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Kevin P. Madore
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 28
Citations - 1769
Kevin P. Madore is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Episodic memory & Autobiographical memory. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 27 publications receiving 1339 citations. Previous affiliations of Kevin P. Madore include Harvard University & Cornell University.
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Creativity and Memory Effects of an Episodic-Specificity Induction on Divergent Thinking
TL;DR: It is shown for the first time that an episodic-specificity induction also enhances divergent creative thinking, providing novel evidence that episodic memory is involved in divergentCreative thinking.
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Constructive Episodic Simulation: Dissociable Effects of a Specificity Induction on Remembering, Imagining, and Describing in Young and Older Adults
TL;DR: Mystery induction selectively increased internal but not external details for memory and imagination in both age groups compared with the control induction, and points to a dissociation between episodic processes involved inMemory and imagination and nonepisodic processesinvolved in picture description.
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Remembering the past and imagining the future: Identifying and enhancing the contribution of episodic memory:
TL;DR: This work considers recent studies that distinguish the contributions of episodic and non-episodic processes in remembering the past and imagining the future by using an episodic specificity induction and extends this approach to the domains of problem solving and creative thinking.
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Worrying about the future: An episodic specificity induction impacts problem solving, reappraisal, and well-being.
TL;DR: The findings support the idea that episodic memory processes are involved in means-end problem solving and episodic reappraisal, and that increasing the episodic specificity of imagining constructive behaviors regarding worrisome events may be related to improved psychological well-being.
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Future planning: default network activity couples with frontoparietal control network and reward-processing regions during process and outcome simulations
TL;DR: This experiment examined the neural basis of process simulations, during which participants imagined themselves going through steps toward attaining a goal, and outcome simulations, when participants imagined events they associated with achieving a goal.