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Dive into the research topics where Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe is active.

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Featured researches published by Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe.


Behavioural Neurology | 2015

“Forget to Whom You Have Told This Proverb”: Directed Forgetting of Destination Memory in Alzheimer’s Disease

Mohamad El Haj; Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe; Philippe Allain; Luciano Fasotti; Pascal Antoine

Destination memory is the ability to remember the receiver of transmitted information. By means of a destination memory directed forgetting task, we investigated whether participants with Alzheimers Disease (AD) were able to suppress irrelevant information in destination memory. Twenty-six AD participants and 30 healthy elderly subjects were asked to tell 10 different proverbs to 10 different celebrities (List 1). Afterwards, half of the participants were instructed to forget the destinations (i.e., the celebrities) whereas the other half were asked to keep them in mind. After telling 10 other proverbs to 10 other celebrities (List 2), participants were asked to read numbers aloud. Subsequently, all the participants were asked to remember the destinations of List 1 and List 2, regardless of the forget or remember instructions. The results show similar destination memory in AD participants who were asked to forget the destinations of List 1 and those who were asked to retain them. These findings are attributed to inhibitory deficits, by which AD participants have difficulties to suppress irrelevant information in destination memory.


Medicine | 2016

Flashbulb memories of Paris attacks: Recall of these events and subjective reliving of these memories in a case with Alzheimer disease

Mohamad El Haj; Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe; Emilie Wawrziczny; Pascal Antoine

Rationale:Flashbulb memories are detailed and vivid memories of attributes of the reception context of surprising and emotionally arousing public events. Patient concerns and diagnosis:This paper offers a fine-grained view of flashbulb memories in a patient with mild Alzheimers disease (AD). Interventions:The patient underwent a directed interview about the 13 November 2015 attacks in Paris. Outcomes:Unlike her memory about the date and month of the attacks, the patient provided accurate information about the year, time and places they occurred. The patient also provided accurate information about how she first became aware of the attacks, where she was, with whom, what she was doing, and what time it was when she learned about them. As for the affective characteristics of these memories, she tended to have high ratings of vividness and rehearsal. Negative emotional states and great surprise and novelty were also reported. Lessons:By assessing the impact of flashbulb memories in this patient with AD, this paper offers a unique view into how such memories may trigger a considerable recall of context as well much subjective reliving.


Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2017

Flashbulb memories of the Paris attacks

Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe; Mohamad El Haj

Flashbulb memories are vivid autobiographical memories of the circumstances where an individual first learns about emotionally significant public events. Our paper assesses whether these memories were triggered by the attacks of Friday 13 November 2015 in Paris. Two hundred and ninety-one participants answered a web-based questionnaire that assessed their memory of the circumstances in which they first learned of the attacks. The questionnaire also assessed vividness, rehearsal, emotion, surprise and novelty. The results showed substantial and vivid recall of the context in which the participants first learned of the event. This recall was associated with fair rehearsal, negative emotional valence, surprise, and novelty. Regression analysis showed that the flashbulb recall was predicted by negative emotion. Negative emotion seems to play a key role in the formation of flashbulb memories, at least those associated with the Paris attacks.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2017

Autobiographical memory compromise in individuals with alcohol use disorders: Towards implications for psychotherapy research

Jean-Louis Nandrino; Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe; Mohamad El Haj

It has been found that Autobiographical memory (i.e., memory for personal experiences and facts about the self) are not properly maintained in people with alcohol-use disorders (AUD). The present paper offers a comprehensive overview of findings regarding the consequences of AUD on autobiographical memory. More specifically, we offer a theoretical model (the AMAUD Autobiographical Memory and Alcohol Use Disorders model) according to which chronic alcohol consumption compromises emotion regulation as well as executive control, which maintains the construction of autobiographical memory. Compromises in emotional regulation and executive functioning can be linked to a weak aspiration to construct detailed memories (i.e., autobiographical overgenerality), compromises of subjective reliving, anterograde amnesia, negative self-defining memories, and a difficulty to mentally project oneself forward in time to generate complex autobiographical representations and self-images. By gathering cognitive and clinical aspects of autobiographical decline in AUD, this model constitutes a theoretical foundation that may lead to a better understanding of this decline. Different clinical perspectives are proposed for developing personalized autobiographical memory rehabilitation programs for individuals with AUD.


