Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Autonoetic consciousness is important in our formation of our "self" identity.
Cochrane also suffered from severe impairment of his autonoetic consciousness.
The parietal cortex is the active part of brain involved in autonoetic consciousness.
Autonoetic consciousness refers to the ability of recovering the episode in which an item originally occurred.
When the pattern of activation encompasses episodic memory, then autonoetic consciousness may result.
These are a subjective sense of time (or mental time travel), connection to the self, and autonoetic consciousness.
Autonoetic consciousness reflects the integration of parts of the autobiographical knowledge base and the working self.
Autonoetic consciousness or recollective experience is the sense of "mental time travel" that is experienced when recalling autobiographical memories.
ERPs can measure autonoetic consciousness scientifically.
Autonoetic consciousness is thought to emerge by retrieval of memory of personally experienced events (episodic memory) .
Autonoetic consciousness is the human ability to mentally place ourselves in the past, in the future, or in counterfactual situations, and to analyze our own thoughts.
Studies have also shown that the PFC is extremely involved with autonoetic consciousness (See Tulving's theory).
Planning behaviour like that of the current work is connected to so-called autonoetic consciousness, where information due to memory can be distinguished from that from the senses.
"I'm personally convinced that at least chimps do plan for future needs, that they do have this autonoetic consciousness," Dr Osvath said.
Tulving's work with KC highlighted the central importance of episodic memory for the subjective experience of one's self in time, an ability he dubbed "autonoetic consciousness."
Autonoetic consciousness refers to a special kind of consciousness that accompanies the act of remembering which enables an individual to be aware of the self in a subjective time.
'Episodic Memory and Autonoetic Consciousness: developmental evidence and a theory of childhood amnesia', Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 59, 516-548.
These theories range from the Freudian psychodynamic theory that remembering events from infancy would be damaging to the "ego", to theories that explain the underdeveloped hippocampus of an infant, and also theories that conclude that infants have not yet developed autonoetic consciousness of having experienced remembered events.
"From Episodic memory Through Autonoesis to Proscopic Chronesthesia," Colloquium of the Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, January 12, 2000.