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    Brain Organization and Memory: Cells, Systems, and Circuits

    Brain Organization and Memory by McGaugh, James L.; Weinberger, Norman M.; Lynch, Gary;

    Cells, Systems, and Circuits

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 76.00
      • The price is estimated because at the time of ordering we do not know what conversion rates will apply to HUF / product currency when the book arrives. In case HUF is weaker, the price increases slightly, in case HUF is stronger, the price goes lower slightly.

        34 314 Ft (32 680 Ft + 5% VAT)
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    34 314 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 3 September 1992

    • ISBN 9780195077124
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages432 pages
    • Size 235x154x24 mm
    • Weight 743 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations numerous black and white photographs, line drawings and tables
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    Short description:

    This edited volume summarizes recent findings of leading research workers on the brain systems that underlie memory. The book reviews recent progress in understanding forms of memory in animals and humans and the interaction of cortical and subcortical systems in the regulation of memory. Special emphasis is given to the development of neural network models that attempt to link systems in the representation of memory.

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    Long description:

    This edited volume summarizes recent findings of leading researchers investigating the brain systems that underlie memory. The book reviews recent progress in understanding forms of memory in animals and humans and the interaction of cortical and subcortical systems in the regulation of memory. Special emphasis is given to the development of neural network models that attempt to link systems in the regulation of memory.

    It will be an invaluable source for cognitive psychologists, neuroscientists, and students interested in memory.

    The Preface ends by telling us that the leitmotif of the book is excitement and by expressing the hope that this will be shared by the reader. There is excitement herein, not least in that the hard work involved is rewarded with the overall feeling that satisfying synthesis of these disparate approaches to brain functioning are brought that much closer by this type of volume.

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    Table of Contents:

    J. Bures: Neurobiology of Memory: The Significance of Anomalous Findings; PART I: Forms of Memory; M. Gallagher: Introduction; T. J. Carew et al.: The Development of Learning and Memory in Aplysia; R. G. M. Morris: Synaptic Plasticity, Neural Architecture, and Forms of Memory; P. C. Holland: Forms of Memory in Pavlovian Conditioning; M. K. Johnson: Functional Forms of Human Memory; N. M. Weinbergner: Neuromnemonics: Forms and Contents; R. W. Doty: Time and Memory; A. P. Shimamura: Forms of Memory: Issues and Directions; PART II: Regulation of Cortical Function in Memory; M. R. Rosennzweig: Introduction; E. T. Rolls: Functions of Neuronal Networks in the Hippocampus and of Backprojections in the Cerebral Cortex in Memory; W. Singer: Ontogenetic Self-Organization and Learning; G. W. Van Hoesen: The Dissection by Alzheimer's Disease of Cortical and Limbic Neural Systems Relevant to Memory; H. P. Killackey: The Neocortex and Memory Storage; R. A. Anderson and D. Zipser: A Network Model for Learned Spatial Representation in the Posterior Parietal Cortex; P. S. Goldman-Rakic: Cortical Localization of Working Memory; PART III: Representations - Beyond the Single Cell; G. L. Shaw: Introduction; L. N. Cooper, et al.: Neural Networks: Test Tubes to Theorems; I. Kohonan: Notes on Neural Computing and Associative Memory; I. J. Sejnowski and G. Tesauro: Building Network Learning and Algorithms from Hebbian Synapses; C. von der Malsburg: A Neural Architecture for the Representation of Scenes; W. J. Freeman and C. A. Skarda: Representations: Who Needs Them?; G. L. Gerstein: Interactions Within Neuronal Assemblies: Theory and Experiment; G. Lynch et al.: Neural Networks and Networks of Neurons; Index.

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