Kensinger, Elizabeth A.
Elizabeth Kensinger
VIAF ID: 19158517 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/19158517
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a Elizabeth Kensinger
- 200 _ | ‡a Kensinger ‡b Elizabeth A
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Kensinger, Elizabeth A
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Kensinger, Elizabeth A.
- 100 1 _ ‡a Kensinger, Elizabeth A.
- 100 1 _ ‡a Kensinger, Elizabeth A.
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (5)
5xx's: Related Names (3)
- 510 2 _ ‡a Boston College ‡4 affi ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#affiliation ‡e Affiliation
- 510 2 _ ‡a Harvard University ‡4 affi ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#affiliation ‡e Affiliation
- 510 2 _ ‡a Massachusetts Institute of Technology ‡4 affi ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#affiliation ‡e Affiliation
Works
Title | Sources |
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The dissociable effects of stereotype threat on older adults' memory encoding and retrieval | |
The effect of cognitive reappraisal on the emotional memory trade-off | |
The effect of emotional arousal and retention delay on subsequent-memory effects | |
The effect of regulation goals on emotional event-specific knowledge. | |
The effect of valence on young and older adults' attention in a rapid serial visual presentation task | |
Effects of Alzheimer disease on memory for verbal emotional information. | |
The effects of emotional content on reality-monitoring performance in young and older adults. | |
Effects of internal and external vividness on hippocampal connectivity during memory retrieval | |
The emotion-induced memory trade-off: more than an effect of overt attention? | |
Emotional content enhances true but not false memory for categorized stimuli. | |
Emotional memory across the adult lifespan | |
Evidence for semantic learning in profound amnesia: an investigation with patient H.M. | |
Examining the effects of emotion regulation on the ERP response to highly negative social stigmas. | |
Extrinsic and intrinsic factors influencing the positive memory bias in aging. | |
Facteurs extrinsèques et intrinsèques qui influencent le biais de positivité mnésique dans le vieillissement | |
Familiarity and priming are mediated by overlapping neural substrates. | |
Finding the good in the bad: age and event experience relate to the focus on positive aspects of a negative event. | |
Functional neuroimaging of self-referential encoding with age. | |
The future can shape memory for the present | |
How does emotion affect attention and memory? attentional capture, tunnel memory, and the implications for posttraumatic stress disorder | |
How emotion affects older adults' memories for event details. | |
How social interactions affect emotional memory accuracy: Evidence from collaborative retrieval and social contagion paradigms. | |
The impact of napping on memory for future-relevant stimuli: Prioritization among multiple salience cues | |
The importance of regulatory goal states for autobiographical memory: A reply to Levine and Rubin. | |
Interactive effects of stress reactivity and rapid eye movement sleep theta activity on emotional memory formation | |
Memory enhancement for emotional words: are emotional words more vividly remembered than neutral words? | |
Memory for contextual details: effects of emotion and aging. | |
Memory for specific visual details can be enhanced by negative arousing content | |
Memory-related functional connectivity in visual processing regions varies by prior emotional context | |
Mnemonic transmission, social contagion, and emergence of collective memory: Influence of emotional valence, group structure, and information distribution | |
Napping and the selective consolidation of negative aspects of scenes | |
Neural activity, neural connectivity, and the processing of emotionally valenced information in older adults: links with life satisfaction | |
The neural correlates of conceptual and perceptual false recognition | |
The neural correlates of specific versus general autobiographical memory construction and elaboration | |
Neural mechanisms supporting emotional and self-referential information processing and encoding in older and younger adults | |
Neural processes underlying memory attribution on a reality-monitoring task. | |
Neutral details associated with emotional events are encoded: evidence from a cued recall paradigm. | |
NEVER forget: negative emotional valence enhances recapitulation | |
Older adults can suppress unwanted memories when given an appropriate strategy. | |
Older and wiser? An affective science perspective on age-related challenges in financial decision making | |
Oversimplification in the study of emotional memory. | |
Phenomenological characteristics of emotional memories in younger and older adults | |
Predicting age from cortical structure across the lifespan. | |
Preferential consolidation of emotionally salient information during a nap is preserved in middle age | |
Prefrontal activity and diagnostic monitoring of memory retrieval: FMRI of the criterial recollection task. | |
Prior Emotional Context Modulates Early Event-Related Potentials to Neutral Retrieval Cues | |
Processing emotional pictures and words: effects of valence and arousal. | |
Psychophysiological arousal at encoding leads to reduced reactivity but enhanced emotional memory following sleep. | |
Puzzling thoughts for H. M.: can new semantic information be anchored to old semantic memories? | |
Questioning the living/nonliving dichotomy: evidence from a patient with an unusual semantic dissociation | |
Recapitulation of emotional source context during memory retrieval. | |
The relation between structural and functional connectivity depends on age and on task goals | |
Repetition Enhancement of Amygdala and Visual Cortex Functional Connectivity Reflects Nonconscious Memory for Negative Visual Stimuli. | |
Residual effects of emotion are reflected in enhanced visual activity after sleep | |
Retrieving accurate and distorted memories: neuroimaging evidence for effects of emotion. | |
A review of the neural and behavioral consequences for unitizing emotional and neutral information. | |
A role for affect in the link between episodic simulation and prosociality | |
The role of forgetting in undermining good intentions | |
The role of the amygdala in emotional experience during retrieval of personal memories | |
Role of the anterior temporal lobe in repetition and semantic priming: evidence from a patient with a category-specific deficit. | |
The route to an integrative associative memory is influenced by emotion | |
Self-involvement modulates the effective connectivity of the autobiographical memory network | |
Semantic knowledge in patient H.M. and other patients with bilateral medial and lateral temporal lobe lesions. | |
Sleep and cortisol interact to support memory consolidation. | |
Sleep leads to changes in the emotional memory trace: evidence from FMRI. | |
Sleep preferentially enhances memory for emotional components of scenes. | |
Sleep promotes lasting changes in selective memory for emotional scenes | |
Test-retest reliability of brain morphology estimates | |
There are age-related changes in neural connectivity during the encoding of positive, but not negative, information | |
What factors need to be considered to understand emotional memories? | |
What neural correlates underlie successful encoding and retrieval? A functional magnetic resonance imaging study using a divided attention paradigm. | |
When the Red Sox shocked the Yankees: comparing negative and positive memories. | |
Why we forget and how to remember better : the science behind memory | |
Working memory in mild Alzheimer's disease and early Parkinson's disease | |
Younger, middle-aged, and older adults’ memories for the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election |