“…While generally patients with episodic amnesia attributable to damage to the hippocampus and related structures are impaired at both remembering past events and imagining personal future episodes (Andelman, Hoofien, Goldberg, Aizenstein, & Neufeld, 2010; Cole, Morrison, Barak, Pauly-Takacs, & Conway, 2016; Hassabis, Kumaran, Vann, & Maguire, 2007; Klein, Loftus, & Kihlstrom, 2002; Kurczek et al, 2015; Kwan, Carson, Addis, & Rosenbaum, 2010; Race, Keane, & Verfaellie, 2011), a subset of such patients – particularly those with developmental amnesia – retain some ability to simulate future events (Cooper, Vargha-Khadem, Gadian, & Maguire, 2011; Dede, Wixted, Hopkins, & Squire, 2016; Hurley, Maguire, & Vargha-Khadem, 2011; Maguire, Vargha-Khadem, & Hassabis, 2010; Squire et al, 2010). However, when such patients generate “internal” details during future imagination, descriptions of these events seem to be fragmented and lacking in spatial coherence (Hassabis et al, 2007, though see Dede et al, 2016).…”