Search Results - "PALLER, K. A"
-
1
Memory Reactivation and Consolidation during Sleep
Published in Learning & memory (Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.) (01-11-2004)“…Do our memories remain static during sleep, or do they change? We argue here that memory change is not only a natural result of sleep cognition, but further,…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
2
Word repetition in amnesia: Electrophysiological measures of impaired and spared memory
Published in Brain (London, England : 1878) (01-09-2000)“…Amnesic patients often show improved performance when stimuli are repeated, even in the absence of conscious memory for those stimuli. Although these…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
3
Neural events that underlie remembering something that never happened
Published in Nature neuroscience (01-12-2000)“…We induced people to experience a false-memory illusion by first asking them to visualize common objects when cued with the corresponding word; on some trials,…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
4
Brain potentials associated with perceptual priming vs explicit remembering during the repetition of visual word-form
Published in Neuropsychologia (01-06-1998)“…Priming of visual word-form was studied using a reading manipulation in which some words appeared in a backward format (e.g., d-r-o-w) instead of the usual…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
5
Neural correlates of memory retrieval and evaluation
Published in Brain research. Cognitive brain research (01-03-2000)“…Results from recent neuroimaging studies have led to a controversy as to whether right or left prefrontal regions are relatively more important for episodic…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
6
Recall and Stem-Completion Priming Have Different Electrophysiological Correlates and Are Modified Differentially by Directed Forgetting
Published in Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition (01-11-1990)“…The notion that different aspects of memory are assessed by explicit and implicit memory tests was supported by behavioral and electrophysiological results. In…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
7
Brain potentials associated with recollective processing of spoken words
Published in Memory & cognition (01-04-2000)“…The neurocognitive foundations of recollection can be explored by recording event-related potentials (ERPs) from the human brain. In the present study, we…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
8
Neural measures of conscious and unconscious memory
Published in Behavioural neurology (2000)“…Neuropsychological studies of memory disorders have played a prominent role in the development of theories of memory. To test and refine such theories in…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
9
Within-hemifield perceptual averaging of facial expressions predicted by neural averaging
Published in Journal of vision (Charlottesville, Va.) (05-03-2009)“…High-level visual neurons in the ventral stream typically have large receptive fields, supporting position-invariant object recognition but entailing poor…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
10
An Electrophysiological Measure of Priming of Visual Word-Form
Published in Consciousness and cognition (01-03-1998)“…Priming and recollection are expressions of human memory mediated by different brain events. These brain events were monitored while people discriminated words…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
11
Frontal Brain Potentials during Recognition Are Modulated by Requirements to Retrieve Perceptual Detail
Published in Neuron (Cambridge, Mass.) (01-03-1999)“…To assess the role of prefrontal cortex in retrieval and address the controversy about whether prefrontal retrieval operations are engaged only following…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
12
Memory changes with normal aging: Behavioral and electrophysiological measures
Published in Psychophysiology (01-11-1998)“…We examined performance in young and elderly on an implicit (lexical decision) and an explicit (recognition) memory test. The difference in lexical decision…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
13
Brain waves following remembered faces index conscious recollection
Published in Brain research. Cognitive brain research (01-03-1999)“…At a glance, one can often determine whether a face belongs to a known individual. To investigate brain mechanisms underlying this memory feat, we recorded EEG…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
14
Do I Know You? Insights into Memory for Faces from Brain Potentials
Published in Clinical EEG and neuroscience (01-10-2006)“…The recognition of faces is central to human social interaction. Recordings of event-related potentials (ERPs) from the brain can shed light on the various…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
15
Event-related potentials elicited by deviant endings to melodies
Published in Psychophysiology (01-03-1992)“…Event-related potentials were recorded from scalp electrodes while subjects listened to well-known melodies. The melodies ended either with the expected note…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
16
-
17
0431 Two-Way Communication Between Dreamers and Experimenters
Published in Sleep (New York, N.Y.) (27-05-2020)“…Abstract Introduction Dreams are emblematic of human sleep, but they have yet to be adequately explained. In part, this is due to the limited options available…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
18
Electrophysiological Correlates of Recollecting Faces of Known and Unknown Individuals
Published in NeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.) (01-02-2000)“…We recorded brain potentials from healthy human subjects during a recognition test in order to monitor neural processing associated with face recollection…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
19
P3-Like Brain Waves in Normal Monkeys and in Monkeys With Medial Temporal Lesions
Published in Behavioral neuroscience (01-10-1988)“…The human brain produces a characteristic electrical response to relevant events that occur unexpectedly. Recent reports have suggested that a prominent part…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
20
Consolidating Dispersed Neocortical Memories: The Missing Link in Amnesia
Published in Memory (Hove) (01-01-1997)“…Consolidation is often conceptualised as a general process by which memory traces can be strengthened in the brain. An alternative idea, developed here, is…”
Get full text
Journal Article