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Introduction: Autobiographical memory is the capacity to recollect memories of personally experienced events. The detection of such memories plays a key role in criminal trials. Among behavioral memory-detection methods, the autobiographical Implicit Association Test (aIAT) has gained popularity for its flexibility and suitability for forensic applications. The aIAT is a reaction time-based methodology aiming to assess whether information about an event is encoded in the respondent's mind. Here, we introduced the index, a measure based on the topography of fixations while performing the aIAT, as an additional measure to detect autobiographical memories covertly.
Methods: In this study, participants were involved in a mock-crime experiment in which they could act as Guilty or Innocent. One week later all participants underwent the aIAT combined with eye-tracking to investigate the presence of the crime-related memory.
Results: Guilty participants showed a higher number of fixations towards the category labels in the block in which true sentences shared the same response key with crime-related sentences, as compared to the block in which true sentences were paired with sentences describing an alternative version. Innocent participants showed the opposite pattern. This unbalanced allocation of attention to the category labels was quantified by the eye-D index and was found to be highly correlated to the standard aIAT-D index.
Discussion: This suggests that more fixations to the category labels could indicate increased cognitive load and monitoring of response conflicts. These preliminary results highlight eye-tracking as a tool to detect autobiographical memories covertly while performing the aIAT.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1268256 | DOI Listing |
Neuropsychologia
September 2025
Department of Experimental Psychology and Oxford Centre for Human Brain Activity, Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, United-Kingdom. Electronic address:
Models of memory consolidation propose that newly acquired memory traces undergo reorganisation during sleep. To test this idea, we recorded high-density electroencephalography (EEG) during an evening session of word-image learning followed by immediate (pre-sleep) and delayed (post-sleep) recall. Polysomnography was employed throughout the intervening night, capturing time spent in different sleep stages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeizure
August 2025
Danish Epilepsy Centre Filadelfia, Dianalund, Denmark; Postgraduation Programme in Clinical Medicine, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, SC, Brazil; Vilnius University, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Clinical Medicine, Clinic of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Lithuania.
Purpose: Reflex epilepsies are epileptic disorders in which seizures are consistently provoked by specific, identifiable stimuli-typically sensory or cognitive. In patients with memory-induced seizures, it has long been debated whether the memory acts as the trigger for the seizure or represents its first clinical manifestation.
Methods: We present the case of a 25-year-old woman with reflex seizures triggered by the recollection of specific autobiographical memories.
Memory
September 2025
Psychology and Neuroscience of Cognition Research Unit, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium.
Remembering past events usually takes less time than their actual duration - events are temporally compressed in memory. A recent study found that this compression is not systematic but emerges when continuous events exceed approximately 9 s. Unexpectedly, however, remembering shorter events (3-6 s) took more time than their actual duration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Epidemiol
September 2025
Center for Primary Care and Public Health (Unisanté), University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Depression is associated with cognitive decline, but the causal nature of this association in early old age has not yet been established. We examined the impact of depressive symptoms on changes in cognitive function using data from 27,315 adults aged 50-65 in the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) followed for 8 years (2010/2011 -2017/2018), using fixed effect models. Results suggest that an increase in depressive symptoms is associated with a significant decline in overall cognitive function (β =-0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground Aging involves heterogeneous brain grey matter (GM) loss patterns that may overlap with dementia-related changes. We evaluated cognitively unimpaired older adults to identify specific GM patterns, their clinical and cognitive profiles, and longitudinal trajectories. Methods We analyzed 746 participants from the Gothenburg H70 Study using random forest clustering based on MRI measures of cortical thickness and subcortical volume across 41 regions.
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