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Query: UMLS:C0002622 (
amnesia
)
5,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Modern ECT practice has evolved far from its beginnings more than 50 years ago. ECT is effective, safe, and rewarding in the clinical setting. This discussion complements the 1990
APA
Task Force report and elaborates on some of the clinical and scientific factors that could not be fully addressed by the report. The future of ECT lies in understanding the mechanisms by which it relieves depressive symptoms and causes
amnesia
and related cognitive deficits.
...
PMID:Electroconvulsive therapy. 841 34
Between the two extreme ends of human sexuality - male and female - lie a poorly understood and poorly studied spectrum of ambiguously defined sexual identities that are very much a part of the human condition but defy rigid classification. "Bigender" is a recently formed sub-category of transgenderism, describing individuals who experience a blending or alternation of gender states. While recognized nominally by the
APA
, no scientific work to our knowledge has addressed this fascinating condition, or proposed any physiological basis for it. In addition, the alternation aspect has not been proposed as a nosological entity distinct from blending. We present descriptive data suggesting that many bigender individuals experience an involuntary switching of gender states without any
amnesia
for either state. In addition, similar to transsexual individuals, the majority of bigender individuals experience phantom breasts or genitalia corresponding to the non-biologic gender when they are in a trans-gender state. Finally, our survey found decreased lateralization of handedness in the bigender community. These observations suggest a biologic basis of bigenderism and lead us to propose a novel gender condition, "alternating gender incongruity" (AGI). We hypothesize that AGI may be related to an unusual degree or depth of hemispheric switching and corresponding callosal suppression of sex appropriate body maps in parietal cortex- possibly the superior parietal lobule- and its reciprocal connections with the insula and hypothalamus. This is based on two lines of reasoning. First, bigender individuals in our survey sample reported an elevated rate of bipolar disorder, which has been linked to slowed hemispheric switching. We hypothesize that tracking the nasal cycle, rate of binocular rivalry, and other markers of hemispheric switching will reveal a physiological basis for AGI individuals' subjective reports of gender switches. Switching may also trigger hormonal cascades, which we are currently exploring. Second, we base our hypotheses on ancient and modern associations between the left and right hemispheres and the male and female genders. By providing a case of sharp brain-sex shifts within individuals, we believe that the study of AGI could prove illuminating to scientific understanding of gender, body representation, and the nature of self.
...
PMID:Alternating gender incongruity: a new neuropsychiatric syndrome providing insight into the dynamic plasticity of brain-sex. 2236 52
As our environment is frequently changing, it is common that our expectations are violated by unexpected stimuli or events, which leaves us uncertain about which pieces of information will be useful in the future. It is unclear how an expectation violation affects the subsequent control settings for processing of information. The current study directly addressed this issue by employing a double-surprise-trial paradigm based on the attribute
amnesia
task (Chen & Wyble, 2015a). In Experiment 1, participants were asked to report the location of a target letter presented among distractor digits on several trials and were then unexpectedly asked to report a different attribute (color or identity) of the target letter. In the next trial, participants were asked another unexpected question about the other attribute (identity or color respectively). The results show that, despite participants' poor performance in the first surprise trial, which replicated the attribute
amnesia
effect, their memory performance in the second surprise trial was dramatically improved, even when the probed attribute was different from that of the first surprise trial. This was also true in Experiment 2, where 15 trials were inserted between the two surprise trials. Experiment 3 further clarified that this effect is not triggered by the mere presence of a surprise test, but rather the violation of expectation about the nature of a surprise test. These results suggest the operation of an adaptive control mechanism that reduces the selectivity of processing in the face of unexpected events. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019
APA
, all rights reserved).
...
PMID:Expecting the unexpected: Violation of expectation shifts strategies toward information exploration. 3081 87
Attribute
amnesia
(Chen & Wyble, 2015, 2016) demonstrates that we may not always be able to spontaneously retrieve a simple attribute of a visual object (e.g., its color) for conscious report, even though the object had just been the target in a visual task. Attribute
amnesia
has been suggested to reflect a lack of consolidation of the task-irrelevant attribute in visual working memory. Here we tested whether saccadic selection eliminates or attenuates attribute
amnesia
. Saccade targets have been shown to be preferentially encoded into visual working memory and may therefore be spared. We used simple color pop-out displays, asking participants to indicate the location of the color singleton letter target on each trial either by keypress or by making a saccade toward it. After a couple of trials and unannounced to the participants, we asked for the color and identity of the last target letter on a surprise trial. We found that saccade targets were not spared from attribute
amnesia
: Participants were as bad in correctly reporting the color in the saccade as in the keypress condition. For letter identity, the effect was attenuated but not abolished when the target was foveated for a short period of time. We argue that the current results do not refute an obligatory coupling between saccadic selection and encoding in visual working memory. However, the encoded information may not necessarily be stored in a manner that is robust enough to persist in the face of a surprise question. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019
APA
, all rights reserved).
