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      Brain Mechanisms Underlying Reality Monitoring for Heard and Imagined Words

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          Abstract

          Using functional MRI, we investigated reality monitoring for auditory information. During scanning, healthy young adults heard words in another person’s voice and imagined hearing other words in that same voice. Later, outside the scanner, participants judged words as “heard,” “imagined,” or “new.” An area of left middle frontal gyrus (Brodmann’s area, or BA, 6) was more active at encoding for imagined items subsequently correctly called “imagined” than for items incorrectly called “heard.” An area of left inferior frontal gyrus (BA 45, 44) was more active at encoding for items subsequently called “heard” than “imagined,” regardless of the actual source of the item. Scores on an Auditory Hallucination Experience Scale were positively related to activity in superior temporal gyrus (BA 22) for imagined words incorrectly called “heard.” We suggest that activity in these areas reflects cognitive operations information (middle frontal gyrus) and semantic and perceptual detail (inferior frontal gyrus and superior temporal gyrus, respectively) used to make reality-monitoring attributions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9007542
          22005
          Psychol Sci
          Psychol Sci
          Psychological science
          0956-7976
          1467-9280
          25 July 2018
          17 January 2014
          February 2014
          01 August 2018
          : 25
          : 2
          : 403-413
          Affiliations
          Yale University
          Author notes
          Corresponding Author: Marcia K. Johnson, Department of Psychology, Yale University, P. O. Box 208205, New Haven, CT 06520-8205, marcia.johnson@ 123456yale.edu
          Article
          PMC6069600 PMC6069600 6069600 nihpa982543
          10.1177/0956797613505776
          6069600
          24443396
          23a090bf-a436-4a23-8ebb-38e91f945e92

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          false memory,imagination,auditory hallucination,reality monitoring,source monitoring

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