Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10466833 | Neuropsychologia | 2008 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Confabulating patients were as impaired as a group of amnesic patients in the amount of information they recalled, both groups being worse than healthy controls. Importantly, confabulating patients showed a selective bias in the negative self-referent condition, in that they recalled such information in a manner which portrayed a more positive image of themselves. This positive bias was not present in stories that were not encoded in a self-referent manner and it was not significantly correlated to patients' self-reported mood. We propose that both confabulation and its motivated content result from a deficit in the control and regulation of memory retrieval, which allows motivational factors to acquire a greater role than usual in determining which memories are selected for retrieval. To this extent, the self-enhancing content of confabulation could be explained as a neurogenic exaggeration of normal self-serving memory distortion.
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Authors
Aikaterini Fotopoulou, Martin A. Conway, Mark Solms, Stephen Tyrer, Michael Kopelman,