All Stories

  1. Electrophysiological markers of memory consolidation in the human brain when memories are reactivated during sleep
  2. Improving memory via automated targeted memory reactivation during sleep
  3. Context matters: Changes in memory over a period of sleep are driven by encoding context
  4. Benefits and concerns of seeking and experiencing lucid dreams: Benefits are tied to successful induction and dream control
  5. Made together, replayed together: Context reinstatement during sleep guides memory consolidation
  6. Targeted memory reactivation of face-name learning depends on ample and undisturbed slow-wave sleep
  7. Benefits and concerns of seeking and experiencing lucid dreams: benefits are tied to successful induction and dream control
  8. Memory Reactivation during Sleep Improves Execution of a Challenging Motor Skill
  9. Reactivating Memories from a Mathematical Task over a Period of Sleep
  10. Multiple memories can be simultaneously reactivated during sleep as effectively as a single memory
  11. Preverbal Infants Discover Statistical Word Patterns at Similar Rates as Adults: Evidence From Neural Entrainment
  12. Dynamics of nonlinguistic statistical learning: From neural entrainment to the emergence of explicit knowledge
  13. Examining sleep’s role in memory generalization and specificity through the lens of targeted memory reactivation
  14. Author Correction: Targeted memory reactivation during sleep boosts intentional forgetting of spatial locations
  15. Targeted memory reactivation during sleep boosts intentional forgetting of spatial locations
  16. Prelingual infants discover statistical word patterns at similar rates as adults: evidence from neural entrainment
  17. Targeted Memory Reactivation During Sleep Improves Next-Day Problem Solving
  18. Targeted Memory Reactivation during Sleep Elicits Neural Signals Related to Learning Content
  19. Multiple memories can be simultaneously reactivated during sleep as effectively as a single memory
  20. Strengthening sleep–autonomic interaction via acoustic enhancement of slow oscillations
  21. Cued reactivation during slow-wave sleep induces brain connectivity changes related to memory stabilization
  22. Competitive learning modulates memory consolidation during sleep
  23. Targeted memory reactivation during sleep to strengthen memory for arbitrary pairings
  24. Cued reactivation during slow-wave sleep induces connectivity changes related to memory stabilization
  25. Online neural monitoring of statistical learning
  26. Sleep-based memory processing facilitates grammatical generalization: Evidence from targeted memory reactivation
  27. The Benefits of Targeted Memory Reactivation for Consolidation in Sleep are Contingent on Memory Accuracy and Direct Cue-Memory Associations
  28. Effects of phase-locked acoustic stimulation during a nap on EEG spectra and declarative memory consolidation
  29. Phase-locked loop for precisely timed acoustic stimulation during sleep
  30. Phase of Spontaneous Slow Oscillations during Sleep Influences Memory-Related Processing of Auditory Cues
  31. Functional differences between statistical learning with and without explicit training
  32. Compensatory processing during rule-based category learning in older adults
  33. Memory improvement via slow-oscillatory stimulation during sleep in older adults
  34. Implicit and explicit contributions to statistical learning
  35. Dissociation of category-learning systems via brain potentials
  36. Unlearning implicit social biases during sleep
  37. Targeted Memory Reactivation during Sleep Depends on Prior Learning
  38. Sleep facilitates learning a new linguistic rule
  39. Response to Block et al.: first-person perspectives are both necessary and troublesome for consciousness science
  40. Benefits of Mindfulness Training for Patients With Progressive Cognitive Decline and Their Caregivers
  41. Retrieval Intention Modulates the Effects of Directed Forgetting Instructions on Recollection
  42. The source of consciousness
  43. Fear not: manipulating sleep might help you forget
  44. Neuronal and Neural-Population Mechanisms of Voluntary Visual-Spatial Attention
  45. Manipulating letter fluency for words alters electrophysiological correlates of recognition memory
  46. Distinct medial temporal contributions to different forms of recognition in amnestic mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease
