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  2. Forgetting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forgetting

    Forgetting can mean access problems, availability problems, or can have other reasons such as amnesia caused by an accident. An inability to forget can cause distress, as with post-traumatic stress disorder and hyperthymesia (in which people have an extremely detailed autobiographical memory).

  3. Anomic aphasia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anomic_aphasia

    People with damage to the left hemisphere of the brain are more likely to have anomic aphasia. Broca's area , the speech production center in the brain, was linked to being the source for speech execution problems, with the use of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), now commonly used to study anomic patients. [ 9 ]

  4. Amnesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amnesia

    Real, diagnosable amnesia – people getting knocked on the head and forgetting their names – is mostly just a rumor in the world. It's a rare condition, and usually a brief one. In books and movies, though, versions of amnesia lurk everywhere, from episodes of Mission Impossible to metafictional and absurdist masterpieces, with dozens of ...

  5. Memory error - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_error

    What a person is experiencing is a complete retrieval failure, which makes blocking especially frustrating. [2] Blocking occurs especially often for the names of people and places, because their links to related concepts and knowledge are weaker than for common names. [ 2 ]

  6. Selective amnesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selective_amnesia

    People may be more susceptible to hypnotic amnesia if the words they are asked to forget (or remember) have significant emotional connotations. [1] Clemes (1964) was able to identify participants’ critical words—words that are linked with inner conflict—and neutral words—words that are not linked with inner conflict.

  7. Misattribution of memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misattribution_of_memory

    In psychology, the misattribution of memory or source misattribution is the misidentification of the origin of a memory by the person making the memory recall.Misattribution is likely to occur when individuals are unable to monitor and control the influence of their attitudes, toward their judgments, at the time of retrieval. [1]

  8. Dyschronometria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyschronometria

    Through studies, dementia is both a cause and an effect of dyschronometria. This has to do completely with the fact that with dementia the brain is constantly rewiring itself and thus information becomes lost causing the person who has dementia to become confused as well as disoriented, and in most cases completely unaware of the passage of time.

  9. Doorway effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doorway_effect

    Separate studies on the presence of a doorway effect elicited incongruences with typical rhythms of life. Some suggest it may be reasonable to expect that humans should instead be rather facile with dealing with movement from one location to another, and its effects on memory recall – especially with objects one was recently carrying.