World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Psychology

D-Index
43
Citations
6296
World Ranking
7338
National Ranking
3959

Overview

David C. Riccio is affiliated with Kent State University in the United States. Their research primarily spans the fields of neuroscience and psychology, with a focus on cognitive neuroscience and developmental and educational psychology.

The main topics addressed in their work include:

  • Memory Processes and Influences
  • Identity, Memory, and Therapy
  • Memory and Neural Mechanisms

Among their recent publications, one notable paper is "Proust and involuntary retrieval," published in 2024 in Frontiers in Psychology.

The scientist has published multiple works in Frontiers in Psychology, which stands out as a frequent venue for their research dissemination.

In collaboration, David C. Riccio has worked with Pascale Gisquet-Verrier, highlighting a co-authorship that has appeared in at least one research output.

Best Publications

  • Retrograde amnesia for old (reactivated) memory: some anomalous characteristics

    Charles F. Mactutus;David C. Riccio;Jacquelyn M. Ferek

  • Memory retrieval deficits based upon altered contextual cues: a paradox

    David C. Riccio;Rick Richardson;Debbie L. Ebner

  • Memory: Phenomena and Principles

    Norman E. Spear;David C. Riccio

  • Forgetting of stimulus attributes: methodological implications for assessing associative phenomena.

    David C. Riccio;Jennifer K. Ackil;Angela Burch-Vernon

  • Reconsolidation: a brief history, a retrieval view, and some recent issues.

    David C. Riccio;Paula M. Millin;Adam R. Bogart

  • Developmental aspects of passive and active avoidance learning in rats

    David C. Riccio;Michael Rohrbaugh;Louis A. Hodges

  • Paradoxical Enhancement of Learned Fear.

    Michael Rohrbaugh;David C. Riccio

  • Acquisition and retention of a passive-avoidance response as a function of age in rats.

    Candace J. Schulenburg;David C. Riccio;Edna R. Stikes

  • Conditions influencing the retention of learned fear in young rats.

    Richard Silvestri;Michael Rohrbaugh;David C. Riccio

  • Effects of blocking an instrumental avoidance response: facilitated extinction but persistence of "fear".

    Xenia Coulter;David C. Riccio;Horace A. Page

  • Activity of the anterior cingulate cortex and ventral hippocampus underlie increases in contextual fear generalization.

    Patrick K. Cullen;T. Lee Gilman;Patrick Winiecki;David C. Riccio

  • Integration of New Information with Active Memory Accounts for Retrograde Amnesia: A Challenge to the Consolidation/Reconsolidation Hypothesis?

    Pascale Gisquet-Verrier;Joseph F. Lynch;Pasquale Cutolo;Daniel Toledano

  • Retrograde amnesia produced by hypothermia in rats.

    David C. Riccio;Louis A. Hodges;Patrick K. Randall

  • Amnesia induced by hypothermia as a function of treatment-test interval and recooling in rats

    Charles F. Hinderliter;Timothy Webster;David C. Riccio

  • Paradoxical enhancement of conditioned suppression.

    Michael Rohrbaugh;David C. Riccio;Alan Arthur

  • Memory: When less is more.

    David C. Riccio;Vita C. Rabinowitz;Shari Axelrod

  • Memory reactivation effects independent of reconsolidation

    Pascale Gisquet-Verrier;Pascale Gisquet-Verrier;David C. Riccio

  • Perspectives on fear generalization and its implications for emotional disorders.

    Aaron M. Jasnow;Joseph F. Lynch;T. Lee Gilman;David C. Riccio

  • d-Cycloserine: effects on long-term retention of a conditioned response and on memory for contextual attributes.

    Cantey L. Land;David C. Riccio

  • The status of memory following experimentally induced amnesias: Gone, but not forgotten

    David C. Riccio;Rick Richardson

Frequent Co-Authors

Rick Richardson
Rick Richardson University of New South Wales
Byron A. Campbell
Byron A. Campbell Princeton University
Douglas L. Delahanty
Douglas L. Delahanty Kent State University
Norman E. Spear
Norman E. Spear Binghamton University

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