• The "lost in the mall" technique or experiment is a memory implantation technique used to demonstrate that confabulations about events that never took...
    14 KB (1,694 words) - 22:11, 25 May 2025
  • Thumbnail for Jim Coan
    Jim Coan (category Date of birth not in Wikidata)
    proving memories can be implanted falsely in the Lost in the mall technique. He is known as an authority in interpersonal emotion regulation called social...
    22 KB (2,346 words) - 15:09, 5 April 2025
  • False memory syndrome (category All Wikipedia articles written in American English)
    group in such an experiment. The lost in the mall technique is a research method designed to implant a false memory of being lost in a shopping mall as a...
    25 KB (2,798 words) - 18:08, 25 May 2025
  • Thumbnail for Elizabeth Loftus
    Elizabeth Loftus (category Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences)
    phrasing on the perceptions of automobile crashes, the "lost in the mall" technique and the manipulation of food preferences through the use of false...
    50 KB (4,714 words) - 14:19, 28 April 2025
  • information. The "lost-in-the-mall" technique is another recovery strategy.[clarification needed] This is essentially a repeated suggestion pattern. The person...
    69 KB (8,248 words) - 18:53, 21 May 2025
  • in great detail. When the concepts are distinguished, eidetic memory is reported to occur in a small number of children and is generally not found in...
    22 KB (2,603 words) - 01:21, 25 May 2025
  • be saved (or lost) when increasing (or decreasing) from a relatively low speed, and to overestimate the time that could be saved (or lost) when increasing...
    109 KB (10,092 words) - 11:03, 27 May 2025
  • Thumbnail for Forgetting curve
    The forgetting curve hypothesizes the decline of memory retention in time. This curve shows how information is lost over time when there is no attempt...
    13 KB (1,570 words) - 19:40, 24 May 2025
  • Thumbnail for Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome
    Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome (category Syndromes affecting the nervous system)
    most commonly seen in people with an alcohol use disorder. Failure in diagnosis of WE and thus treatment of the disease leads to death in approximately 20%...
    38 KB (4,502 words) - 15:31, 23 May 2025
  • Thumbnail for Rote learning
    a memorization technique based on repetition. The method rests on the premise that the recall of repeated material becomes faster the more one repeats...
    10 KB (914 words) - 02:15, 12 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mnemonic
    Mnemonic (redirect from Mnemonic technique)
    memory device is any learning technique that aids information retention or retrieval in the human memory, often by associating the information with something...
    37 KB (4,586 words) - 07:43, 27 May 2025
  • been shown to be possible in some experimental conditions; some of the techniques currently being investigated are: drug-induced amnesia, selective memory...
    28 KB (3,380 words) - 03:14, 24 May 2025
  • to getting lost in remembering. This can make it difficult to attend to the present or future, as she is often spending time re-living the past. Others...
    52 KB (5,578 words) - 15:59, 26 May 2025
  • syndrome Ideomotor responses to questioning in hypnotherapy Imagination inflation Lost in the mall technique Memory errors Memory implantation Misinformation...
    10 KB (1,184 words) - 11:38, 24 May 2025
  • occupational therapy. In therapy, amnesiacs will develop the memory skills they have and try to regain some they have lost by finding which techniques help retrieve...
    53 KB (6,764 words) - 23:56, 25 May 2025
  • performances of the Vespro della Beata Vergine. In 1977, it gave the first performance in the Russian Cathedral of Sir John Tavener's setting of the Liturgy of...
    13 KB (1,588 words) - 15:15, 22 December 2024
  • Thumbnail for Transient global amnesia
    accessing older memories. A person in a state of TGA exhibits no other signs of impaired cognitive functioning but recalls only the last few moments of consciousness...
    33 KB (3,772 words) - 13:51, 23 May 2025
  • conducted the earliest known research on the effect in 1876. Edward B. Titchener also documented the effect and described the "glow of warmth" felt in the presence...
    22 KB (2,702 words) - 04:36, 25 May 2025
  • physiological cause, more general cognitive techniques may be used to treat confabulation. A case study published in 2000 showed that Self-Monitoring Training...
    48 KB (5,587 words) - 08:20, 25 May 2025
  • necessarily bad, and that they serve a useful purpose in memory. For instance, persistence is one of the sins of memory that can lead to things like post traumatic...
    10 KB (1,171 words) - 20:39, 20 September 2024
  • differences in the anatomy of the brain in individuals who suffer from flashbacks compared to those who do not. Neuroimaging involves a cluster of techniques, including...
    29 KB (3,723 words) - 21:20, 10 May 2025
  • the concept of nostalgia though still different respectively in being rosy retrospection being biased towards perceiving the past as better than the present...
    14 KB (1,517 words) - 00:53, 26 May 2025
  • Thumbnail for World Memory Championships
    World Memory Championships (category World championships in mind sports)
    The World Memory Championships is an organized competition of memory sports in which competitors memorize as much information as possible within a given...
    12 KB (649 words) - 23:10, 19 February 2025
  • can cause impairments in memory. Tests show that information from days and weeks before the ECT can be permanently lost. The results of this study also...
    45 KB (5,317 words) - 04:34, 25 May 2025
  • Thumbnail for Involuntary memory
    recall the childhood home he was in, and even the town itself. This becomes a theme throughout In Search of Lost Time, with sensations reminding the narrator...
    25 KB (3,337 words) - 19:59, 24 May 2025
  • assessed functionally for psychogenic amnesia using imaging techniques such as fMRI, PET and EEG, in accordance with clinical data. Some research has suggested...
    23 KB (2,589 words) - 03:59, 12 May 2025
  • Thumbnail for Sigmund Freud
    Sigmund Freud (category Jewish emigrants from Austria after the Anschluss to the United Kingdom)
    persecution. He died in exile in the United Kingdom in 1939. In founding psychoanalysis, Freud developed therapeutic techniques such as the use of free association...
    194 KB (23,953 words) - 19:14, 25 May 2025
  • psychological techniques. The final stage was represented by an advance to a new post-traumatic life, possibly broadened by the experience of surviving the trauma...
    12 KB (1,016 words) - 12:14, 25 May 2025
  • effect, discovered by Elizabeth Loftus, which gave rise to the lost in the mall technique Harry Harlow, an American psychologist best known for his maternal-separation...
    3 KB (439 words) - 18:29, 12 April 2025
  • "The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing Information" is one of the most highly cited papers in psychology...
    16 KB (1,930 words) - 04:21, 12 March 2025