Search results for "Confabulation"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Confabulation: damage to a specific inferior medial prefrontal system

2008

Confabulation, the pathological production of false memories, occurs following a variety of aetiologies involving the frontal lobes, and is frequently held to be underpinned by combined memory and executive deficits. However, the critical frontal regions and specific cognitive deficits involved are unclear. Studies in amnesic patients have associated confabulation with damage to the orbital and ventromedial prefrontal cortices. However, neuroimaging studies have associated memory-control processes which are assumed to underlie confabulation with the right lateral prefrontal cortex. We used a confabulation battery to investigate the occurrence and localisation of confabulation in an unselect…

AdultMaleConfabulationDeceptionCognitive NeuroscienceConfabulation frontal lobe executive function memory orbitofrontal cortexVentromedial prefrontal cortexAmnesiaPrefrontal CortexExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyNeuropsychological TestsDelusionsFunctional Lateralityfrontal lobe.confabulation; frontal lobe; executive function; memory; orbitofrontal cortexmemoryNeuroimagingReference ValuesNeural PathwaysmedicineMemory impairmentHumansConfabulationEpisodic memoryAgedBrain MappingMiddle Agedfrontal lobeSelf ConceptNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologymedicine.anatomical_structureFrontal lobeexecutive functionCase-Control StudiesOrbitofrontal cortexBrain Damage ChronicFemaleAmnesiamedicine.symptomPsychologyorbitofrontal cortexNeuroscience
researchProduct

Le «Facezie» di Poggio nel teatro spagnolo del “Siglo de oro”

2022

Un capitolo della fortuna europea del «Liber facetiarum» di Poggio Bracciolini riguarda le rielaborazioni e le riscritture di alcune di esse nelle commedie spagnole del secolo XVII (il cosiddetto “Siglo de oro”). In questo studio, dopo una preliminare ricognizione bibliografica sull’attuale status della ricerca sul «Liber facetiarum», vengono analizzati i modi di riscrittura di tre racconti del Bracciolini (fac. 157, 172, 203) in tre scene di commedie spagnole del XVII secolo, «La dama boba» ed «El perro del hortelano» di Lope de Vega e «Don Gil de las calzas verdes» di Tirso de Molina. A chapter of the European fortune of Poggio Bracciolini’s «Liber facetiarum» concerns the re-elaborations…

Latin Humanistic NovellisticPoggio BraccioliniLope de Vega («La dama boba» «El perro del hortelano»)Settore L-FIL-LET/08 - Letteratura Latina Medievale E UmanisticaSettore L-FIL-LET/14 - Critica Letteraria E Letterature ComparaterielaborazioniRewritingsSpanish Theater of the “Siglo de oro”riscritturenovellistica latina dell'UmanesimoSettore L-FIL-LET/13 - Filologia Della Letteratura ItalianaRe-elaborationTirso de Molina («Don Gil de las calzas verdes»)teatro spagnolo del “Siglo de oro”«Liber facetiarum» («Facetiae» «Confabulationes»)
researchProduct

Disordered recognition memory: recollective confabulation.

2013

Recollective confabulation (RC) is encountered as a conviction that a present moment is a repetition of one experienced previously, combined with the retrieval of confabulated specifics to support that assertion. It is often described as persistent deja vu by family members and caregivers. On formal testing, patients with RC tend to produce a very high level of false positive errors. In this paper, a new case series of 11 people with dementia or mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and with deja vu-like experiences is presented. In two experiments the nature of the recognition memory deficit is explored. The results from these two experiments suggest - contrary to our hypothesis in earlier publi…

MaleConfabulationHallucinationsReduplicative paramnesiaCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectMetacognitionExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyNeuropsychological TestsDevelopmental psychologyMemorymedicineHumansFalse Positive ReactionsRecognition memorymedia_commonAgedAged 80 and overIntelligence TestsAnalysis of VarianceMemory DisordersRecallIntelligence quotientRecognition PsychologyDeja VuNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyFeelingReadingDéjà vuMental RecallFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyTomography X-Ray ComputedCognitive psychologyCortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
researchProduct

History repeating itself: Arnaud's case of pathological déjà vu.

2017

International audience; We present a translation of Arnaud's (1896) case report of Patient Louis, a case he describes as having a pathological form of déjà vu. Louis has the delusional belief that the present moment is a repetition of an exact same previous event. Arnaud's paper is critical for two reasons. Firstly, it is amongst the first articles in the scientific literature to describe the déjà vu experience using the term 'déjà vu'. Secondly, the case report of someone with delusional and persistent déjà vu, anticipates recently reported cases with similar symptoms, which are beginning to gain interest as a particular form of memory disorder. We offer a contemporary analysis of Louis an…

MaleConfabulationPsychoanalysisReduplicative paramnesiaCognitive Neuroscience[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyScientific literatureDelusions050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences[SCCO]Cognitive science[ SHS.PSY ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychology0302 clinical medicineDelusionRecollectionJamais vumedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesConfabulationDelusionMemory DisordersRepetition (rhetorical device)Recall05 social sciencesHistory 19th CenturyDeja VuParamnesiaNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyDéjà vuDéjà vuFrance[ SCCO ] Cognitive sciencemedicine.symptomPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgery
researchProduct

Spontaneous confabulation, temporal context confusion and reality monitoring: a study of three patients with anterior communicating artery aneurysms.

2010

AbstractSpontaneous confabulation involves the production of false or distorted memories, and is commonly associated with ventromedial prefrontal damage. One influential theory proposes that the critical deficit is a failure to suppress currently irrelevant memory traces that intrude into ongoing thinking (Schnider & Ptak, 1999). In this study, we report experimental investigations with three spontaneously confabulating patients aimed at exploring this account. Using Schnider and Ptak’s (1999) continuous recognition paradigm, we replicated their experimental results with our patients. However, our data suggest that the critical impairment might be more generalized than a failure to supp…

MaleConfabulationSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)anterior communicating artery aneurysmsReality TestingAmnesiaNeuropsychological TestsTask (project management)medicineImage Processing Computer-AssistedHumansPrefrontal cortexConfusionMemory DisordersRecallGeneral NeuroscienceBrainIntracranial AneurysmRecognition PsychologyMiddle AgedReality testingMagnetic Resonance ImagingPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyFrontal lobeMental RecallNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomPsychologyCognitive psychologyJournal of the International Neuropsychological Society : JINS
researchProduct