What's the difference between confabulate and confabulatory?

Confabulate


Definition:

  • (v. i.) To talk familiarly together; to chat; to prattle.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Seventy-six unselected patients affected by senile dementia were investigated in order to study the relationships between confabulation of denial and (a) stage attained by the demential process; (b) degree of memory loss, and (c) personality features and cultural models of the patients.
  • (2) Using his views as a starting point, the concept of confabulation is then defined in a Kraepelin-oriented manner, making it also applicable to the phantastic false memories found in some rarer forms of functional psychotic illness.
  • (3) Sixty-two subjects were divided into two groups (33 with and 29 without such a history) and compared on the following features: color-dominated percepts, primary-process content, confabulation, activity versus passivity, and two new scores related to dissociative symptoms.
  • (4) Implications for the role of frontal lobe dysfunction in the genesis of anosognosia and confabulation are discussed.
  • (5) There is a retrograde amnesia for up to several years, that disappears slowly, and apparently no confabulations.
  • (6) A gradual development of the confabulatory syndrome (from mnemonic confabulations to ecmnestic) was seen in senile dementia (5 cases) and in its combination with vascular atherosclerosis (61 cases).
  • (7) Beverly died in 2013. Letters: John Berger obituary Read more Last year saw the premiere in Berlin of the film The Seasons in Quincy: Four Portraits of John Berger , directed by Tilda Swinton, Colin McCabe, Christopher Roth and Bartek Dziadosz, and the publication of Confabulations, a miscellany of essays and drawings.
  • (8) During the latest hearing, Nightingale claimed the pistol and ammunition must have belonged to Soldier N. His explanation about how he came by the gun and ammunition was put down to "confabulation" – an unconscious trick of the mind in which gaps are filled in with false memories.
  • (9) The author thinks that psychopathological symptoms, pathognomonic for damage to the mediobasal parts of the frontal lobes play a role in the pathogenesis of confabulations.
  • (10) A case of posttraumatic amnestic syndrome is described, with spontaneous confabulations as the main symptom.
  • (11) It is supposed that disturbances of recent memory are an indispensable, although insufficient condition for confabulation development.
  • (12) Early in the twentieth century it was used to refer to a subtype of dementia characterized by confabulations, marked memory impairment, hyperactivity, disorientation, elevated mood and preserved social graces.
  • (13) A neuropsychologic analysis of the disorder stresses the cognitive operations entailed in geographical localization and confabulation.
  • (14) Finally, his autobiographical memory was poor and subject to substantial confabulation.
  • (15) A number of plausible theories of confabulation have been proposed, but the various claims and counterclaims have not been systematically tested.
  • (16) Anton's syndrome or cortical blindness consists of blindness, denial of blindness and at times confabulation.
  • (17) The Council finds that recollections obtained during hypnosis can involve confabulations and pseudomemories and not only fail to be more accurate, but actually appear to be less reliable than nonhypnotic recall.
  • (18) Some forms of confabulation ('confabulation of denial') seem due to the need to deny demential dissolution by replacing information pointing to illness with expressions suggesting normal health and efficiency.
  • (19) A large increase in time spent awake and in stage I sleep is reported as well as confused sleep cycles, increased ocular density in case of confabulation and dream accounts recalling mental activity from the previous day.
  • (20) We propose that the typical confabulations are triggered by gaps in memory for the period surrounding the onset of his illness, while the aphasic (fantastic) confabulations are triggered by gaps in semantic representation.

Confabulatory


Definition:

  • (a.) Of the nature of familiar talk; in the form of a dialogue.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) On the basis of clinical observation and a review of a number of studies, it appears that confabulatory states frequently are associated with cerebral damage that involves the right hemisphere, notably, the frontal (often bilaterally) and parietal lobes--areas intimately involved in arousal, attention, information regulation, and integration.
  • (2) In tumors of the left lobe there were disorders in the motor and initiative side of speech, general inhibition, a decline in the level of generalizing, a prevalence of memory disorders, rather than attention, inertia of mental processes with a preservation of a sense of being ill. Tumors of the right frontal lobe were characterized by an insufficient insight to the illness, euphoria, an absence of a critical understanding of the environment, a prevalence of attention disorders over memory disturbances, a narrowing of the volume of simultaneously perceived information and a tendency towards a confabulatory addition to fragmentarily perceived images.
  • (3) A gradual development of the confabulatory syndrome (from mnemonic confabulations to ecmnestic) was seen in senile dementia (5 cases) and in its combination with vascular atherosclerosis (61 cases).
  • (4) It is suggested that nosologically studied group of psychoses in old age developing only with confabulatory-paraphrenic delusion without endogenous or organic dementia first appearing in seniscence should be referred to be senile dementia.
  • (5) Kraepelin and Leonhard have been preeminent in their concern with such clinical states; thus, Leonhard's confabulatory euphoria and confabulatory paraphrenia can be symptomatically and syndromally linked up with points of view on paranoid mania and confabulatory paraphrenia held by Kraepelin.
  • (6) The third group of patients varied only by the presence of the confabulatory-paraphrenic delusion without any signs of endogenous or senile-atrophic processes.
  • (7) Nine subjects with aneurysms of the anterior communicating artery (ACoA) and 17 subjects with other intracranial hemorrhages (ICH) were evaluated for confabulatory responses under two naturally occurring conditions: (1) when subjects were not oriented to person, place, month and year, (2) when subjects were fully oriented.
  • (8) They are sustained by paranoid elaboration or confabulatory rationalisation of a double.
  • (9) The main expressions of psychopathological syndromes in patients with lesions of the right hemisphere were anosognosia, certain emotional reactions in the form of euphoria, a drop in purposeful activity, motor and mental aspontanity and specific confabulatory disorders.
  • (10) The comparative study of the psychopathological traits of confabulatory-paraphrenic delusion in all patients showed that in all three groups there was a similarity of this symptomatology.
  • (11) The state of these patients was characterized by confabulatory-paraphrenic delusion which developed for the first in senility.
  • (12) Thus, confabulatory phenomena arises, which are specific for right hemispheric lesions.
  • (13) It is hypothesized that confabulatory responses corresponded to a disinhibition of the left hemisphere from the control of the hemisphere dominant in dealing with visuo-spatial data.
  • (14) Alcoholic paraphrenia was more frequently expressed in the form of systematized and confabulatory forms with a monotonous and primitive delusion accompanied by a psychoorganic syndrome.

Words possibly related to "confabulate"

Words possibly related to "confabulatory"