Article
Behavioral Sciences
Ana Luiza Alves Dias, Adriana Maria Fernandes de Oliveira Golzio, Bruno Henrique de Lima Santos, Mirian Graciela da Silva Stiebbe Salvadori, Socrates Golzio dos Santos, Marcelo Sobral da Silva, Reinaldo Nobrega de Almeida, Flavio Freitas Barbosa
Summary: Studies have shown that caffeine can improve the consolidation of episodic-like memory in Wistar rats, leading to increased dopamine turnover rate in the hippocampus.
BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
(2022)
Article
Neurosciences
John J. Sakon, Roozbeh Kiani
Summary: An important feature of human memory is the ability to recall past events. This study explores the accuracy of recalling what, where, and when components of episodic memory. The findings suggest that memory for when has the lowest accuracy and is most influenced by primacy, recency, and interference.
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
(2022)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Daniela J. Palombo, Alessandra A. Te, Katherine J. Checknita, Christopher R. Madan
Summary: Emotion can have complex effects on memory, enhancing memory for central aspects but dampening memory for peripheral/contextual information. The study also found that emotion may impact the accuracy of memory for when an event occurred.
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
(2021)
Article
Psychology, Experimental
Safiyyah Nawaz, Diana Omigie
Summary: Recent evidence suggests that pleasant music has a positive influence on episodic memory encoding. However, it is unclear if this effect holds regardless of the arousingness of the music or the aesthetic emotions it induces. The current study used an online what-where-when paradigm to investigate the influence of music on memory encoding in a rich spatiotemporal environment. The results showed that pleasant low arousing music was associated with better recall performance, and negative aesthetic emotions compromised memory performance.
COGNITION & EMOTION
(2023)
Article
Neurosciences
Sang-Eon Park, Jeonghyun Lee, Jin-Hyuck Park, Maria Jieun Hwang, Sang Ah Lee
Summary: This study examined individual differences in cognitive profiles using a componential episodic memory task, and investigated the role of theta oscillations in performance, specifically in what, where, and when memory. The results showed that what and where memory depended on frontal theta power, while when memory depended on theta modulation by temporal distance between retrieved items. Additionally, Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients exhibited difficulties in when memory.
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
(2023)
Review
Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
Richard M. Palin, M. Santosh
Summary: The theory of plate tectonics is widely accepted and provides a solid framework for describing and predicting the behavior of Earth's lithosphere. Interactions at the Earth's surface offer insight into the planet's inaccessible interior and allow speculation about geological characteristics of other rocky bodies.
Article
Biology
Qihong Lu, Uri Hasson, Kenneth A. Norman
Summary: Recent studies have shown that people are selective when encoding and retrieving episodic memories, and neural networks can also learn to selectively retrieve based on factors like uncertainty about upcoming states. Selectively encoding episodic memories at the end of an event leads to better prediction performance. These findings suggest that selective retrieval and encoding help reduce the risk of retrieving irrelevant memories.
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Elizabeth Laliberte, Hyungwook Yim, Benjamin Stone, Simon J. Dennis
Summary: An important challenge in alibi-generation research is establishing the truth of real-world events of interest. This study used a smartphone app to track adult participants and found that participants often made mistakes in identifying their locations. The research also revealed that participants tend to confuse days across weeks and hours across days, with location similarity leading to more errors than audio environment or movement type similarity.
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
(2021)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Zhi Lu, Anna Mattila, Stephanie Q. Liu
Summary: The research suggests that low-status customers prefer non-preferential recovery, while high-status customers tend to be indifferent. The effects are moderated by interpersonal and failure similarity, with fairness perception being the psychological mechanism underlying these effects. These findings have important implications for service recovery practices in tourism firms.
ANNALS OF TOURISM RESEARCH
(2021)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Aurelia Bugaiska, Patrick Bonin, Arnaud Witt
Summary: According to the adaptive view of human memory, animated objects are better remembered than inanimated objects in adults, due to their higher importance for survival. The present study aimed to investigate the animacy effect on recollection in children. The results showed that older children demonstrated an animacy effect on memory, particularly in their remember responses, indicating its episodic nature.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2023)
Article
Psychology, Developmental
Emily Van Etten, Catherine Sumida, Lisa Graves, Heather Holden, Francesca Lopez, Andrea Mustafa, Paul E. Gilbert
Summary: This study used a new test to assess memory differences across the adult lifespan and found evidence for age-related differences beginning in middle age, with young adults performing the best in memory tests.
AGING NEUROPSYCHOLOGY AND COGNITION
(2022)
Article
Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
Lucas Arthur de Almeida Telles, Jose Elias Claudio Arroyo, Daniel Henrique Breda Binoti, Alexandre Simoes Lorenzon, Alexandre Rosa dos Santos, Getulio Fonseca Domingues, Rafael Tassinari Resende, Gustavo Eduardo Marcatti, Duberli Geomar Elera Gonzales, Nero Lemos Martins de Castro, Pedro Henrique Santos Mota, Brener de Almeida Oliveira, Marcio Lopes da Silva
Summary: The proposed mathematical programming model integrates cash flows to achieve optimal production planning and updates, avoiding harmful land use. The model provides ideal financial security measures for landowners and meets new production demands.
JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
(2021)
Review
Nutrition & Dietetics
Chris J. J. Mulder, Luca Elli, Benjamin Lebwohl, Govind K. Makharia, Kamran Rostami, Alberto Rubio-Tapia, Michael Schumann, Jason Tye-Din, Jonas Zeitz, Abdulbaqi Al-Toma
Summary: For patients with celiac disease, a gluten-free diet is necessary to resolve symptoms and minimize long-term morbidity. Follow-up care should involve a multidisciplinary approach, improved access through telemedicine, and adherence to guidelines informed by evidence-based research. However, data is lacking on optimal clinic visit intervals and outcomes, as well as quality indicators and resource utilization.
Article
Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence
Chenrui Zhang, Ping Chen, Tao Lei, Yangxu Wu, Hongying Meng
Summary: Video-based person re-identification is critical in intelligent video surveillance, and existing methods often use attention mechanisms to address challenging variations. However, these methods mainly focus on occlusion, neglecting other important spatial information and temporal cues in video frames. This paper proposes a comprehensive attention mechanism, W3AN, which effectively learns discriminative spatial-temporal features for person re-identification. The experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of W3AN model and the contributions of major modules are clarified in the discussion.
Review
Psychology, Experimental
Carina L. L. Fan, H. Moriah Sokolowski, R. Shayna Rosenbaum, Brian Levine
Summary: Early cognitive neuroscientific research indicated that the hippocampus plays a crucial role in spatial navigation in rodents and autobiographical episodic memory in humans. Researchers proposed that the human hippocampus supports memory through its representation of space and the study of the relationship between spatial cognition and episodic memory in humans has grown rapidly. However, the term "spatial" is used in different contexts and it is unclear which aspect of space is critical for memory. The definition and testing of "episodic" memory also vary. This review discusses the aspects of space commonly linked to episodic memory and explores individual differences in naturalistic autobiographical memory. Future studies should carefully consider the aspect(s) of space linked to memory in the context of naturalistic human cognition.
WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-COGNITIVE SCIENCE
(2023)