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Your search keyword '"ANDERSON MC"' showing total 30 results

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30 results on '"ANDERSON MC"'

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1. Reduced hippocampal-cortical connectivity during memory suppression predicts the ability to forget unwanted memories.

2. Inducing forgetting of unwanted memories through subliminal reactivation.

3. Dynamic targeting enables domain-general inhibitory control over action and thought by the prefrontal cortex.

4. Cortical thickness in the right inferior frontal gyrus mediates age-related performance differences on an item-method directed forgetting task.

5. Active Forgetting: Adaptation of Memory by Prefrontal Control.

6. What doesn't kill you makes you stronger: Psychological trauma and its relationship to enhanced memory control.

7. Memory Control: A Fundamental Mechanism of Emotion Regulation.

8. A supramodal role of the basal ganglia in memory and motor inhibition: Meta-analytic evidence.

9. Successfully controlling intrusive memories is harder when control must be sustained.

10. Parallel Regulation of Memory and Emotion Supports the Suppression of Intrusive Memories.

11. Cognitive and neural consequences of memory suppression in major depressive disorder.

12. Tracking the intrusion of unwanted memories into awareness with event-related potentials.

13. Memory control ability modulates intrusive memories after analogue trauma.

14. The origins of repetitive thought in rumination: separating cognitive style from deficits in inhibitory control over memory.

15. Retrieval induces adaptive forgetting of competing memories via cortical pattern suppression.

16. Older adults can suppress unwanted memories when given an appropriate strategy.

17. Adaptive top-down suppression of hippocampal activity and the purging of intrusive memories from consciousness.

18. Direct suppression as a mechanism for controlling unpleasant memories in daily life.

19. Neural mechanisms of motivated forgetting.

20. Suppressing unwanted memories reduces their unconscious influence via targeted cortical inhibition.

21. Purging of memories from conscious awareness tracked in the human brain.

22. Opposing mechanisms support the voluntary forgetting of unwanted memories.

23. More is not always better: paradoxical effects of repetition on semantic accessibility.

24. Intentional suppression of unwanted memories grows more difficult as we age.

25. Inhibiting your native language: the role of retrieval-induced forgetting during second-language acquisition.

26. The role of inhibitory control in forgetting semantic knowledge.

27. Neural systems underlying the suppression of unwanted memories.

28. Suppressing unwanted memories by executive control.

29. Similarity and inhibition in long-term memory: evidence for a two-factor theory.

30. Remembering can cause forgetting: retrieval dynamics in long-term memory.

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