Involuntary memory chains: what do they tell us about autobiographical memory organisation?

scientific article published on 27 September 2012

Involuntary memory chains: what do they tell us about autobiographical memory organisation? is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1080/09658211.2012.726359
P698PubMed publication ID23016577

P2093author name stringJohn H Mace
Ronan S Bernas
Amanda M Clevinger
P2860cites workEmotionally charged autobiographical memories across the life span: the recall of happy, sad, traumatic, and involuntary memoriesQ34167726
Priming involuntary autobiographical memoriesQ34562702
Involuntary memory chaining versus event cueing: Which is a better indicator of autobiographical memory organisation?Q38499121
Episodic remembering creates access to involuntary conscious memory: demonstrating involuntary recall on a voluntary recall taskQ48582707
Voluntary and involuntary access to autobiographical memory.Q51096257
P433issue3
P921main subjectautobiographical memoryQ682304
P304page(s)324-335
P577publication date2012-09-27
P1433published inMemoryQ15753954
P1476titleInvoluntary memory chains: what do they tell us about autobiographical memory organisation?
P478volume21

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q35215933Chronologically organized structure in autobiographical memory search
Q38310173Involuntary autobiographical memory chains: implications for autobiographical memory organization
Q38656084Priming involuntary autobiographical memories in the lab.
Q57295216Semantic memories prime autobiographical memories: General implications and implications for everyday autobiographical remembering

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