1. Stress- and trauma-related blockade of episodic-autobiographical memory processing
- Author
-
Andreas Kordon, Hans J. Markowitsch, and Angelica Staniloiu
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Malingering ,Memory, Long-Term ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Memory, Episodic ,Amnesia ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Autonoetic consciousness ,Psychological Trauma ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,indifference ,Functional neuroimaging ,medicine ,Conversion syndrome ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,belle ,Episodic memory ,Cognitive science ,Autobiographical memory ,Long-term memory ,05 social sciences ,Neuropsychology ,Dissociative Amnesia ,Effort ,Functional amnesia ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Stress, Psychological - Abstract
Memory disorders without a direct neural substrate still belong to the riddles in neuroscience. Although they were for a while dissociated from research and clinical arenas, risking becoming forgotten diseases, they sparked novel interests, paralleling the refinements in functional neuroimaging and neuropsychology. Although Endel Tulving has not fully embarked himself on exploring this field, he had published at least one article on functional amnesia (Schacter et al., 1982) and ignited a seminal article on amnesia with mixed etiology (Craver et al., 2014). Most importantly, the research of Endel Tulving has provided the researchers and clinicians in the field of dissociative or functional amnesia with the best framework for superiorly understanding these disorders through the lens of his evolving concept of episodic memory and five long term memory systems classification, which he developed and advanced. Herein we use the classification of long-term memory systems of Endel Tulving as well as his concepts and views on autonoetic consciousness, relationships between memory systems and relationship between episodic memory and emotion to describe six cases of dissociative amnesia that put a challenge for researchers and clinicians due to their atypicality. We then discuss their possible triggering and maintaining mechanisms, pointing to their clinical heterogeneity and multifaceted causally explanatory frameworks.
- Published
- 2019