Poster Session

Poster Session2019-09-26T14:44:28+00:00

Thursday 3rd of October 2019

  1. Aging increases reliance on gist memory: Further evidence. Marlène Abadie (Aix-Marseille University)
  2. Recollection of odor-evoked autobiographical memories in Alzheimer’s disease. Ophélie Glachet1; Mohamad El Haj2,3,4 (1. Univ. Lille; 2. Université de Nantes; 3. Centre Hospitalier de Tourcoing; 4. Institut Universitaire de France)
  3. Using immersive virtual reality to examine the U-shaped relationship between schema and memory performance. Jörn Alexander Quent & Rik Henson (University of Cambridge)
  4. Reactivation of perceptual and conceptual stimulus properties during memory retrieval. Carolin Sievers1,2, Fraser W. Smith2, Janak Saada2, Jon S. Simons1, Louis Renoult2 (1. University of Cambridge; 2. University of East Anglia)
  5. Do Differences between Self- and Spouse-Evaluation of Memory Performance Signal Incipient Anosognosia and Predict Cognitive Decline in Healthy Older Adults? Y. Bellaali1,2, J. L. Woodard1,3, B. Hanseeuw1,2,4, A. Ivanoiu1,2 (1. Université Catholique de Louvain; 2. Saint Luc University Hospital; 3. Wayne State University; 4. Harvard Medical School)
  6. Jacoby–Whitehouse illusion from thematic association. Demonty, Manon1*, Invernizzi, Sandra2*, Delhaye, Emma1, Lefebvre, Laurent2, Collette, Cynthia2, Simoes Loureiro, Isabelle2, & Bastin, Christine1 (1. University of Liege; 2. University of Mons)
  7. Neural substrates of recognition memory for unfamiliar faces. Shir Ben-Zvi Feldman1, Nachum Soroker1,2, & Daniel A. Levy3 (1. Tel-Aviv University; 2. Lowenstein Rehabilitation Hospital; 3. Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya)
  8. Neurocognitive index of multi-domain amnestic mild cognitive impairment during an old/new words recognition task. Uxía Ferreiro-Caneiro, Fernando Díaz, Montserrat Zurrón, Santiago Galdo-Álvarez & Mónica Lindín (Universidade de Santiago de Compostela)
  9. A gist orientation before retrieval impacts the objective content but not the subjective experience of recollection. Adrien Folville, Arnaud D’Argembeau & Christine Bastin (University of Liège)
  10. Elucidating the Neural Mechanisms of Working Memory and Cognitive Reserve among Younger and Older Adults using Structural and Functional Neuroimaging. Dylan Franklin, Meghan Lau, Yara Yakoub, Maryse Gad, Jason Steffener (University of Ottawa)
  11. How does familiarity and recollection support memory for Congruent and incongruent events. A. Greve, P. Vandenenden, E. Cooper, R. Tibon, R. Henson (University of Cambridge)
  12. The influence of memory and decision making on recognition ROCs. Olya Hakobyan, Sen Cheng (Ruhr University Bochum)

Friday 4th of October 2019

  1. It’s time for action! – Does the presence of an action relationship reduce the associative memory deficit? Véronique Huffer, Regine Bader, & Axel Mecklinger (Saarland University)
  2. Talking about the past: A way to stimulate episodic memory development in pre-schoolers. Christina Léonard, Marie Geurten, & Sylvie Willems (University of Liège)
  3. Common neural patterns for serial order coding in working memory, number and letter domains: A multi-voxel pattern analysis approach. Nathan Leroy, Lucie Attout, & Steve Majerus (University of Liège)
  4. Functional changes in resting state EEG activity following testing or repeated studying of learned material. Miklós Marián1, Dorottya Bencze1, Ágnes Szőllősi1, Péter Simor2, & Mihály Racsmány1,3 (1. Budapest University of Technology and Economics; 2. Eötvös Lóránd University; 3. Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
  5. Differential Effects of Intrinsic and Extrinsic Rewards on Recognition Memory. Meliss, S. & Murayama, K. (University of Reading)
  6. The pupillary response to highly familiar complex stimuli. Marton Nagy, Ildiko Kiraly (ELTE)
  7. Subjectively defined optimal/non-optimal time of day modulates controlled but not automatic retrieval processes in verbal memory. Delphine Puttaert1, Stephane Adam2, & Philippe Peigneux1 (1. Université Libre de Bruxelles; 2. University of Liege)
  8. The effects of novelty and expectations on human memory. Richárd Reichardt1, Bertalan Polner1, Péter Simor2 (1. BME TTK, Dept. of Cognitive Science; 2. ELTE)
  9. Investigating procedural learning skills in children with Developmental Coordination Disorder. Dorine Van Dyck1,2, Nicolas Deconinck2, Christelle Maillart3, Xavier De Tiège1, & Charline Urbain1 (1. Université libre de Bruxelles ; 2. Hôpital Universitaire des Enfants Reine Fabiola; 3. University of Liège)
  10. A new material for assessing Sleep benefit on memory recognition. Dimitri Vast, Yannick Gounden, & Véronique Quaglino (Cognition, Psychisme et Organisations (EA 7273))
  11. Neurophysiological signals supporting the online formation and retrieval of meaningful episodic sequence of events. Xiongbo Wu1,2, Xavier Viñals2,3, Iria Rodríguez2, Ignasi Sols2, Aya Ben-Yakov4, Lluís Fuentemilla1,2,5 (1. University of Barcelona; 2. Institute of Biomedical Research of Bellvitge; 3. TecnoCampus Mataró-Maresme; 4. University of Cambridge; 5. Hospitalet de Llobregat)
  12. Wakeful rest promotes the viewpoint-invariance, but not the fine discriminability, of entities mnemonic representations for subsequent familiarity-based recognition. Gabriel Besson1,2, Pierre-Yves Jonin2, & Christian Barillot2 (1. University of Liège; 2. University of Rennes)
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