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Query: UMLS:C0598853 (
forgetting
)
3,232
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Qualitative methods were used to investigate decision-making among a group of older adults who declined the offer of flexible sigmoidoscopy screening for bowel cancer. Interviews were conducted with 60 people (30 men and 30 women) who either had not responded to the screening letter or who responded saying that they were not interested in participating. The findings suggest that low perceived susceptibility to bowel cancer, in terms of current health status, family history or absence of bowel symptoms. was an important factor in the decision to decline screening. Procedural barriers such as embarrassment, pain/discomfort and perceived unpleasantness of the test were reported as relatively minor, although the test was considered more physically intrusive than other screening tests. Avoidant attitudes emerged as an important theme and were reported by a third of respondents. Distinct patterns of decision-making were also observed and three groups emerged from accounts: (i)
forgetting
or avoiding making a decision about the test (ii) a confident rejection of the test based on a few salient factors, and (iii) a more careful consideration of the test focusing on issues of susceptibility. The findings are discussed in the context of models of health behaviour and bowel cancer screening participation research.
Soc Sci Med 2001
Sep
PMID:Declining the offer of flexible sigmoidoscopy screening for bowel cancer: a qualitative investigation of the decision-making process. 1147 46
Does interference, a primary source of
forgetting
in explicit memory, also affect implicit memory? Several early and highly influential studies have suggested that implicit memory is immune to interference. In contrast, a number of subsequent investigations have reported evidence for interference. As well, amnesic patients, whose performance relies primarily on implicit memory, often show interference effects. A review of methods, materials, and findings suggests that interference occurs on implicit tests when targets and nontargets are similar and so compete as potential responses to the memory cue. Further, there is some evidence that the degree of interference on implicit tasks is affected by the number of competing items and their strength relative to the target. Interference effects in implicit memory seem to parallel those in explicit memory, and the authors consider the implications of this conclusion for theoretical concepts of memory and the brain.
Psychol Bull 2001
Sep
PMID:Implicit memory is not immune to interference. 1154 70
Retrieving some members of a memory set impairs later recall of semantically related but not unrelated members (M. C. Anderson, R. A. Bjork, & E. L. Bjork, 1994; M. C. Anderson & B. A. Spellman, 1995). The authors investigated whether this retrieval-induced
forgetting
effect would generalize to testing procedures other than category-cued recall. Although the authors demonstrated a retrieval-induced
forgetting
effect using a category-cued recall task, they failed to show retrieval-induced
forgetting
on several different memory tests that used item-specific cues, including a category-plus-stem-cued recall test, a category-plus-fragment-cued recall test, a fragment-cued recall test, and a fragment completion task.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 2001
Sep
PMID:A limit on retrieval-induced forgetting. 1155 Jul 57
This paper describes the application of a large memory storage and retrieval (LAMSTAR) neural network to medical diagnosis and medical information retrieval problems. The network is based on Minsky's knowledge-lines (k-lines) theory of memory storage and retrieval in the central nervous system. It employs arrays of self-organized map modules, such that the k-lines are implemented via link weights (address correlation) that are being updated by learning. The network also employs features of
forgetting
and of interpolation and extrapolation, thus being able to handle incomplete data sets. It can deal equally well with exact and fuzzy information, thus being specifically applicable to medical diagnosis where the diagnosis is based on exact data, fuzzy patient interview information, patient history, observed images, and test records. Furthermore, the network can be operated in closed loop with Internet search engines to intelligently use data from the Internet in a higher hierarchy of learning. All of the above features are shown to make the LAMSTAR network suitable for medical diagnosis problems that concern large data sets of many categories that are often incomplete and fuzzy. Applications of the network to three specific medical diagnosis problems are described: two from nephrology and one related to an emergency-room drug identification problem. It is shown that the LAMSTAR network is hundreds and thousands times faster in its training than back-propagation-based networks when used for the same problem and with exactly the same information.
IEEE Trans Inf Technol Biomed 2001
Sep
PMID:A novel large-memory neural network as an aid in medical diagnosis applications. 1155 Aug 42
Seven experiments are reported that show that retrieving facts from long-term memory is accomplished, in part, by inhibitory processes that suppress interfering facts. When asked to repeatedly retrieve a recently learned proposition (e.g., recalling The actor is looking at the tulip, given cues such as Actor looking t__), subjects experienced a recall deficit for related facts (e.g., The actor is looking at the violin) on a recall test administered 15 min later. Importantly, this retrieval-induced
forgetting
was shown to generalize to other facts in which the inhibited concepts took part (e.g., The teacher is lifting the violin), replicating a finding observed by M. C. Anderson and B. A. Spellman (1995) with categorical stimuli. These findings suggest a critical role for suppression in models of propositional retrieval and implicate the mere retrieval of what we know as a source of
forgetting
of factual knowledge.
J Exp Psychol Gen 2001
Sep
PMID:Forgetting our facts: the role of inhibitory processes in the loss of propositional knowledge. 1156 27
This study tested questions of ecological validity by comparing the eyewitness testimonies of children directly experiencing a painful inoculation experience those of children in a yoked-control group who vicariously experienced the inoculation onwith videotape. The study involved 86 5-year-olds, divided between 2 groups: the experiential and yoked control. The experiential group was followed through a health department with a video camera as they received diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus (DPT), and oral polio inoculations. They were tested immediately, 20 min later, and 1 month later. Each child in the yoked-control group merely watched the videotape of his or her counterpart in the experiential group, made similar ratings of pain, and was given the same tests and suggestions. Stress and personal experience affected items congruent with the stressor to produce flashbulb-like memories, with slower rates of
forgetting
for some items, such as nurse identifications, and greater suggestibility for other items, such as estimates of needle size. These and the apparently conflicting results in the literature were said to make sense when personally experienced stress was viewed from S.-A. Christianson's (1992) interactive perspective rather than as a single ubiquitous variable.
