Browsing by Subject "Memory"
Now showing items 1-14 of 14
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Arguing against yourself : exploring the relationship between conflicting episodic memories.
(2015)The current study is an attempt to evaluate how participants' memory is altered by information either congruent or incongruent to their original testimony. False memory research consistently shows that exposure to post-event ... -
CAN RECOLLECTION EXPLAIN MIRROR EFFECTS IN ITEM RECOGNITION? EVIDENCE FROM HUMANS AND A COMPUTATIONAL MODEL
(2010)This thesis examines the role of recollection in the word frequency mirror effect. In two experiments, participants studied lists comprised of sets of associatively related words and sets of unrelated words from 4 levels ... -
Death-primed memory suppression
(2008)Participants (17 males, 37 females) performed a computer-based, five-phase, study recall-suppress-test-recognize task. Participants significantly suppressed more nonword target items compared to death-related prime-target ... -
Electrophysiological resting state brain network and episodic memory in healthy aging adults
(2022-06)Recent studies have emphasized the changes in large-scale brain networks related to healthy aging, with the ultimate purpose to aid in differentiating normal neurocognitive aging from neurodegenerative disorders that also ... -
EXPORTING THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR TO “OUR NEIGHBOR TO THE SOUTH”: THE CALIFORNIA CIVIL WAR CENTENNIAL AND COLD WAR MEXICO, 1961–1965
(2019)This project is about the California Civil War Centennial Commission’s (CWCC) articulation of California’s contemporary state identity through the lens of Civil War commemoration in the early 1960s. In its task to commemorate ... -
FACTORS INFLUENCING KNOWLEDGE AND SKILL DECAY IN ORGANIZATIONAL TRAINING: A META-ANALYSIS
(2010)The current meta-analysis summarized existing organizationally-relevant training research on knowledge and skill decay. Results based on 111 independent effects retrieved from 35 manuscripts suggested an overall moderate ... -
A Litmus Test for the Pattern-Suppression Model
(2016)The current set of experiments were designed to test the pattern-suppression model, which is a component of the suppression theory of forgetting. Experiment 1 tested the pattern-facilitation hypothesis, a hypothesis derived ... -
Memory and Decision Processes on Lineup Identifications Following Mugshot Exposure
(2010)The present study manipulated mugshot search task instructions to reveal when witnesses make commitment or familiarity based lineup errors. Additionally we examined the memory and decision making processes underlying these ... -
Memory and Decision Processes on Lineup Identifications Following Mugshot Exposure
(2010)The present study manipulated mugshot search task instructions to reveal when witnesses make commitment or familiarity based lineup errors. Additionally we examined the memory and decision making processes underlying these ... -
Oklahoman by blood: indigenous land tenure from Indian Territory to McGirt
(2022)After the McGirt v. Oklahoma decision in 2020, Oklahoma’s statehood became the subject of intense legal scrutiny regarding the supposed “disestablishment” of American Indian reservations. The State’s position follows a ... -
ONLINE MEMORY UPDATING: INVESTIGATING DIRECTED FORGETTING
(2013)Memory updating, defined as the replacement of outdated information with new information, is be achieved by both increasing the likelihood of remembering the new information and reducing proactive interference caused by ... -
Plasticity in the Olfactory System: Lessons for the Neurobiology of Memory
(The Neuroscientist, 2004-12-01)We are rapidly advancing toward an understanding of the molecular events underlying odor transduction, mechanisms of spatiotemporal central odor processing, and neural correlates of olfactory perception and cognition. A ... -
A psychological scar: collective trauma and memory in republican Rome, 390-55 BCE
(2021)The sack of Rome by the Gallic chieftain Brennus in 390 BCE was the cause of a collective trauma that influenced all sectors of Roman society. The collective trauma and memory were, in part, responsible for policy changes, ... -
Recognition Memory is Fundamentally Continuous, and Strategic Discretization Does Not Change This
(2019-05-10)Recognition memory research has long focused on whether it is mediated by discrete or continuous processes. Recent research has shown that the picture is more complex. Recognition memory is not continuous or discrete, but ...