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Rachael L. Elward

Researcher at London South Bank University

Publications -  17
Citations -  829

Rachael L. Elward is an academic researcher from London South Bank University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Recall & Episodic memory. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 16 publications receiving 736 citations. Previous affiliations of Rachael L. Elward include UCL Institute of Child Health & Cardiff University.

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Reduced specificity of autobiographical memory and depression: the role of executive control.

TL;DR: It has been widely established that depressed mood states and clinical depression, as well as a range of other psychiatric disorders, are associated with a relative difficulty in accessing specific autobiographical information in response to emotion-related cue words on an Autobiographical Memory Test (AMT).
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Recollection-Related Increases in Functional Connectivity Predict Individual Differences in Memory Accuracy

TL;DR: The findings suggest that enhanced functional interactions between distributed brain regions are a signature of successful recollection and demonstrate that examining dynamic modulations in functional connectivity during episodic retrieval will likely provide valuable insight into neural mechanisms underlying individual differences in memory performance.
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Cross-modal face identity aftereffects and their relation to priming.

TL;DR: The magnitude of the face identity aftereffect following adaptation to different modes of adaptors is tested in terms of cross-modal adaptation occurring at various loci within the face-recognition system analogous to priming.
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Semantic memory in developmental amnesia.

TL;DR: A profile of patients with developmental amnesia and dissociations in cognitive memory and Variables affecting semantic learning in developmentalAmnesia and variations between adult-onset versus early-ONSet amnesia are studied.
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Motivated Memories: Effects of Reward and Recollection in the Core Recollection Network and Beyond

TL;DR: The findings suggest that reward value and recollection success are conjointly but independently represented in at least 2 cortical regions and that striatal retrieval success effects cannot be accounted for in terms of a single construct, such as goal satisfaction.