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In the previous study, two different remember-know paradigms are explored. The first is the "remember-first method" [24] in which a remember response is solicited prior to a know response for non-remembered items. Secondly, a trinary paradigm, [24] in which a single response judges the "remember vs. know" and "new" alternatives is investigated ...
The right ventral prefrontal cortex and the insular cortex are specific to "knowing that you don't know", whereas prefrontal regions are generally more specific to the feeling of knowing. [22] These findings suggest that a person knowing that they do not know and feeling of knowing are two neuroanatomically dissociable features of metamemory ...
Recognition memory can be subdivided into two component processes: recollection and familiarity, sometimes referred to as "remembering" and "knowing", respectively. [1] Recollection is the retrieval of details associated with the previously experienced event.
The term "episodic memory" was coined by Endel Tulving in 1972, referring to the distinction between knowing and remembering: knowing is factual recollection (semantic) whereas remembering is a feeling that is located in the past (episodic). [3]
Older adults tend to exhibit deficits on tasks that involve knowing the temporal order in which they learned information, [108] source memory tasks that require them to remember the specific circumstances or context in which they learned information, [109] and prospective memory tasks that involve remembering to perform an act at a future time ...
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It’s messy and formative, and sometimes, you have to meet the wrong person before you even know what “right” looks like. At the precise intersection of identity and intimacy, our ...
The tip-of-the-tongue experience is a classic example of blocking, which is a failure to retrieve information that is available in memory even though you are trying to produce it. [2] The information you are trying to remember has been encoded and stored, and a cue is available that would usually trigger its recollection. [2]