Chemical Senses | 2018

From Nose to Memory: The Involuntary Nature of Odor-evoked Autobiographical Memories in Alzheimer’s Disease

Mohamad El Haj; Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe; Karim Gallouj; Dimitrios Kapogiannis; Pascal Antoine

Research suggests that odors may serve as a potent cue for autobiographical retrieval. We tested this hypothesis in Alzheimers disease (AD) and investigated whether odor-evoked autobiographical memory is an involuntary process that shares similarities with music-evoked autobiographical memory. Participants with mild AD and controls were asked to retrieve 2 personal memories after odor exposure, after music exposure, and in an odor-and music-free condition. AD participants showed better specificity, emotional experience, mental time travel, and retrieval time after odor and music exposure than in the control condition. Similar beneficial effects of odor and music exposure were observed for autobiographical characteristics (i.e., specificity, emotional experience, and mental time travel), except for retrieval time which was more improved after odor than after music exposure. Interestingly, regression analyses suggested executive involvement in memories evoked in the control condition but not in those evoked after music or odor exposure. These findings suggest the involuntary nature of odor-evoked autobiographical memory in AD. They also suggest that olfactory cuing could serve as a useful and ecologically valid tool to stimulate autobiographical memory, at least in the mild stage of the disease.


Journal of Integrative Neuroscience | 2017

Positive facial expressions during retrieval of self-defining memories

Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe; Jean-Louis Nandrino; Gérald Delelis; Claire Ducro; Audrey Lavallee; Xavier Saloppé; Ahmed A. Moustafa; Mohamad El Haj

In this study, we investigated, for the first time, facial expressions during the retrieval of Self-defining memories (i.e., those vivid and emotionally intense memories of enduring concerns or unresolved conflicts). Participants self-rated the emotional valence of their Self-defining memories and autobiographical retrieval was analyzed with a facial analysis software. This software (Facereader) synthesizes the facial expression information (i.e., cheek, lips, muscles, eyebrow muscles) to describe and categorize facial expressions (i.e., neutral, happy, sad, surprised, angry, scared, and disgusted facial expressions). We found that participants showed more emotional than neutral facial expressions during the retrieval of Self-defining memories. We also found that participants showed more positive than negative facial expressions during the retrieval of Self-defining memories. Interestingly, participants attributed positive valence to the retrieved memories. These findings are the first to demonstrate the consistency between facial expressions and the emotional subjective experience of Self-defining memories. These findings provide valuable physiological information about the emotional experience of the past.


Revista De Psiquiatria Clinica | 2018

Flashbulb memories for Paris attacks in Korsakoff's syndrome: a case study

Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe; Mohamad El Haj

We recruited a participant with KS (Mr. T), a male, high-school graduates, right-handed, French native-speakers, living in his own homes with his wife and he had been abstinent for two years. Mr. T was 51 years old and had a 10-year-history of worsening alcohol abuse. He was diagnosed with KS based on the DSM-IV-TR criteria for alcohol-induced persistent amnesic disorder. Even though confabulations and anterograde amnesia persisted after the acute phase, Mr. T showed significant cognitive improvement, in addition to a significant change in volition and motivation for self-care.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2014

Cognitive and affective theory of mind abilities in alcohol-dependent patients: The role of autobiographical memory

Jean-Louis Nandrino; Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe; Charlotte Alexandre; Elodie Kmiecik; Jacques Yguel; Laurent Urso


Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry | 2013

Autobiographical memory and differentiation of schematic models in substance-dependent patients

Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe; Jean-Louis Nandrino; Sabine Hancart; Véronique Vosgien


Encephale-revue De Psychiatrie Clinique Biologique Et Therapeutique | 2011

Stratégies de surgénéralisation des souvenirs autobiographiques chez les consommateurs de cannabis et les polyconsommateurs de substances psychoactives

Marie-Charlotte Gandolphe; Jean-Louis Nandrino

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Fabrice Berna

University of Strasbourg

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