النتائج (
العربية) 1:
[نسخ]نسخ!
As noted by Hassabis, Kumaran, Maguire (2007), the pattern of activation specific to autobiographical memory resemblesthe network found to support EFT (e.g., Addis, Wong, & Schacter, 2007). One may, therefore, argue that recalling past experiencesand thinking about plausible, autobiographical future events share the same key, defining processes. Indeed, whenindividuals remember past or simulate future events, they imaginatively place themselves into specific settings that are temporalin nature (settings that pertain to their past and to their future). Furthermore, when envisioning events that will occurin the future, especially in the near future, individuals imagine themselves in the context of familiar settings (e.g., Gamboz,Brandimonte, & De Vito, 2010). This is not to say that familiarity of setting is a defining feature of EFT, as it is for autobiographicalmemory. We can indeed pre-experience an event expected to occur somewhere we have never been before and,still, scene construction is surely not restricted to events represented in unfamiliar settings. However, empirical evidenceindicates that familiarity of setting is indeed an important modulator of the characteristics of EFT
يجري ترجمتها، يرجى الانتظار ..