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A measure of delayed face memory. In the first part of this test, participants were shown 20 faces that they were asked to identify for immediate recall (CPF . Now, during the delayed recall (CPFd , participants are shown a series, one at a time, of 40 faces: the 20 study stimuli/faces they were asked to memorize and 20 novel faces, all of which are different from the 20 distracters shown during the CPF. The participants’ task is to decide whether they have seen each face before by clicking one of four buttons, presented in a 4-point scale: “definitely yes”, “probably yes”, “probably no” and “definitely no,” using the mouse. There is one alternate form of the CPFd: the CPFd-b.


Alias(es)

CPFd, Penn Face Memory Test - Delayed, PFMT, CPFd, CPFdelay, RCPFd

Definition contributed by Anonymous
Penn Facial Memory Test Delayed Memory has been asserted to measure the following CONCEPTS
No concepts assertions have been added.

Phenotypes associated with Penn Facial Memory Test Delayed Memory

Disorders

No associations have been added.

Traits

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Behaviors

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IMPLEMENTATIONS of Penn Facial Memory Test Delayed Memory
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EXTERNAL DATASETS for Penn Facial Memory Test Delayed Memory
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CONDITIONS

Experimental conditions are the subsets of an experiment that define the relevant experimental manipulation.

CONTRASTS

You must specify conditions before you can define contrasts.


In the Cognitive Atlas, we define a contrast as any function over experimental conditions. The simplest contrast is the indicator value for a specific condition; more complex contrasts include linear or nonlinear functions of the indicator across different experimental conditions.

INDICATORS

No indicators have yet been associated.

An indicator is a specific quantitative or qualitative variable that is recorded for analysis. These may include behavioral variables (such as response time, accuracy, or other measures of performance) or physiological variables (including genetics, psychophysiology, or brain imaging data).

Term BIBLIOGRAPHY

Effects of memory processing on regional brain activation: cerebral blood flow in normal subjects.
Gur RC, Jaggi JL, Ragland JD, Resnick SM, Shtasel D, Muenz L, Gur RE
(Int J Neurosci)
1993 Sep

Computerized neurocognitive scanning: II. The profile of schizophrenia.
Gur RC, Ragland JD, Moberg PJ, Bilker WB, Kohler C, Siegel SJ, Gur RE
Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (Neuropsychopharmacology)
2001 Nov

Computerized neurocognitive scanning: I. Methodology and validation in healthy people.
Gur RC, Ragland JD, Moberg PJ, Turner TH, Bilker WB, Kohler C, Siegel SJ, Gur RE
Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (Neuropsychopharmacology)
2001 Nov