No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 January 2020
Although Bastin et al. propose a useful model for thinking about the structure of memory and memory deficits, their distinction between entities and relational encoding is incompatible with data showing that even individual objects – prototypical “entities” – are made up of distinct features which require binding. Thus, “entity” and “relational” brain regions may need to solve fundamentally the same problems.
Target article
An integrative memory model of recollection and familiarity to understand memory deficits
Related commentaries (22)
Cognitive control constrains memory attributions
Cutting out the middleman: Separating attributional biases from memory deficits
Dual processes in memory: Evidence from memory of time-of-occurrence of events
Entities also require relational coding and binding
Episodic memory is emotionally laden memory, requiring amygdala involvement
Fluency: A trigger of familiarity for relational representations?
Global matching and fluency attribution in familiarity assessment
How do memory modules differentially contribute to familiarity and recollection?
Improving the integrative memory model by integrating the temporal dynamics of memory
Priming recognition memory test cues: No evidence for an attributional basis of recollection
Refining the bigger picture: On the integrative memory model
Representational formats in medial temporal lobe and neocortex also determine subjective memory features
The integrative memory model is detailed, but skimps on false memories and development
The other side of the coin: Semantic dementia as a lesion model for understanding recollection and familiarity
The role of anxiety in the integrative memory model
The role of reference frames in memory recollection
The subjective experience of recollection and familiarity in Alzheimer's disease
The ventral lateral parietal cortex in episodic memory: From content to attribution
There is more to memory than recollection and familiarity
Two processes are not necessary to understand memory deficits
Understanding misidentification syndromes using the integrative memory model
What face familiarity feelings say about the lateralization of specific entities within the core system
Author response
Interactions with the integrative memory model