J Genet Psychol 2001
Sep
PMID:Similarities and differences in eyewitness testimonies of children who directly versus vicariously experience stress. 1167 66
Participants read short passages and 1 day later they answered questions via telephone about the passages (text facts) and about the experimental session (event facts). They were telephoned again 6 weeks later and answered the same questions about text and event facts. They also answered new questions about whether they remembered the answers they had given in the initial telephone interview (recall for prior memory performance). Although participants accurately remembered the majority of past memory successes, they were poor at remembering past memory failures. After being provided with the correct answer and tested again, the participants' performance improved somewhat, especially for memory failures. This suggests that some errors in recalling past
forgetting
might have been due to correctly remembering the answer previously given, but failing to realize that it had been wrong. These findings have implications for a variety of situations in which people are queried about past memory performance.
Mem Cognit 2001
Sep
PMID:Memory for memory. 1171 52
Each year as a consequence of pregnancy and delivery at least 500,000 women die, 99% of them in developing countries. Most maternal deaths are avoidable. For each death, 10-15 other women suffer serious health effects which may lead to chronic pain or even social isolation. Childbirth is riskier for women who are too young or too old, who have many children, or whose births are too closely spaced. Limiting family size reduces both maternal and child deaths. In developed countries, 5-30 women die per 100,000 births, compared to 50-800 in developing countries. Maternal mortality rates at 2 hospitals in Yaounde, Cameroon, have declined significantly in recent years, probably due to establishment of high risk pregnancy clinics, improved monitoring during labor, and child spacing clinics. Improved obstetric services and child spacing could reduce maternal mortality in developing countries as they have in the developed world. The use of contraception has been a controversial topic in traditional African societies, but by now the majority of governments of developing countries include family planning programs in their development plans for their health as well as their economic benefits. Despite gradual increases, fewer than 5% of women in most African countries use modern contraception. African men play an insignificant role in family planning. The continuing practices of prolonged lactation and postpartum abstinence in rural areas have compensated to some extent for the absence of modern contraception. Oral contraceptives are the most widely used reversible method. They may protect against vaginal infection, iron deficiency anemia, ectopic pregnancy, benign breast disease, ovarian and endometrial cancer, dysmenorrhea, endometriosis, and rheumatoid arthritis. There is evidence that some steroid hormones have a beneficial effect in stabilizing the cellular membranes of red blood cells in women with sickle cell anemia. The danger of infection with the IUD is largely limited to the 1st 4 months of use and to women with sexually transmitted diseases. Careful selection of candidates, aseptic insertion, and regular follow-up are needed to ensure IUD safety. The IUD is contraindicated for nulliparas. Barrier methods provide contraception as well as some protection against sexually transmitted diseases. Condoms have a significant protective effect against HIV infection. Diaphragms, cervical caps, and vaginal sponges provide some protection against infections like gonorrhea and chlamydiae that invade the cervical cells. Many adolescents resist condoms because they diminish sensation. But condoms provide protection against sexually transmitted diseases and are appropriate for individuals with sporadic sex lives. Oral contraceptives are more effective but adolescents are at risk of
forgetting
pills. IUDs are the least attractive option for adolescents because of the danger of infection and subsequent infertility.
Afr Med 1990
Sep
PMID:[High risk pregnancies and family planning]. 1234 59
Forgetting
functions generated by delayed matching-to-sample procedures allow delay-dependent effects to be distinguished from delay-independent effects on working memory. Parameters of negative exponential functions estimate initial discriminability (intercept) and rate of
forgetting
(slope).
Forgetting
functions for patients with Alzheimer's disease indicate that they differ from normal controls in terms of reduced initial discriminability--that is, in the encoding component of memory performance--but not convincingly in rate of
forgetting
. Reanalyses of previous studies with different species suggest that pro- and anticholinergic drugs influence initial discriminability in delayed matching-to-sample performance, but not rate of
forgetting
. The results of our reanalyses are consistent with the conclusion that the cholinergic system plays a role in the encoding component of working memory and that this is the main characteristic of the memory deficit shown by patients with Alzheimer's disease.
Psychon Bull Rev 2002
Sep
PMID:Memory deficits in Alzheimer's disease: the encoding hypothesis and cholinergic function. 1241 85
Recent research on the cognitive dysfunctions experienced by human anmesic patients indicates that very long term (multidecade) changes may occur in memory. Flat retrograde amnesia (RA), consisting of a uniform memory deficit for information from all preamnesia time periods, indicates a simple, monolithic retrieval problem, whereas graded RA, with greater memory deficits for information from recent as opposed to remote time periods, suggests the presence of a gradual long-term encoding, or consolidation, process. An evaluation of 247 outcomes from 61 articles provides strong evidence of graded RA across different cerebral injuries, materials, and test procedures, as well as in measures of both absolute and relative (patient vs. control) performance. Future conceptualizations of human memory should address the possibility that memories increase in resistance to
forgetting
, or reduction in trace fragility, across many decades.
Psychon Bull Rev 2002
Sep
PMID:Consolidation theory and retrograde amnesia in humans. 1241 84
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