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ファイル | 記述 | サイズ | フォーマット | |
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j.neures.2020.07.008.pdf | 900.17 kB | Adobe PDF | 見る/開く |
タイトル: | Phylogeny and ontogeny of mental time |
著者: | Hirata, Satoshi Betsuyaku, Toru Fujita, Kazuo Nakano, Tamami Ikegaya, Yuji |
著者名の別形: | 平田, 聡 別役, 透 藤田, 和生 |
キーワード: | Mental time Episodic memory Episodic foresight Phylogeny Ontogeny Mental time travel |
発行日: | Sep-2021 |
出版者: | Elsevier BV |
誌名: | Neuroscience Research |
巻: | 170 |
開始ページ: | 13 |
終了ページ: | 17 |
抄録: | Humans have mental time in our mind, apart from physical time that is a part of system that governs the physical world, and memory is our key cognitive ability for recognizing the passage of time. Recent studies have suggested that the memory system of several nonhuman animals may have an incidental nature, which is also a feature of episodic memory. In addition, apes, which are phylogenetically close to humans, have an ability to remember a single past event. In the case of humans, preverbal infants under the age of two are able to retain long-term memory of a single event and apply it to predict a future event. Thus, nonhuman animals and preverbal human infants both have their own specific mental time travel abilities, and there is a phylogenetic and ontogenic basis of full-fledged mental time travel that can be found in human adults. |
著作権等: | © 2020. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license. The full-text file will be made open to the public on 1 September 2022 in accordance with publisher's 'Terms and Conditions for Self-Archiving'. This is not the published version. Please cite only the published version. この論文は出版社版でありません。引用の際には出版社版をご確認ご利用ください。 |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2433/277932 |
DOI(出版社版): | 10.1016/j.neures.2020.07.008 |
PubMed ID: | 32681853 |
出現コレクション: | 学術雑誌掲載論文等 |

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