These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


BIOMARKERS

Molecular Biopsy of Human Tumors

- a resource for Precision Medicine *

328 related articles for article (PubMed ID: 23163437)

  • 21. Implicit Memory, Constructive Memory, and Imagining the Future: A Career Perspective.
    Schacter DL
    Perspect Psychol Sci; 2019 Mar; 14(2):256-272. PubMed ID: 30517833
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 22. Impaired mental simulation of specific past and future personal events in non-depressed multiple sclerosis patients.
    Ernst A; Blanc F; de Seze J; Sellal F; Chauvin B; Manning L
    J Neurol Sci; 2014 Oct; 345(1-2):68-74. PubMed ID: 25043663
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 23. The construction system of the brain.
    Hassabis D; Maguire EA
    Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci; 2009 May; 364(1521):1263-71. PubMed ID: 19528007
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 24. An fMRI investigation of the relationship between future imagination and cognitive flexibility.
    Roberts RP; Wiebels K; Sumner RL; van Mulukom V; Grady CL; Schacter DL; Addis DR
    Neuropsychologia; 2017 Jan; 95():156-172. PubMed ID: 27908591
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 25. Neural correlates of event clusters in past and future thoughts: How the brain integrates specific episodes with autobiographical knowledge.
    Demblon J; Bahri MA; D'Argembeau A
    Neuroimage; 2016 Feb; 127():257-266. PubMed ID: 26658926
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 26. Blessedly forgetful and blissfully unaware: a positivity bias in memory for (re)constructions of imagined past and future events.
    Ünal B; Besken M
    Memory; 2020 Aug; 28(7):888-899. PubMed ID: 32627663
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 27. Common and unique neural correlates of autobiographical memory and theory of mind.
    Rabin JS; Gilboa A; Stuss DT; Mar RA; Rosenbaum RS
    J Cogn Neurosci; 2010 Jun; 22(6):1095-111. PubMed ID: 19803685
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 28. Remembering the past and imagining the future: common and distinct neural substrates during event construction and elaboration.
    Addis DR; Wong AT; Schacter DL
    Neuropsychologia; 2007 Apr; 45(7):1363-77. PubMed ID: 17126370
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 29. Remembering the Personal Past: Beyond the Boundaries of Imagination.
    McCarroll CJ
    Front Psychol; 2020; 11():585352. PubMed ID: 33101155
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 30. Differential impairment of remembering the past and imagining novel events after thalamic lesions.
    Weiler J; Suchan B; Koch B; Schwarz M; Daum I
    J Cogn Neurosci; 2011 Oct; 23(10):3037-51. PubMed ID: 21268672
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 31. Task-related and resting-state fMRI identify distinct networks that preferentially support remembering the past and imagining the future.
    Gilmore AW; Nelson SM; Chen HY; McDermott KB
    Neuropsychologia; 2018 Feb; 110():180-189. PubMed ID: 28625660
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 32. Thinking about the future early in life: the role of relational memory.
    Richmond JL; Pan R
    J Exp Child Psychol; 2013 Apr; 114(4):510-21. PubMed ID: 23267734
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 33. Imagining the present: amnesia may impair descriptions of the present as well as of the future and the past.
    Zeman AZ; Beschin N; Dewar M; Della Sala S
    Cortex; 2013 Mar; 49(3):637-45. PubMed ID: 22525357
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 34. Episodic simulation of future events: concepts, data, and applications.
    Schacter DL; Addis DR; Buckner RL
    Ann N Y Acad Sci; 2008 Mar; 1124():39-60. PubMed ID: 18400923
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 35. Remembering, imagining, false memories & personal meanings.
    Conway MA; Loveday C
    Conscious Cogn; 2015 May; 33():574-81. PubMed ID: 25592676
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 36. Spatial scaffold effects in event memory and imagination.
    Robin J
    Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci; 2018 Jul; 9(4):e1462. PubMed ID: 29485243
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 37. Relational processing demands and the role of spatial context in the construction of episodic simulations.
    Wiebels K; Addis DR; Moreau D; van Mulukom V; Onderdijk KE; Roberts RP
    J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn; 2020 Aug; 46(8):1424-1441. PubMed ID: 32134319
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 38. Priming, not inhibition, of related concepts during future imagining.
    Campbell KL; Benoit RG; Schacter DL
    Memory; 2017 Oct; 25(9):1235-1245. PubMed ID: 28276983
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 39. Toward a model-based cognitive neuroscience of mind wandering.
    Hawkins GE; Mittner M; Boekel W; Heathcote A; Forstmann BU
    Neuroscience; 2015 Dec; 310():290-305. PubMed ID: 26427961
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 40. [Imagination: its definition, purposes and neurobiology].
    Drubach D; Benarroch EE; Mateen FJ
    Rev Neurol; 2007 Sep 16-30; 45(6):353-8. PubMed ID: 17899517
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

    [Previous]   [Next]    [New Search]
    of 17.