michael J. Kahana Mark Adler

Power functions (e.g., f(t) = at) describe the relationships among many variables observed in nature. One example of this is the power law of forgetting: The decline in memory performance with time or intervening events is well fit by a power function. This simple functional relationship accounts for a great deal of accumulated data. In this note, we consider a simple yet general memory model i...

Journal: :Brain research. Cognitive brain research 2005
Greig I de Zubicaray Katie L McMahon Matthew M Eastburn Simon Finnigan Michael S Humphreys

We used event-related fMRI to investigate the neural correlates of encoding strength and word frequency effects in recognition memory. At test, participants made Old/New decisions to intermixed low (LF) and high frequency (HF) words that had been presented once or twice at study and to new, unstudied words. The Old/New effect for all hits vs. correctly rejected unstudied words was associated wi...

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