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  1. Apr 28, 2024 · Calling your child by a sibling’s name is not a memory issue. “It’s neither due to forgetfulness nor aging. It’s more a sign of stress than of cognitive decline,” Dumas says. If you ...

    • Gina Way
    • unknown@hearst.com
  2. May 7, 2021 · A staggering 41 of the 42 pet-related misnaming incidents involved calling pets by family members’ names or vice versa, rather than mixing up two pets’ names. And most of those incidents ...

  3. May 3, 2024 · The researchers analyzed more than 1,700 participants across five studies and found that more than 95% of participants reported being called the wrong name by a family member at some point. The ...

    • Avery Newmark
  4. Jan 16, 2017 · When Samantha Deffler was young, her mother would often call her by her siblings' names — even the dog's name. "Rebecca, Jesse, Molly, Tucker, Samantha," she says. A lot of people mix up ...

    • Michelle Trudeau
    • A Method to The Madness
    • What Happens When These Processes Break Down?
    • Naming Difficulties in Semantic Dementia
    • It's Harder Than It Looks

    The finding that we often mix up names that are semantically and phonetically related, rather than at random, gives insights into the way our memories for names are organised in the brain. The brain tends to group names that are related. They can be related because they belong to a similar semantic category (e.g. family members, school friends, wor...

    Like knowledge about other types of cognitive abilities, much has been gained from studying people where the ability has been disrupted due to damage in the brain. Complex pathways in the brain are working to retrieve stored information on faces and names. Our research group has a special interest in studying individuals with semantic dementia. Lik...

    People with semantic dementia show very specific types of naming errors. For example, they may call a "zebra" a "horse", or an "animal". This suggests that as semantic knowledge is lost, our understanding of the world becomes less specific and more generalised. People with semantic dementia also have difficulty in recognising and naming people. Thi...

    The ability to recognise someone and call them by their correct name is incredibly complex, even though it feels like second nature to us. Calling a person by their correct name requires integration of information across both hemispheres of the brain to connect face and name knowledge in mere milliseconds. Understanding how this process goes wrong ...

  5. Jan 17, 2017 · Sure enough, another study, published in the scientific journal PLOS One, found that children experienced their parents mixing up their names with siblings' much more frequently when either the ...

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  7. May 3, 2016 · For instance, parents were just as likely to mix up the names of their children whether or not they looked alike, or were the same gender. People even mixed up the names of family members with ...

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