Loss of memory for events immediately following a trauma; sometimes in effect for events during and for a long time following the trauma.
Loss of the ability to create new memories after the onset of amnesia.
1Criteria of efficacy were the degree of sedation and anterograde amnesia.
2These results suggest that H.M.'s lexical word-retrieval skills remain fluid despite his profound anterograde amnesia.
3In anterograde amnesia, memory loss is obtained for events that occur subsequent to the traumatic insult.
4Both groups showed severe anterograde amnesia that was indistinguishable from that obtained in the gradually rewarmed controls.
5For induction of anterograde amnesia, rats were trained while at reduced body temperature (29 degrees C).
6See, it stars Nicole Kidman as a woman who was nearly beaten to death, and suffers from anterograde amnesia.
7More common still is anterograde amnesia, which means people have difficulty forming new memories of the things that happen after their accident.
8The inspiration for this latest thinking comes, in part, from people with very poor memories, suffering from a deficit known as anterograde amnesia.
9Anterograde amnesia is a real thing.
Translations for anterograde amnesia