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EPA-1815 – Biographical Memory, Autonoetic Consciousness and the Self

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 April 2020

H.J. Markowitsch*
Affiliation:
University of Bielefeld, Physiological Psychology, Bielefeld, Germany

Abstract

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Introduction

Episodic-autobiographical memory (EAM) is the highest ontogenetic human achievement and is defined as the conjunction of subjective time, autonoetic consciousness and the experiencing self. The EAM system is more susceptible to insults than other memory systems and is predominantly affected in amnesic disorders. Dissociative amnesia is triggered by psychological stress and usually presents with retrograde memory impairment in the EAM domain.

Objectives

This work's objectives are establishing greater recognition of the changes in the area of personality dimensions, self and autonoetic consciousness, accompanying dissociative amnesia.

Aims

We review data from own patients with dissociative amnesia or fugue

Methods

Patients were investigated medically, neuropsychologically and neuroradiologically.

Results

We found impairments of self and self-referential processing in patients with dissociative amnesia, such as profound loss of personal identity, decreased ability for self-reflection and self projection and anomalous self-face processing. We also identified changes in personality dimensions involving affectivity, perception, cognition (e.g. social cognition) and behavior.

Conclusions

The observed changes in self and autonoetic consciousness may represent a consequence of amnesia. Studies indicate a right hemispheric bias for higher forms of self awareness. In retrograde dissociative amnesia, we found a hypometabolism in right fronto-temporal areas, suggesting a defective synchronization during retrieval between processing of affectively-loaded personal events and fact-based processing. This synchronization abnormality in our opinion not only leads to a memory blockade, but also to a shrinkage of self and loss of autonoetic consciousness in dissociative amnesic conditions.

Type
S533 - Biography, Self and Contextual Memory: Where is it encoded in the brain?
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2014
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