Disorders of memory must have been known to the ancients and are mentioned in several early medical texts, but it was not until the closing decades of the 19th century that serious attempts were made to analyze them or to seek their explanation in terms of ... Paramnesia and confabulation ... Reduplicative paramnesia...
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www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/374514/memory-abnorm...
www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/374514/memory-abnormality
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"A group of non-amnesic cases with confabulation, paramnesia, false memories or memory-laden hallucination (dysfunctional hypermnesia), due to a unilateral lesion, was also assembled... ... paramnesia (pa-ram-nee-ziă) n. a distorted memory, such as confabulation or déjà vu.
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www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O62-paramnesia.html
www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O62-paramnesia.html
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Submit a response ... No responses publishe ... Research Article: Pathogenesis of reduplicative paramnesia.
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jnnp.bmj.com/cgi/reprint/51/6/839.pdf
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mon to reduplicative paramnesia and confabulation, but in reduplicative paramnesia loss of perceptual and topo- graphical orientation may also be relevant. ...
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jnnp.bmj.com/content/62/6/675.full.pdf
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A patient is reported who presented with reduplicative paramnesia following a vascular lesion in the right ... Confabulation and frontal lobe dysfunction. ...
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www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1032...
www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1032979
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Amazon.com: The Lost Self: Pathologies of the Brain and Identity
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Price:
$55.00
The Lost Self :Pathologies of the Brain and Identity is an in-depth exploration of one of the most mysterious and controversial topics in neuroscience, The book is a guide to understanding how the brain creates who we are, and what happens when things go ... They first lay the foundation for an understanding of the topic.
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Whitty and Zangwill (1977) indicated that a mild form of paramnesia or confabulation may exist in most instances of post-traumatic amnesia, but that occasionally an instance of marked confabulation may occur in the presence of relatively normal behavior in other speheres of activity, as opposed to confabulation which may...
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www.ic.arizona.edu/ic/amd/headinj.htm
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In his book The Neurology of Thinking, D. Frank Benson says "in all three conditions-reduplicative paramnesia, Capgras syndrome, and spontaneous confabulation-decreased ability to monitor the obvious incorrectness of a belief and/or to act on corrected information remains represents the key dysfunction";
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www.elmhurst.edu/~phl/pdf/confabulation.pdf
www.elmhurst.edu/~phl/pdf/confabulation.pdf
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