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Andrew R. Mayes

Researcher at University of Manchester

Publications -  111
Citations -  5275

Andrew R. Mayes is an academic researcher from University of Manchester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amnesia & Recall. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 109 publications receiving 4954 citations.

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Associative memory and the medial temporal lobes

TL;DR: Using this framework, psychological, lesion and functional imaging evidence is considered, highlighting how informational convergence in the brain underlies the associative nature of both memory and perception.
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Convergent neuroanatomical and behavioural evidence of an amygdala hypothesis of autism.

TL;DR: It is found that people with high-functioning autism (HFA) show neuropsychological profiles characteristic of the effects of amygdala damage, in particular selective impairment in the recognition of facial expressions of fear, perception of eye-gaze direction, and recognition memory for faces.
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The neural system that mediates familiarity memory.

TL;DR: The neural system that underlies scene familiarity memory was identified by identifying the hippocampus, and left anterior and inferolateral frontal and parietal cortices more than strong familiarity, and no brain region that was unaffected by recollection was modulated by variations in familiarity strength.
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A disproportionate role for the fornix and mammillary bodies in recall versus recognition memory

TL;DR: These findings support models of diencephalic memory mechanisms that require hippocampal inputs for recall, but not for key elements of recognition, as the volumes of the left fornix and the left mammillary bodies decreased, the difference between recall and recognition scores increased.
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The role of recollection and familiarity in the functional differentiation of the medial temporal lobes.

TL;DR: There has been disagreement about whether recall/recollection is primarily mediated by the hippocampus and familiarity by the evolutionarily newer MTL cortices or whether the MTL mediates these kinds of memory in an integrated, homogeneous fashion.