  47. Neural correlates of familiarity and conceptual fluency in a recognition test with ancient pictographic characters
  48. Reinforcing Rhythms in the Sleeping Brain with a Computerized Metronome
  49. The Role of Memory Reactivation during Wakefulness and Sleep in Determining Which Memories Endure
  50. Upgrading the sleeping brain with targeted memory reactivation
  51. Detecting and categorizing fleeting emotions in faces.
  52. Human Memory Systems: A Framework for Understanding the Neurocognitive Foundations of Intuition
  53. Neural activity tied to reading predicts individual differences in extended-text comprehension
  54. Many roads lead to recognition: Electrophysiological correlates of familiarity derived from short-term masked repetition priming
  55. More than a feeling: Pervasive influences of memory without awareness of retrieval
  56. On the pervasive influences of implicit memory
  57. Neural Correlates of Reactivation and Retrieval-Induced Distortion
  58. Correction for Hauner et al., Exposure therapy triggers lasting reorganization of neural fear processing
  59. Cued memory reactivation during sleep influences skill learning
  60. Memory stabilization with targeted reactivation during human slow-wave sleep
  61. Assuming too much from ‘familiar’ brain potentials
  62. Exposure therapy triggers lasting reorganization of neural fear processing
  63. Neural Mechanisms of Object Naming and Word Comprehension in Primary Progressive Aphasia
  64. Concurrent Impairments in Sleep and Memory in Amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment
  65. The Potato Chip Really Does Look Like Elvis! Neural Hallmarks of Conceptual Processing Associated with Finding Novel Shapes Subjectively Meaningful
  66. Neural correlates of contextual cueing are modulated by explicit learning
  67. Differential Roles of Frequency-following and Frequency-doubling Visual Responses Revealed by Evoked Neural Harmonics
  68. Medial temporal contributions to successful face-name learning
  69. Why Some Faces won't be Remembered: Brain Potentials Illuminate Successful Versus Unsuccessful Encoding for Same-Race and Other-Race Faces
  70. Conceptual Priming and Familiarity: Different Expressions of Memory during Recognition Testing with Distinct Neurophysiological Correlates
  71. Sleep Influences the Severity of Memory Disruption in Amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment
  72. Bridging divergent neural models of recognition memory: Introduction to the special issue and commentary on key issues
  73. Orientation to learning context modulates retrieval processing for unrecognized words
  74. What makes recognition without awareness appear to be elusive? Strategic factors that influence the accuracy of guesses
  75. Real-Time Neural Signals of Perceptual Priming with Unfamiliar Geometric Shapes
  76. Familiarity or Conceptual Priming? Good Question! Comment on Stenberg, Hellman, Johansson, and Rosén (2009)
  77. Putting the brain back together: Mechanisms of interhemispheric integration in face perception
  78. Emotional context at learning systematically biases memory for facial information
  79. EEG Measures Index Neural and Cognitive Recovery from Sleep Deprivation
  80. Finding meaning in novel geometric shapes influences electrophysiological correlates of repetition and dissociates perceptual and conceptual priming
  81. Electrophysiology of Object Naming in Primary Progressive Aphasia
  82. Long-lasting effects of subliminal affective priming from facial expressions
  83. Strengthening Individual Memories by Reactivating Them During Sleep
  84. Establishing a relationship between activity reduction in human perirhinal cortex and priming
  85. Left-frontal brain potentials index conceptual implicit memory for words initially viewed subliminally
  86. Remembering and knowing: Electrophysiological distinctions at encoding but not retrieval
  87. Recognition without awareness in humans and its implications for animal models of episodic memory
  88. Within-hemifield perceptual averaging of facial expressions predicted by neural averaging
  89. Memory and the awareness of remembering
  90. An electrophysiological signature of unconscious recognition memory
  91. Recall of remote episodic memories can appear deficient because of a gist-based retrieval orientation
  92. Memory Consolidation: Systems
  93. Who can you trust? Behavioral and neural differences between perceptual and memory-based influences
  94. Brain substrates of implicit and explicit memory: The importance of concurrently acquired neural signals of both memory types
  95. Accurate forced-choice recognition without awareness of memory retrieval
  96. Conscious intrusion of threat information via unconscious priming in anxiety
  97. Familiarity and Conceptual Priming Engage Distinct Cortical Networks
  98. Subliminal Smells can Guide Social Preferences
  99. Validating neural correlates of familiarity
  100. Neural correlates of conceptual implicit memory and their contamination of putative neural correlates of explicit memory
  101. Trait anxiety modulates supraliminal and subliminal threat: Brain potential evidence for early and late processing influences
  102. Attention induces synchronization-based response gain in steady-state visual evoked potentials
  103. Distinguishing source memory and item memory: Brain potentials at encoding and retrieval
  104. Binding memory fragments together to form declarative memories depends on cross-cortical storage
  105. Neural correlates of perceptual contributions to nondeclarative memory for faces
  106. Dissociating perceptual and representation-based contributions to priming of face recognition
  107. When memory does not fail: Familiarity-based recognition in mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease.
  108. Fluent Conceptual Processing and Explicit Memory for Faces Are Electrophysiologically Distinct
  109. A whole face is more than the sum of its halves: Interactive processing in face perception
  110. Electrophysiological correlates of forming memories for faces, names, and face–name associations
  111. Memory reactivation and consolidation during sleep
  112. Neural Evidence That Vivid Imagining Can Lead to False Remembering
  113. Electrical Signals of Memory and of the Awareness of Remembering
  114. An electrophysiological investigation of memory encoding, depth of processing, and word frequency in humans
  115. The neural basis of the butcher-on-the-bus phenomenon: when a face seems familiar but is not remembered
  116. Brain networks for analyzing eye gaze
  117. Neural Correlates of Person Recognition
  118. Neural Manifestations of Memory with and without Awareness
  119. Neural Correlates of the Left-Visual-Field Superiority in Face Perception Appear at Multiple Stages of Face Processing
  120. Observing the transformation of experience into memory
  121. Field potentials in the human hippocampus during the encoding and recognition of visual stimuli
  122. Neural events that underlie remembering something that never happened
  123. Neural correlates of memory retrieval and evaluation
  124. Electrophysiological Correlates of Recollecting Faces of Known and Unknown Individuals
  125. Brain waves following remembered faces index conscious recollection
  126. Brain potentials associated with perceptual priming vs explicit remembering during the repetition of visual word-form
  127. An Electrophysiological Measure of Priming of Visual Word-Form
  128. Potentials evoked in human and monkey medial temporal lobe during auditory and visual oddball paradigms
  129. Event-Related Potentials Elicited by Deviant Endings to Melodies
  130. Priming of face matching in amnesia
  131. Indirect measures of memory in a duration-judgement task are normal in amnesic patients
  132. ERPs predictive of subsequent recall and recognition performance
  133. P3-like brain waves in normal monkeys and in monkeys with medial temporal lesions.
  134. Neural correlates of encoding in an incidental learning paradigm