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- The functional neuroanatomy of odor evoked autobiographical memories . . .
Behavioral evidence indicates that odor evoked autobiographical memories (OEAMs) are older, more emotional, less thought of and induce stronger time traveling characteristics than autobiographical memories (AMs) evoked by other modalities The main aim of this study was to explore the neural correla …
- Olfaction and emotion: The case of autobiographical memory
Taken together, the overall pattern of findings suggests that retrieval of olfactory evoked information is sensitive to semantic and conceptual processing, and that odor-evoked representations are more emotional than memories triggered by verbal information
- Brain–Immune Interaction Accompanying Odor-Evoked Autobiographic Memory . . .
Odor-evoked autobiographic memories are more emotional than those elicited by other sensory stimuli The results of our previous study indicated that odor-evoked autobiographic memory accompanied by positive emotions has remarkable effects on various psychological and physiological activities, including the secretion of cytokines, which are
- Odor-evoked memories: The importance of choosing the right odor
Odor-evoked autobiographical memories (AMs) are indeed claimed to be different from other memory experiences particularly because of their enhanced specificity, emotional charge, vividness (i e the clarity and detail of visual imagery in a memory), rarity (i e the fact that they're rarely thought of compared to other memories), feeling of
- A naturalistic study of autobiographical memories evoked by olfactory . . .
Results revealed that memories recalled in the context of odors were significantly more emotional than those recalled in the context of the same cue presented visually and by the verbal label for the cue Odor-evoked memories also tended to make participants feel more “brought back” to the original event
- The functional neuroanatomy of odor evoked autobiographical memories . . .
Behavioral evidence indicates that odor evoked autobiographical memories (OEAMs) are older, more emotional, less thought of and induce stronger time traveling characteristics than autobiographical memories (AMs) evoked by other modalities
- Psychological and physiological responses to odor-evoked . . . - PubMed
Recent studies have demonstrated that odor-evoked autobiographic memories are more emotional than those elicited by other sensory stimuli because of the direct neural communication between the olfactory system and the amygdala
- Olfactory LOVER: behavioral and neural correlates of autobiographical . . .
Overall, research indicates that autobiographical odor memory is different than memories evoked by our primary sensory systems; sight, and hearing Here, observed differences from a behavioral and neuroanatomical perspective are presented
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