...
PMID:Saccadic selection does not eliminate attribute amnesia. 3088 72
Reports an error in "Hippocampal contributions to language: Evidence of referential processing deficits in amnesia" by Jake Kurczek, Sarah Brown-Schmidt and Melissa Duff (
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
, 2013[Nov], Vol 142[4], 1346-1354). In the article, in Figure 3, the plots for the
amnesia
participants and healthy matched comparison participants were slightly distorted, although the overall pattern of results is correct. In Figure 4, two of the error bars were inadvertently swapped with each other. The figure caption for Supplemental Table 1 is incorrect and should note instead that there are 1,547 trials. The figure caption for Supplemental Table 2 is incorrect and should note instead that there are 1,904 trials. The online version of this article has been corrected. (The following abstract of the original article appeared in record 2013-28217-001.) A growing body of work suggests the hippocampus contributes to a variety of cognitive domains beyond its traditional role in memory. We propose that the hippocampus, in its capacity for relational binding, representational flexibility, and online maintenance and integration of multimodal relational representations, is a key contributor to language processing. Here we test the hypothesis that the online interpretation of pronouns is hippocampus-dependent. We combined eye tracking with neuropsychological methods, where participants (4 patients with bilateral hippocampal damage and severe declarative memory impairment, 4 patients with ventromedial prefrontal cortex [vmPFC] damage, and healthy comparison participants) viewed a scene while listening to short dialogues introducing 2 characters; for example,
Melissa is playing violin for Debbie/Danny as the sun is shining overhead. She is wearing a blue/purple dress.
Consistent with previous work, analysis of eye gaze showed that younger and older healthy comparison participants and the vmPFC patients rapidly identified the intended referent of the pronoun when gender uniquely identified the referent, and when it did not, they showed a preference to interpret the pronoun as referring to the first-mentioned character. By contrast, hippocampal patients, while exhibiting a similar gender effect, exhibited significant disruptions in their ability to use information about which character had been mentioned first to interpret the pronoun. This finding suggests that the hippocampus plays a role in maintaining and integrating information even over a very short discourse history. These observed disruptions in referential processing demonstrate how promiscuously the hallmark processing features of the hippocampus are used in service of a variety of cognitive domains including language. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019
APA
, all rights reserved).
...
PMID:"Hippocampal contributions to language: Evidence of referential processing deficits in amnesia": Correction to Kurczek, Brown-Schmidt, and Duff (2013). 2393 78
Selective
amnesia
for previously established memories can be induced by administering drugs that impair protein synthesis shortly after memory reactivation. Competing theoretical accounts attribute this selective post-retrieval
amnesia
to drug-induced engram degradation (reconsolidation blockade) or to incorporation of sensory features of the reactivation experience into the memory representation, hampering later retrieval in a drug-free state (memory integration). Here we present evidence that critically challenges both accounts. In contextual fear conditioning in rats, we find that
amnesia
induced by administration of midazolam (MDZ) after reexposure to the training context A generalizes readily to a similar context B.
Amnesia
is also observed when animals are exposed to the similar context B prior to MDZ administration and later tested for fear to context B but recovers when instead testing for fear to the original training context A or an equally similar but novel context C. Next to their theoretical implications for the nature of forgetting, our findings raise important questions about the viability of reconsolidation-based interventions for the treatment of emotional disorders. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020
APA
, all rights reserved).
...
PMID:Generalization and recovery of post-retrieval amnesia. 3229 79
Cognitively suppressing the retrieval of an unwanted memory causes its forgetting and, in the meantime, disrupts hippocampal functions. The present study investigated whether retrieval suppression induces virtual
amnesia
, which disturbs any existing memories that are reactivated in the temporal vicinity but are otherwise unrelated to the targets of suppression. Participants performed retrieval suppression on a set of memories while cues of an unrelated set of memories were briefly presented near in time to the suppression trials. Results showed that retrieval suppression impaired the retrieval of both the directly suppressed content and the reactivated unrelated memory. This amnesic shadow functioned in both the forward and backward temporal directions, and its forgetting effect was revealed by independent cues that were not presented in the shadow. Remarkably, a negative memory could be impaired simply by presenting it between the suppression episodes of an unrelated neutral memory. These findings provide support for systemic influence of retrieval suppression on hippocampal functions and offer a way to disrupt existing episodic memory strategically. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020
APA
, all rights reserved).
...
PMID:Forgetting unrelated episodic memories through suppression-induced amnesia. 3279 Apr 59