Produktbild: Science of Memory Concepts

Science of Memory Concepts Concepts

77,99 €

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.04.2007

Abbildungen

26 black & white photographs and 26 line illustrations

Herausgeber

Henry L. Roediger + weitere

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

464

Maße (L/B/H)

23,4/15,6/2,5 cm

Gewicht

685 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-531044-3

Beschreibung

Rezension

a fascinating book that I would definitely recommend to all interested in memory phenomena. Applied Cognitive Psychology

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.04.2007

Abbildungen

26 black & white photographs and 26 line illustrations

Herausgeber

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

464

Maße (L/B/H)

23,4/15,6/2,5 cm

Gewicht

685 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-531044-3

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Science of Memory Concepts
    • 1: Yadin Dudai, Henry L Roediger III and Endel Tulving: Memory Concepts

    • Section 1: Memory

    • 2: Yadin Dudai: It's all about representations

    • 3: Morris Moscovitch: Why the engram is elusive

    • 4: Daniel L Schacter: Delineating the core

    • 5: Richard G M Morris: Integrative comments: Distinctions and dilemmas

    • Section 2: Learning

    • 6: Robert A Rescorla: A pre-theoretical concept

    • 7: Anthony Dickinson: The need for a hybrid theory

    • 8: Elizabeth A Phelps: Challenges in the merging of levels

    • 9: Steve E Petersen: Integrative comments: Multiplicity of mechanisms

    • Section 3: Coding and representation

    • 10: Alessandro Treves: Time, space, history and beyond

    • 11: Anthony R McIntosh: The importance of mesoscale dynamics

    • 12: Endel Tulving: Searching for a home in the brain

    • 13: Misha Tsodyks: Integrative comments: On appealing beliefs and paucity of data

    • Section 4: Plasticity

    • 14: John H Byrne: New concepts, new challenges

    • 15: Chris I De Zeeuw: A pragmatic compromise

    • 16: John T Bruer: On the level

    • 17: Edvard I Moser: Integrative comments: More than memory

    • Section 5: Context

    • 18: Michale S Fanselow: What's so special about it?

    • 19: Eric Eich: Mood, memory, and the concept of context

    • 20: Steven M Smith: A reference for focal experience

    • 21: Mark E Bouton: Integrative comments: The concept in the human and animal memory domains

    • Section 6: Encoding

    • 22: Michael E Hasselmo: Models linking neural mechanisms to behavior

    • 23: Fergus I M Craik: A cognitive perspective

    • 24: Lila Davachi: Integrative comments: The proof is still required

    • Section 7: Working memory

    • 25: Wendy A Suzuki: Signals in the brain

    • 26: Alan Baddeley: Multiple models, multiple mechanisms

    • 27: Susan E Gathercole: What it is, and what it is not

    • 28: Randall W Engle: Integrative comments: The mind is richer than the models

    • Section 8: Consolidation

    • 29: Alcino J Silva: Molecular restlessness

    • 30: Joseph E LeDoux: Challenging the traditional view

    • 31: Lynn Nadel: The demise of the fixed trace

    • 32: Susan J Sara: Integrative comments: From hypothesis to paradigm to concept

    • Section 9: Persistence

    • 33: Howard Eichenbaum: Necessary, but not sufficient

    • 34: Richard F Thompson: Discrepancies between behaviors and brains

    • 35: Integrative comments: In search of molecular persistance

    • Section 10: Retrieval

    • 36: J David Sweatt: Molecular mechanisms

    • 37: Norman E Spear: Properties and effects

    • 38: John M Gardiner: On its essence and related concepts

    • 39: Kathleen B McDermott: Integrative comments: Varieties and puzzles

    • Section 11: Remembering

    • 40: Andrew P Yonelinas: Defining and measuring

    • 41: Martin A Conway: A process and a state

    • 42: Asher Koriat: Metacognitive monitoring and control processes

    • 43: Suparna Rajaram: Integrative comments: A controversy and a challenge

    • Section 12: Transfer

    • 44: Yadin Dudai: Its transfer into neurobiology

    • 45: E J Capaldi: Analysis in rats and other species

    • 46: Mark A McDaniel: Rediscovering a central concept

    • 47: Alice F Healy: Specificity and generality

    • 48: Henry L Roediger III: Integrative comments: The ubiquitous concept

    • Section 13: Inhibition

    • 49: Gyorgy Buzaki: Diversity of cortical function

    • 50: Lynn Hasher: Attentional regulation of cognition

    • 51: Michael C Anderson: Manifestations in long-term memory

    • 52: Colin M MacLeod: Elusive or illusion?

    • 53: Robert A Bjork: Integrative comments: An essential and contentious concept

    • Section 14: Forgetting

    • 54: Michael Davis: Once again, its all about representations

    • 55: Elizabeth F Loftus: The fate of once learned, but 'forgotten', material

    • 56: David C Rubin: Its role in the science of memory

    • 57: John T Wixted: Integrative comments: It's not just the opposite of remembering

    • Section 15: Memory systems

    • 58: Larry R Squire: A biological concept

    • 59: Edmund T Rolls: Multiple systems in the brain and their interactions

    • 60: Marcia K Johnson: A cognitive construct for analysis and synthesis

    • 61: Randy L Buckner: Integrative comments: An incentive, not an endpoint

    • Section 16: Phylogeny and evolution

    • 62: It takes two to tango

    • 63: Randolf Menzel: On comparing species at multiple levels

    • 64: Stanley B Klein: Implications for understanding the nature of a memory system

    • 65 Integrative comments: Ecology, evolutionary biology, and the science of memory: Sara J Shuttleworth

    • Epilogue

    • 66: Susan M Fitzpatrick: Remember the future