PMID: 9444475Jan 28, 1998Paper

Confabulation in a dysexecutive patient: implication for models of retrieval

Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior
C Papagno, A Baddeley

Abstract

A confabulating patient MM is described who, despite clear evidence of a dysexecutive syndrome, showed normal prospective and retrospective memory in everyday life and preserved autobiographical memory. He also performed well on many, but not all laboratory-based measures of learning and memory that were given. His confabulation typically involved going well-beyond the information he could genuinely recall, and was attributed to a defect in memory monitoring resulting from his frontal lobe damage. Implications for the role of "stop rules" in memory retrieval are discussed.

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Citations

Mar 17, 2004·Brain Research. Cognitive Brain Research·Antoni Rodriguez-FornellsThomas F Münte
Mar 24, 2004·Neuropsychologia·Aikaterini FotopoulouOliver Turnbull
Apr 18, 2008·Cognitive Neuropsychology·Kasey MetcalfMax Coltheart
Sep 10, 2008·Cognitive Neuropsychology·Gian Daniele ZanninoGiovanni A Carlesimo
Sep 17, 2009·Cognitive Neuropsychiatry·Asaf Gilboa
Jan 20, 2009·Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior·Elisa CiaramelliMarco Borsotti
Jun 30, 2004·Brain and Cognition·Oliver H TurnbullCathryn E Y Evans
Jun 16, 2016·Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience·Maria Chiara LiveraniArmin Schnider
Dec 31, 2002·Journal of Child Neurology·Daria RivaSara Bulgheroni
May 11, 2018·Experimental Brain Research·Gianfranco Dalla BarbaMichel Thiebaut de Schotten
Feb 3, 2020·Neuropsychologia·Gianfranco Dalla BarbaMarzia Alderighi

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