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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
3  reciprocal manner during the anxiolytic and amnesic action of the benzodiazepine agonist.
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
6        We addressed this issue by asking MTL amnesics and controls to generate exemplars of three typ
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
9 emory function, from healthy young adults to amnesic cases.
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
12         The labels generated and used by the amnesics during interactions with their partners became
13  social recognition test in mice revealed an amnesic effect at 5 mg/kg intraperitoneally.
14      The present experiment investigated the amnesic effect of lidocaine and ECS in 25 rats trained o
15 previous learning protected animals from the amnesic effect of NMDA antagonists on new learning (of a
16 cessary to render memories vulnerable to the amnesic effect of PKMz-antisense.
17 aversive memories renders them liable to the amnesic effect of reconsolidation inhibitors.
18                             Furthermore, the amnesic effect persists for at least 24 h, cannot be att
19                           These two distinct amnesic effects are abolished if protein degradation by
20 at potential for clinical practice, the fear-amnesic effects are typically demonstrated through Pavlo
21 tic effects during the post-shock period and amnesic effects during a retention test 24 h later.
22                                          The amnesic effects of atr/scop in the MSDB have been presum
23 campus, is a critical locus in mediating the amnesic effects of atr/scop.
24 cilitative effects that outweighed potential amnesic effects of cortical beta amyloid.
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
28                    The results show that the amnesic effects of TS+AM+FX cannot be generally attribut
29 ures for faster onset of action, predictable amnesic effects, and relatively rapid recovery.
30 esis that STEP may be required for ethanol's amnesic effects.
31 otoxic, antidepressive, anxiolytic, and anti-amnesic effects.
32  over a 30-min delay; (iii) two subgroups of amnesics emerged, those subjects impaired in acquisition
33                           In addition to the amnesic episodes, many patients describe significant int
34 e patients with otherwise typical FTD can be amnesic from presentation, or even present solely with a
35                    Studies of fluency in MTL amnesics have yielded mixed results but were not designe
36                       E.P. became profoundly amnesic in 1992 after viral encephalitis, which damaged
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
39             Patients with typical AD and non-amnesic initial presentation had a significantly higher
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
42 ficits in multiple cognitive domains and 31% amnesic MCI.
43                                              Amnesic participants made more errors than nonamnesic pa
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
46                                              Amnesic participants' latencies were longer and distance
47                                          The amnesic participants' learning resulted in their arrivin
48  perceptual memory (priming) in a profoundly amnesic patient (E.P.), despite at-chance recognition me
49                       We tested a profoundly amnesic patient (E.P.), who has virtually complete bilat
50                                              Amnesic patient D.A. demonstrated intact TP, and perform
51                                          The amnesic patient E.P. has demonstrated normal levels of r
52 r semantic (fact) learning in the profoundly amnesic patient E.P., who has extensive damage limited p
53   Although neuropsychological studies of the amnesic patient H.
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;
57                                              Amnesic patients (n = 8), who have severely impaired dec
58                                              Amnesic patients acquired delay conditioning at a normal
59                                              Amnesic patients also produced significantly more nonada
60 easures that vary with word repetition in 12 amnesic patients and 12 control subjects: (i) a late pos
61                             Seven bitemporal amnesic patients and 7 controls were randomly presented
62                                              Amnesic patients and control participants generated exem
63  this issue, resting fMRI was performed with amnesic patients and control participants.
64                                              Amnesic patients and controls listened to verbal descrip
65                                              Amnesic patients and controls showed comparable total le
66                                              Amnesic patients and nondemented patients with Parkinson
67                   Eight medial temporal lobe amnesic patients and their demographically matched contr
68                                              Amnesic patients are impaired on recall tests [1, 2], an
69 reported perceptual deficits in the group of amnesic patients at the heart of this debate.
