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1. Interactive influences of prior knowledge on episodic memory.

2. Visual Recognition Memory of Scenes Is Driven by Categorical, Not Sensory, Visual Representations.

3. The structure of prior knowledge enhances memory in experts by reducing interference.

4. Age-related dedifferentiation and hyperdifferentiation of perceptual and mnemonic representations.

5. The Role of the Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex and Basal Forebrain in Relational Memory and Inference.

6. Age-Related Compensatory Reconfiguration of PFC Connections during Episodic Memory Retrieval.

7. Visual and Semantic Representations Predict Subsequent Memory in Perceptual and Conceptual Memory Tests.

8. Application of long-interval paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation to motion-sensitive visual cortex does not lead to changes in motion discrimination.

9. Cortical Overlap and Cortical-Hippocampal Interactions Predict Subsequent True and False Memory.

10. Neural basis of goal-driven changes in knowledge activation.

11. Excitatory TMS modulates memory representations.

12. Knowledge supports memory retrieval through familiarity, not recollection.

13. Neural mechanisms underlying subsequent memory for personal beliefs:An fMRI study.

14. Search and recovery of autobiographical and laboratory memories: Shared and distinct neural components.

15. Contributions of the ventral parietal cortex to declarative memory.

16. Hippocampal Contributions to the Large-Scale Episodic Memory Network Predict Vivid Visual Memories.

17. On Known Unknowns: Fluency and the Neural Mechanisms of Illusory Truth.

18. The influence of self-awareness on emotional memory formation: an fMRI study.

19. Reinstatement of individual past events revealed by the similarity of distributed activation patterns during encoding and retrieval.

20. The neural basis of involuntary episodic memories.

21. Neural similarity between encoding and retrieval is related to memory via hippocampal interactions.

22. Neural correlates of retrieval-based memory enhancement: an fMRI study of the testing effect.

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