Recent findings suggest that multiple event properties contribute to shape the phenomenology of episodic future thoughts, but the specific role of each property is not yet fully understood. This study shows that different phenomenological features are predicted by distinct event properties. The vividness of an episodic future thought largely depends on the familiarity of its constitutive elements (i.e., the envisioned location, persons and objects), while the visual perspective adopted is instead related to the temporal distance of the imagined event. Cognitive feelings such as the sense of pre-experiencing the future depend on sensory-perceptual qualities, and are further modulated by the personal importance attributed to the event. These ...
In the last two decades, the study of memory processes has been expanded to encompass theprocesses i...
How does imagining future events—whether positive or negative—influence our choices in the present? ...
Episodic future thinking refers to the capacity to imagine or simulate experiences that might occur ...
Recent findings suggest that multiple event properties contribute to shape the phenomenology of epis...
Imagining one's future is a ubiquitous and important aspect of mental life. In recent years, researc...
The ability to think about the future-prospection-is central to many aspects of human cognition and ...
Increasing evidence from several domains of research indicates that similar neurocognitive mechanism...
The ability to mentally simulate hypothetical scenarios is a rapidly growing area of research in bot...
Imagining future events and adjusting current behavior accordingly is a hallmark of human cognition....
Humans are able to transcend the present and mentally travel to another time, place, or perspective....
Memory can be flexibly used to image events that might happen in one’s personal future, a capacity t...
peer reviewedRecent research suggests that many imagined future events are not represented in isolat...
This study sought to investigate the component processes underlying the ability to imagine future ev...
Memories of personal events can generate complex subjective experiences with high-sensory details, a...
As humans, we frequently engage in mental time travel, reliving past experiences and imagining possi...
In the last two decades, the study of memory processes has been expanded to encompass theprocesses i...
How does imagining future events—whether positive or negative—influence our choices in the present? ...
Episodic future thinking refers to the capacity to imagine or simulate experiences that might occur ...
Recent findings suggest that multiple event properties contribute to shape the phenomenology of epis...
Imagining one's future is a ubiquitous and important aspect of mental life. In recent years, researc...
The ability to think about the future-prospection-is central to many aspects of human cognition and ...
Increasing evidence from several domains of research indicates that similar neurocognitive mechanism...
The ability to mentally simulate hypothetical scenarios is a rapidly growing area of research in bot...
Imagining future events and adjusting current behavior accordingly is a hallmark of human cognition....
Humans are able to transcend the present and mentally travel to another time, place, or perspective....
Memory can be flexibly used to image events that might happen in one’s personal future, a capacity t...
peer reviewedRecent research suggests that many imagined future events are not represented in isolat...
This study sought to investigate the component processes underlying the ability to imagine future ev...
Memories of personal events can generate complex subjective experiences with high-sensory details, a...
As humans, we frequently engage in mental time travel, reliving past experiences and imagining possi...
In the last two decades, the study of memory processes has been expanded to encompass theprocesses i...
How does imagining future events—whether positive or negative—influence our choices in the present? ...
Episodic future thinking refers to the capacity to imagine or simulate experiences that might occur ...