M C AndersonSummaryAffiliation: University of Oregon Country: USA Publications
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Publications
Similarity and inhibition in long-term memory: evidence for a two-factor theoryM C Anderson
Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, Eugene 97403 1227, USA
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 26:1141-59. 2000..The differing effects of target-competitor and competitor-competitor similarity may resolve conflicting results concerning the effects of similarity on inhibition...
Retrieval-induced forgetting: evidence for a recall-specific mechanismM C Anderson
Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, Eugene 97403 1227, USA
Psychon Bull Rev 7:522-30. 2000..These findings argue that retrieval-induced forgetting is not caused by increased competition arising from the strengthening of practiced items, but by inhibitory processes specific to the situation of recall...
Suppressing unwanted memories by executive controlM C Anderson
Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, Eugene 97403 1227, USA
Nature 410:366-9. 2001..These results show that executive control processes not uniquely tied to trauma may provide a viable model for repression...
Forgetting our facts: the role of inhibitory processes in the loss of propositional knowledgeM C Anderson
Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, Eugene 97403 1227, USA
J Exp Psychol Gen 130:544-70. 2001..A. Spellman (1995) with categorical stimuli. These findings suggest a critical role for suppression in models of propositional retrieval and implicate the mere retrieval of what we know as a source of forgetting of factual knowledge...
Neural systems underlying the suppression of unwanted memoriesMichael C Anderson
Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403, USA
Science 303:232-5. 2004..These results confirm the existence of an active forgetting process and establish a neurobiological model for guiding inquiry into motivated forgetting...
A functional magnetic resonance imaging study of auditory mismatch in schizophreniaC G Wible
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
Am J Psychiatry 158:938-43. 2001..CONCLUSIONS: This result is consistent with those of mismatch negativity event-related potential studies and suggests that early auditory processing is abnormal in chronic schizophrenia...
