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Brain Mechanisms of Reality Monitoring

Journal

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES
Volume 21, Issue 6, Pages 462-473

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tics.2017.03.012

Keywords

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Funding

  1. James S. McDonnell Foundation
  2. University of Cambridge Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute
  3. Medical Research Council
  4. Wellcome Trust
  5. MRC [G1000183] Funding Source: UKRI

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Reality monitoring processes are necessary for discriminating between internally generated information and information that originated in the outside world. They help us to identify our thoughts, feelings, and imaginations, and to distinguish them from events we may have experienced or have been told about by someone else. Reality monitoring errors range from confusions between real and imagined experiences, that are byproducts of normal cognition, to symptoms of mental illness such as hallucinations. Recent advances support an emerging neurocognitive characterization of reality monitoring that provides insights into its underlying operating principles and neural mechanisms, the differing ways in which impairment may occur in health and disease, and the potential for rehabilitation strategies to be devised that might help those who experience clinically significant reality monitoring disruption.

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