False memories in schizophrenia.

Standard

False memories in schizophrenia. / Moritz, Steffen; Woodward, Todd S; Cuttler, Carrie; Whitman, Jennifer C; Watson, Jason M.

in: NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, Jahrgang 18, Nr. 2, 2, 2004, S. 276-283.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Moritz, S, Woodward, TS, Cuttler, C, Whitman, JC & Watson, JM 2004, 'False memories in schizophrenia.', NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, Jg. 18, Nr. 2, 2, S. 276-283. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15099150?dopt=Citation>

APA

Moritz, S., Woodward, T. S., Cuttler, C., Whitman, J. C., & Watson, J. M. (2004). False memories in schizophrenia. NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 18(2), 276-283. [2]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15099150?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Moritz S, Woodward TS, Cuttler C, Whitman JC, Watson JM. False memories in schizophrenia. NEUROPSYCHOLOGY. 2004;18(2):276-283. 2.

Bibtex

@article{489b101a86144de7a15b08aa1d2c690e,
title = "False memories in schizophrenia.",
abstract = "In prior studies, it was observed that patients with schizophrenia show abnormally high knowledge corruption (i.e., high-confident errors expressed as a percentage of all high-confident responses were increased for schizophrenic patients relative to controls). The authors examined the conditions under which excessive knowledge corruption occurred using the Deese-Roediger-McDermott paradigm. Whereas knowledge corruption in schizophrenia was significantly greater for false-negative errors relative to controls, no group difference occurred for false-positive errors. The groups showed a comparable high degree of confidence for false-positive recognition of critical lure items. Similar to findings collected in elderly participants, patients, but not controls, showed a strong positive correlation between the number of recognized studied items and false-positive recognition of the critical lure.",
author = "Steffen Moritz and Woodward, {Todd S} and Carrie Cuttler and Whitman, {Jennifer C} and Watson, {Jason M}",
year = "2004",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "18",
pages = "276--283",
journal = "NEUROPSYCHOLOGY",
issn = "0894-4105",
publisher = "American Psychological Association Inc.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - False memories in schizophrenia.

AU - Moritz, Steffen

AU - Woodward, Todd S

AU - Cuttler, Carrie

AU - Whitman, Jennifer C

AU - Watson, Jason M

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - In prior studies, it was observed that patients with schizophrenia show abnormally high knowledge corruption (i.e., high-confident errors expressed as a percentage of all high-confident responses were increased for schizophrenic patients relative to controls). The authors examined the conditions under which excessive knowledge corruption occurred using the Deese-Roediger-McDermott paradigm. Whereas knowledge corruption in schizophrenia was significantly greater for false-negative errors relative to controls, no group difference occurred for false-positive errors. The groups showed a comparable high degree of confidence for false-positive recognition of critical lure items. Similar to findings collected in elderly participants, patients, but not controls, showed a strong positive correlation between the number of recognized studied items and false-positive recognition of the critical lure.

AB - In prior studies, it was observed that patients with schizophrenia show abnormally high knowledge corruption (i.e., high-confident errors expressed as a percentage of all high-confident responses were increased for schizophrenic patients relative to controls). The authors examined the conditions under which excessive knowledge corruption occurred using the Deese-Roediger-McDermott paradigm. Whereas knowledge corruption in schizophrenia was significantly greater for false-negative errors relative to controls, no group difference occurred for false-positive errors. The groups showed a comparable high degree of confidence for false-positive recognition of critical lure items. Similar to findings collected in elderly participants, patients, but not controls, showed a strong positive correlation between the number of recognized studied items and false-positive recognition of the critical lure.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 18

SP - 276

EP - 283

JO - NEUROPSYCHOLOGY

JF - NEUROPSYCHOLOGY

SN - 0894-4105

IS - 2

M1 - 2

ER -