70 ning of the transverse patterning problem by amnesic patients derives from their general impairment i
71             Controls performed well, but the amnesic patients did not acquire categorical knowledge.
72                                              Amnesic patients exhibited normal learning of the task b
73                                          Two amnesic patients failed to recover fear responses follow
74 emonstrations of intact category learning by amnesic patients for dot patterns, artificial grammars,
75        Specifically, it was widely held that amnesic patients have impaired explicit memory performan
76                                              Amnesic patients K.C. and R.F.R. were tested to provide
77 ruction observed in some hippocampal-damaged amnesic patients may be supported by residual function i
78                                              Amnesic patients often show improved performance when st
79   Experiment 1 examined the performance of 6 amnesic patients on 11 to 25 different recognition memor
80      On the tests of semantic knowledge, the amnesic patients performed markedly better than the pati
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
85                                          The amnesic patients tended to be impaired on the same items
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
88                                          The amnesic patients underwent a sadness induction procedure
89       The nondeclarative memory available to amnesic patients was relatively inflexible and available
90 In the present studies, category learning in amnesic patients was tested with stimuli that both exhib
91                                              Amnesic patients were able to distinguish between 2 tone
92                                              Amnesic patients were as competent as healthy volunteers
93 o discourage the use of episodic memory, the amnesic patients were impaired and E.P. performed at cha
94                                          The amnesic patients were impaired at solving both the trans
95                                              Amnesic patients were not able to reverse the previously
96                      Numerous results in the amnesic patients were predicted in advance by the single
97                                 In contrast, amnesic patients were unimpaired on the category decisio
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
101                                        Three amnesic patients with damage limited to the hippocampal
102                                              Amnesic patients with damage to the hippocampal formatio
103             Here, we addressed this topic in amnesic patients with damage to the hippocampus (HC grou
104                                         Most amnesic patients with damage to the medial temporal lobe
105                 To resolve this discrepancy, amnesic patients with either selective hippocampal damag
106                                        Three amnesic patients with extensive bilateral medial tempora
107                        It is unknown whether amnesic patients with hippocampal damage would exhibit s
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
110 me intervals has sometimes been described in amnesic patients with medial temporal lobe damage.
111                                              Amnesic patients with medial temporal system damage show
112                                Specifically, amnesic patients with MTL damage were impaired at probab
113                                              Amnesic patients with MTL lesions that converged on the
114 hy participants, but occurred only rarely in amnesic patients with severe damage to the hippocampus.
115                                        Human amnesic patients with well characterized MTL damage and
116                            It was found that amnesic patients' CRs occurred significantly earlier tha
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
119 ruous than for incongruous words, as did the amnesic patients, who performed less well overall.
120 ative memory that are beyond the capacity of amnesic patients.
121 nimals are consistent with the findings from amnesic patients.
122 nd medial prefrontal cortex were observed in amnesic patients.
123  dementia performed markedly better than the amnesic patients.
124 d an aspect of memory that was intact in the amnesic patients.
125 a 'Schema for the Examination of Aphasic and Amnesic Persons'.
126 45 [IQR 0.035-0.056]) than did those with an amnesic presentation (0.041 [0.031-0.057]; p=0.001).
127                     We observed two distinct amnesic profiles in bvFTD patients that could reflect tw
128  Studies have investigated the nootropic and amnesic properties of both systems.
129 ciceptive effects of THC and its detrimental amnesic properties.
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
133                                         This amnesic shadow follows a dose-response function, becomes
134 ting occurs on these affective memories, the amnesic shadow itself is induced by conscious suppressio
135                                   Casting an amnesic shadow over harmful, reactivated memories thereb
136 ion through retrieval suppression induces an amnesic shadow that impairs the encoding and stabilizati
137                                Combining the amnesic shadow with subliminal reactivation may offer a
138 y subliminally reactivating them within this amnesic shadow.
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
141  for the neurologic condition referred to as amnesic shellfish poisoning.
142 rent evidence suggests that after an initial amnesic stage in Alzheimer's disease, attention is the f
143                       Ten chronic and stable amnesic subjects (nine with bilateral medial temporal lo
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
150 sly accessible memories, producing a classic amnesic syndrome.
151  particular, mechanisms underlying the human amnesic syndrome.
152 ral lobes can result in profound anterograde amnesic syndromes.
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
155                                              Amnesic windows might also occur in healthy people due t

 
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