The efficient use of our memory does not only require remembering encoded information, it also requires forgetting old out-of-date information. That such memory updating is part of our memory system is suggested by numerous behavioral studies. The physiological correlates of this process, however, still remain elusive. In this study we explore oscillatory correlates of memory updating as they occur in list-method directed forgetting. In this task, subjects are cued to forget a previously learned word list and to learn a new list of words instead. Such cuing typically leads to forgetting of the first list (List 1) and to memory enhancement of the second (List 2). Measuring EEGs during List-2 encoding, we identified two effects of the forget ...
To form an episodic memory, we must first process a vast amount of sensory information about the to-...
Episodic memory refers to humans' unique ability to mentally reconstruct past events. Neurocomputati...
Memory crucially depends on the way how information is processed during encoding. Differences in pro...
The efficient use of episodic memory does not only require to remember new information, it also requ...
Prior behavioral work has shown that changing context during encoding can influence long-term memory...
Retrieving a target item from episodic memory typically enhances later memory for the retrieved item...
People’s memory for new information can be enhanced by cuing them to forget older information, as is...
Our capacity to remember and manipulate objects in working memory (WM) is severely limited. However...
Recent research has demonstrated that previously consolidated episodic memories reenter a labile sta...
Across 3 experiments we examined the interplay of part-list cuing and forgetting, employing 3 differ...
Previous studies demonstrated that increases in the theta frequency band with concomitant decreases ...
Previous studies demonstrated that increases in the theta frequency band with concomitant decreases ...
The human brain’s ability to store information and remember past events is thought to be orchestrate...
Several studies have shown that attention and perception can depend upon the phase of ongoing neural...
Previous studies demonstrated that increases in the theta frequency band with concomitant decreases ...
To form an episodic memory, we must first process a vast amount of sensory information about the to-...
Episodic memory refers to humans' unique ability to mentally reconstruct past events. Neurocomputati...
Memory crucially depends on the way how information is processed during encoding. Differences in pro...
The efficient use of episodic memory does not only require to remember new information, it also requ...
Prior behavioral work has shown that changing context during encoding can influence long-term memory...
Retrieving a target item from episodic memory typically enhances later memory for the retrieved item...
People’s memory for new information can be enhanced by cuing them to forget older information, as is...
Our capacity to remember and manipulate objects in working memory (WM) is severely limited. However...
Recent research has demonstrated that previously consolidated episodic memories reenter a labile sta...
Across 3 experiments we examined the interplay of part-list cuing and forgetting, employing 3 differ...
Previous studies demonstrated that increases in the theta frequency band with concomitant decreases ...
Previous studies demonstrated that increases in the theta frequency band with concomitant decreases ...
The human brain’s ability to store information and remember past events is thought to be orchestrate...
Several studies have shown that attention and perception can depend upon the phase of ongoing neural...
Previous studies demonstrated that increases in the theta frequency band with concomitant decreases ...
To form an episodic memory, we must first process a vast amount of sensory information about the to-...
Episodic memory refers to humans' unique ability to mentally reconstruct past events. Neurocomputati...
Memory crucially depends on the way how information is processed during encoding. Differences in pro...