7 research outputs found
Memory during general anaesthesia: variations in stimulus characteristics
Evidence from studies of memory and awareness during general anaesthesia suggests that
some form of cognitive functioning is preserved in surgical patients. This finding has
important implications both for clinical practice and for psychological theories of memory.
In order to give the methodological background of the present situation in this field of
research, this article deals, on the basis of recent experiments, with important
methodological aspects of studies into perception and memory during general anaesthesia
Corrigendum: UP'S: A Cohort Study on Recovery in Psychotic Disorder Patients: Design Protocol (Front. Psychiatry, (2021), 11, (609530), 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.609530)
© 2021 van Aken, Bakia, Wierdsma, Voskes, Van Weeghel, van Bussel, Hagestein, Ruissen, Leendertse, Sewbalak, van der Draai, Hammink, Mandos, van der Gaag, Bonebakker, Van Der Feltz-Cornelis and MulderIn the original article, reference (100) was incorrectly written as “de Sonneville L. Amsterdamse neuropsychologische taken: wetenschappelijke en klinische toepassingen. Tijdschr voor Neuropsychol. (2005) 10:27–41”. It should be “Corcoran R, Mercer G, Frith CD. Schizophrenia, symptomatology and social inference: investigating “theory of mind” in people with schizophrenia. Schizophr Res. (1995) 17:5–13.” The authors apologize for this error and state that this does not change the scientific conclusions of the article in any way. The original article has been updated