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1 hbourhood, to which he moved after he became amnesic.
2 CA1 of brain histamine-depleted rats (hence, amnesic) 10 min before the retention test restored IA me
4 nerative diseases, included 6 3 with typical amnesic Alzheimer disease and 3 with atypical variants (
5 ude of [18F]AV-1451 binding (3 patients with amnesic Alzheimer disease, r = -0.82; P < .001; r = -0.7
7 egy; (ii) following the organization trials, amnesics and non-amnesics retained information to a comp
8 These data suggest that at least some severe amnesics are able to acquire new semantic knowledge, pro
10 ptide is thought to contribute to the subtle amnesic changes in Alzheimer's disease (AD) by causing s
11 ry during the 13-year period since he became amnesic, despite having no measurable anterograde episod
15 previous learning protected animals from the amnesic effect of NMDA antagonists on new learning (of a
20 at potential for clinical practice, the fear-amnesic effects are typically demonstrated through Pavlo
25 experiment 2, we determined the anterograde amnesic effects of large lesions of the hippocampus that
26 methamphetamine, and an insensitivity to the amnesic effects of the cholinergic receptor antagonist,
27 nd therefore support the hypothesis that the amnesic effects of this lesion are caused primarily by t
32 over a 30-min delay; (iii) two subgroups of amnesics emerged, those subjects impaired in acquisition
34 e patients with otherwise typical FTD can be amnesic from presentation, or even present solely with a
37 ive temporal lobe damage, all of whom became amnesic in a known year, were given tests of anterograde
38 trieval despite the fact that these mice are amnesic in long-term memory tests when natural recall cu
40 scertain since damage to this tract in human amnesics is invariably accompanied by atrophy to surroun
41 We report the case of R.S., a 49-year-old amnesic man, who we found to have acquired information a
44 us in spatial learning and memory, we tested amnesic participants with hippocampal damage in a virtua
45 s hypothesis by examining the performance of amnesic participants with hippocampal lesions (one femal
48 perceptual memory (priming) in a profoundly amnesic patient (E.P.), despite at-chance recognition me
52 r semantic (fact) learning in the profoundly amnesic patient E.P., who has extensive damage limited p
54 trasted the findings for E.P. with the noted amnesic patient H.M, whose surgical lesion is strikingly
55 ted to the hippocampal formation, a severely amnesic patient with extensive medial temporal lobe dama
56 he ability of bilateral medial temporal lobe amnesic patients (MT; n=8) and normal participants (NC;
60 easures that vary with word repetition in 12 amnesic patients and 12 control subjects: (i) a late pos
70 ning of the transverse patterning problem by amnesic patients derives from their general impairment i
74 emonstrations of intact category learning by amnesic patients for dot patterns, artificial grammars,
77 ruction observed in some hippocampal-damaged amnesic patients may be supported by residual function i
79 Experiment 1 examined the performance of 6 amnesic patients on 11 to 25 different recognition memor
81 mained stable across brief breaks in typing, amnesic patients showed evidence of impaired access to m
82 relations in paired-associate learning, the amnesic patients showed remarkably robust collaborative
83 ntrols retained these gains over the breaks; amnesic patients slowed down and compensated for these l
84 of conflicting results from studies in human amnesic patients suggests that extraneous damage to extr
86 stem, providing preliminary support from MTL amnesic patients that the default network can be fractio
87 ion is a processing mechanism that may allow amnesic patients to compensate for relational memory def
90 In the present studies, category learning in amnesic patients was tested with stimuli that both exhib
93 o discourage the use of episodic memory, the amnesic patients were impaired and E.P. performed at cha
98 investigated object perception in two human amnesic patients who were chosen on the basis of their l
99 nd familiarity judgement tasks compared with amnesic patients with Alzheimer's disease and healthy co
100 ings are described here for three additional amnesic patients with bilateral damage limited to the hi
108 ddressed in 5 experiments with E.P., 3 other amnesic patients with hippocampal damage, and 8 healthy
109 ces, we compared the performance of severely amnesic patients with large medial temporal lobe lesions
114 hy participants, but occurred only rarely in amnesic patients with severe damage to the hippocampus.
117 matomotor network connectivity was intact in amnesic patients, indicating that bilateral MTL lesions
118 with the findings from patient RB and other amnesic patients, make three important points about memo
126 45 [IQR 0.035-0.056]) than did those with an amnesic presentation (0.041 [0.031-0.057]; p=0.001).
130 in individuals with Alzheimer disease and in amnesic rats have demonstrated that DBS targeted to the
131 BLA of brain histamine-depleted rats, hence amnesic, restored long-term memory; however, the time fr
132 ng the organization trials, amnesics and non-amnesics retained information to a comparable extent ove
134 ting occurs on these affective memories, the amnesic shadow itself is induced by conscious suppressio
136 ion through retrieval suppression induces an amnesic shadow that impairs the encoding and stabilizati
139 P), diarrheic shellfish poisoning (DSP), and amnesic shellfish poisoning (ASP) toxins in seafood is a
140 o detect the primary marine biotoxin groups: amnesic shellfish poisoning toxins, paralytic shellfish
142 rent evidence suggests that after an initial amnesic stage in Alzheimer's disease, attention is the f
144 paired declarative memory for the tasks, the amnesic subjects demonstrated acquisition and retention
145 dings of impaired item memory in hippocampal amnesics suggest a more nuanced role for the hippocampus
146 presentation: a typical pattern with initial amnesic syndrome (n = 4 cases), progressive visual dysfu
147 ropine and scopolamine (atr/scop) produce an amnesic syndrome in humans, subhuman primates, and roden
148 eptal muscarinic agonists also alleviate the amnesic syndrome produced by systemic administration of
149 rief survey of the clinical varieties of the amnesic syndrome, transient and persistent, selected the
153 when active, the internal state provided by amnesic treatments is represented and integrated within
154 major findings were: (i) immediate recall in amnesics was improved by providing an organizational str