Authors
Zara M Bergström, Jan de Fockert, Alan Richardson-Klavehn
Publication date
2009/7/1
Journal
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Volume
21
Issue
7
Pages
1280-1301
Publisher
MIT Press
Description
Voluntary control processes can be recruited to facilitate recollection in situations where a retrieval cue fails to automatically bring to mind a desired episodic memory. We investigated whether voluntary control processes can also stop recollection of unwanted memories that would otherwise have been automatically recollected. Participants were trained on cue–associate word-pairs, then repeatedly presented with the cue and asked to either recollect or avoid recollecting the associate, while having the event-related potential (ERP) correlate of conscious recollection measured. Halfway through the phase, some cues switched instructions so that participants had to start avoiding recall of associates they had previously repeatedly recalled, and vice versa. ERPs during recollection avoidance showed a significantly reduced positivity in the correlate of conscious recollection, and switching instructions reversed the ERP …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ZM Bergström, J de Fockert, A Richardson-Klavehn - Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2009