149 related articles for article (PubMed ID: 17407823)
1. Presentation duration and false recall for semantic and phonological associates.
Ballardini N; Yamashita JA; Wallace WP
Conscious Cogn; 2008 Mar; 17(1):64-71. PubMed ID: 17407823
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
2. Semantic, phonological, and hybrid veridical and false memories in healthy older adults and in individuals with dementia of the Alzheimer type.
Watson JM; Balota DA; Sergent-Marshall SD
Neuropsychology; 2001 Apr; 15(2):254-67. PubMed ID: 11324868
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
3. Implicit false memory in the DRM paradigm: effects of amnesia, encoding instructions, and encoding duration.
Van Damme I; d'Ydewalle G
Neuropsychology; 2009 Sep; 23(5):635-48. PubMed ID: 19702417
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
4. Semantic and phonological information in sentence recall: converging psycholinguistic and neuropsychological evidence.
Schweppe J; Rummer R; Bormann T; Martin RC
Cogn Neuropsychol; 2011 Dec; 28(8):521-45. PubMed ID: 22813068
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
5. False memory and schizophrenia: evidence for gist memory impairment.
Lee YS; Iao LS; Lin CW
Psychol Med; 2007 Apr; 37(4):559-67. PubMed ID: 17076913
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
6. False recognition following study of semantically related lists presented in jumbled word form.
Halcomb SH; Taylor JP; DeSouza KD; Wallace WP
Memory; 2008 May; 16(4):443-61. PubMed ID: 18432488
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
7. Effects of orthographic and phonological word length on memory for lists shown at RSVP and STM rates.
Coltheart V; Mondy S; Dux PE; Stephenson L
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn; 2004 Jul; 30(4):815-26. PubMed ID: 15238026
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
8. Hemispheric asymmetries in discourse processing: evidence from false memories for lists and texts.
Ben-Artzi E; Faust M; Moeller E
Neuropsychologia; 2009 Jan; 47(2):430-8. PubMed ID: 18951910
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
9. Opposing effects of phonological similarity on item and order memory of words and nonwords in the serial recall task.
Lian A; Karlsen PJ; Eriksen TB
Memory; 2004 May; 12(3):314-37. PubMed ID: 15279435
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
10. Dissociated developmental trajectories for semantic and phonological false memories.
Holliday RE; Weekes BS
Memory; 2006 Jul; 14(5):624-36. PubMed ID: 16754246
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
11. Phonetic-semantic mediated false recognition: does activation fail to spread?
Wallace WP; Salapska-Gelleri J; Belz CL; Owen MA
Am J Psychol; 2006; 119(4):585-617. PubMed ID: 17286090
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
12. On rejecting emotional lures created by phonological neighborhood activation.
Starns JJ; Cook GI; Hicks JL; Marsh RL
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn; 2006 Jul; 32(4):847-53. PubMed ID: 16822152
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
13. False recollection in children with reading comprehension difficulties.
Weekes BS; Hamilton S; Oakhill JV; Holliday RE
Cognition; 2008 Jan; 106(1):222-33. PubMed ID: 17349990
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
14. Mechanisms underlying the production of false memories for famous people's names in aging and Alzheimer's disease.
Plancher G; Guyard A; Nicolas S; Piolino P
Neuropsychologia; 2009 Oct; 47(12):2527-36. PubMed ID: 19410586
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
15. Semantic and phonological loop effects on verbal working memory in middle-age adults with mental retardation.
Kittler P; Krinsky-McHale SJ; Devenny DA
Am J Ment Retard; 2004 Nov; 109(6):467-80. PubMed ID: 15471513
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
16. Implicit word activation during pre-recognition processing influences correct recognition and estimates of presentation frequency.
Amberg MD; Yamashita JA; Wallace WP
Memory; 2004 Mar; 12(2):129-39. PubMed ID: 15250178
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
17. Short-term false memories vary as a function of list type.
McBride DM; Coane JH; Xu S; Feng Y; Yu Z
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove); 2019 Dec; 72(12):2726-2741. PubMed ID: 31184272
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
18. False memories in children. Evidence for a shift from phonological to semantic associations.
Dewhurst SA; Robinson CA
Psychol Sci; 2004 Nov; 15(11):782-6. PubMed ID: 15482451
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
19. Can intentional forgetting reduce false memory? Effects of list-level and item-level forgetting.
Lee YS
Acta Psychol (Amst); 2008 Jan; 127(1):146-53. PubMed ID: 17475195
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
20. Revisiting the rise and fall of false recall: presentation rate effects depend on retention interval.
Smith TA; Kimball DR
Memory; 2012; 20(6):535-53. PubMed ID: 22639939
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
[Next] [New Search]