Poster session I
Monday June 14, AULA
14.00 – 15.30
Poster No | Cuing and retrieval processes |
101 | Multimodal cuing of autobiographical events; Miles & Berntsen |
102 | Consolidation of self-relevant memories (sleep); Horton & Poll |
103 | Multimodal cuing; Karlsson & Willander |
104 | Music as cues; Morrison & Conway |
105 | Effects of sleep on AM; Kristo, Janssen, & Murre |
The Functions of Autobiographical Memory | |
106 | Effect of aging on functions of nostalgic memories; Takigawa & Naka |
107 | Functions of AM; Rasmussen, Berntsen & Habermas |
108 | Empathy and AM; Bender, Pohl, Chasiotis & Lachmann |
109 | What characterizes life story memories? Thomsen, Olesen, |
110 | Functions of AM in single, recurring, and extended event memories; Waters, |
111 | Life story in gifted young adults – the role of turning points; Grosch, |
112 | Belief and recollection in non-believed and believed AM; Scoboria & Mazzoni |
Social, collective, and cultural aspects of autobiographical memory | |
113 | Role of group identification in collective memory; Mercy, Licata, Luminet & Klein |
114 | Younger and older adults’ collective memories of US history; Butler, Zaromb, |
115 | Socially shared retrieval-induced forgetting: forgetting shared memories through |
116 | Socially shared retrieval-induced forgetting; Wohl, Koppel & Hirst |
117 | Life script and legal age; Naka |
Autobiographical memory across the Lifespan | |
118 | Self and AM: young and middle-aged earliest and recent memories; Demiray & Bluck |
119 | Young – old: goal directed AM retrieval Lonson; Astell & Dritschel |
120 | Young – old: memories for 2008 US presidential election; Holland & Kensinger |
121 | Enhancing AM performance of younger and older eyewitnesses; Felber, Kraus, |
Clinical aspects of autobiographical memory | |
122 | Role of A1/A2 criteria and memory in PTSD; Broadbridge & Fitzgerald |
123 | Self defining memories in borderline personality disorder; Jørgensen, Jørgensen, Bech, |
124 | Intrusive thoughts and PTSD following early non-recognized trauma; Fohn, Grynberg & Luminet |
125 | Mental Time Travel in High and Low Worriers; Finnbogadóttir & Berntsen |
126 | Remembering feeling: reflection and rumination as determinants of valence of AM, McIlwain |
127 | Mental time travel in patients with traumatic brain injury; K. Rasmussen |
Organisation of autobiographical memory | |
128 | Self development across lifespan and organization of AM and future events; Rathbone, |
129 | Prevalence of event clusters across the lifespan; Svob & Brown |
130 | Context models, AM and interaction; Bietti |
131 | Life transitions – memories cued by autobiographical contents; Lee, Brown & Uzer |
132 | Paraplegia and organization of AM; Uzer, Brown & Lee |
133 | Changes in neural correlates of self positivity bias and mood; Watson, Dritschel, |
134 | The self and its role in constructing autobiographical future events; Cole, Morrison & Conway |
135 | The preminiscence bump; Bohn & Berntsen |
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Poster session II
Tuesday June 15, AULA
13.30 – 15.00
Poster No | Cuing and retrieval processes |
201 | Spontaneous autobiographical memory retrieval; Lonson, Astell & Dritschel |
202 | Neural substrates of direct and generative AM retrieval; Addis, Knapp, |
203 | Current concerns in involuntary and voluntary AM; Johannessen & Berntsen |
204 | Voluntary suppression of neutral and emotional memories; Nørby. Lange & Larsen |
Social, collective, and cultural aspects of autobiographical memory | |
205 | AM memory characteristics and self-construal in 18 year old Slovaks and |
206 | Long term retention of 9/11 – self reference as a factor; Meksin & Hirst |
207 | Living in history in Lebanon, Zebian & Brown |
208 | Life story coherence and wellbeing – cross- culturally; Chen, McAnally & Reese |
209 | Social identity impacts on rehearsal processes, Mercy, Luminet, Licata & Klein |
Autobiographical Memory across the Lifespan | |
210 | Lifescript and lifestory across generations; Tekcan, Ece & Kaya |
211 | Young – old: event boundary flexibility; Hohman & Peynircioğlu |
212 | Reminiscence work in high-cued and low-cued settings; Jeppesen & Berntsen |
213 | Life narratives across the lifespan; Diel & Habermas |
214 | Positive and negative experiences in relation to bereavement outcome following |
Clinical aspects of autobiographical memory | |
215 | Delay-onset of posttraumatic memory related to war; Fohn & Luminet |
216 | Cognitive vulnerability in bipolar disorder, Ramos & Cláudio |
217 | Trait aggression increases recall of negative AM ; Cameron-Shaw, Dritschel, |
218 | Relation between AM, maladaptive schemas and depression; Cláudio |
219 | Schemas and their relation to childhood AM; Arelio & Cláudio |
220 | Autobiographical memory retrieval in Parkinson’s disease: effects of cueing; |
Phenomenological qualities of autobiographical memory | |
221 | Non-believed memories; Mazzoni & Scoboria |
222 | New topic for AM research: Momentary life review; Nourkova |
223 | Repeated retrieval slows shift from first to third person perspective; |
224 | Involuntary and voluntary memory characteristics; Kawahira & Itsukushima |
225 | Multiplicity of perspectives in AM: some implications of the independence of field |
226 | Temporal distribution of recollective memory; Janssen, St. Jacques & Rubin |
Memory development from infancy through adolescence | |
227 | Development of working memory in school-aged children; Lambek & Shevlin |
228 | Narratives of Japanese elementary school children – positive and negative events; |
229 | Cross linguistic (Turkish - German) source monitoring in children; Balaban, Kraus; |
230 | Development of understanding thruth and lies; Uemiya & Naka |
231 | A brain-imaging study of memory for words at birth; Benavides Varela, Gómez, |
232 | Infants’ object individuation; Kingo & Krøjgaard |
233 | Cultural life scripts and the development of prospective life stories in children and |