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  • The Oxford Handbook of Human Memory, Two Volume Pack: Foundations and Applications

    The Oxford Handbook of Human Memory, Two Volume Pack by Kahana, Michael J.; Wagner, Anthony D.;

    Foundations and Applications

    Sorozatcím: Oxford Library of Psychology;

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    A termék adatai:

    • Kiadó OUP USA
    • Megjelenés dátuma 2024. december 18.

    • ISBN 9780197746141
    • Kötéstípus Keménykötés
    • Terjedelem1632 oldal
    • Méret 292x231x182 mm
    • Súly 5466 g
    • Nyelv angol
    • 731

    Kategóriák

    Rövid leírás:

    The Oxford Handbook of Human Memory provides an authoritative overview of the science of human memory, its application to clinical disorders, and its broader implications for learning and memory in real-world contexts. Organized into two volumes and eleven sections, the Handbook integrates behavioral, neural, and computational evidence with current theories of how we learn and remember. Overall, The Oxford Handbook of Human Memory documents the current state of knowledge in the field and provides a roadmap for the next generation of memory scientists, established peers, and practitioners.

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    Hosszú leírás:

    The Oxford Handbook of Human Memory provides an authoritative overview of the science of human memory, its application to clinical disorders, and its broader implications for learning and memory in real-world contexts. Bringing together experts in the field, the Handbook integrates behavioral, neural, and computational evidence with current theories of how we learn and remember.

    Organized into two volumes and eleven sections, chapters cover foundational concepts, laws, and methods to study human memory; forms and attributes of memory; encoding and retrieval processes; interference, inhibition, and consolidation; memory distortion, inference, and prediction; individual differences and memory development; memory disorders and therapies; learning and memory in educational settings; and the role of memory in society. An authoritative and comprehensive treatment, The Oxford Handbook of Human Memory documents the current state of knowledge in the field and provides a roadmap for the next generation of memory scientists, established peers, and practitioners.

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    Tartalomjegyzék:

    List of Contributors
    Volume 1
    Part 1: Foundations
    1. Critical Concepts in the Study of Learning and Memory
    Henry L. Roediger, III and Oyku Uner
    2. Laws of Human Memory
    Michael J. Kahana, Nicholas B. Diamond, and Ada Aka
    3. Computational Models of Event Memory
    Gregory E. Cox and Richard M. Shiffrin
    4. Neural Mechanisms
    Tarek Amer and Lila Davachi
    5. Methods to Study Human Memory
    Randolph F. Helfrich, Robert T. Knight, and Mark D'Esposito
    Part 2: Forms of Memory
    6. Episodic Memory
    Charan Ranganath
    7. Generalization and Abstraction: Human Memory as a Magic Library
    Timothy T. Rogers
    8. Deep Learning: Implications for Human Learning and Memory
    James L. McClelland and Matthew M. Botvinick
    9. Procedural and Motor Learning
    Barbara J. Knowlton and Julia M. Schorn
    10. Priming
    David M. Schnyer and Ian G. Dobbins
    11. Perceptual Learning: Learning, Memory, and Models
    Barbara Anne Dosher and Zhong-Lin Lu
    12. Conditioning and Associative Learning
    Alice Mason, Elliot A. Ludvig, and Christopher R. Madan
    13. Working Memory as Persistent Neural Activity
    Joshua J. Foster, Edward K. Vogel, and Edward Awh
    14. Working Memory: Theoretical, Computational, and Neural Considerations
    Bradley R. Postle and Klaus Oberauer
    Part 3: Attributes of Memory
    15. Attribute Theories of Memory
    Sean M. Polyn
    16. Memory for Time
    Marc W. Howard
    17. Memory for Space
    Suzanna Becker
    18. Events and Boundaries
    Sarah DuBrow
    19. Perceptual Attributes in Memory Research
    Robert Sekuler and Allison B. Sekuler
    20. Affective Memory
    Elizabeth A. Kensinger and Eric Fields
    Part 4: Encoding Processes
    21. Attention and Memory
    Brynn E. Sherman and Nicholas B. Turk-Browne
    22. Rehearsal Processes
    Geoff Ward
    23. Encoding and the Medial Temporal Lobe
    Corey Fernandez, Kevin P. Madore, and Anthony D. Wagner
    24. Dopamine and Learning
    Katherine Duncan and Daphna Shohamy
    25. Oscillatory Brain Mechanisms for Memory Formation: Online and Offline Processes
    Simon Hanslmayr, Bernhard P. Staresina, and Ole Jensen
    26. Memory Capacity of Neural Network Models
    Stefano Fusi
    27. Frequency Effects in Recognition and Recall
    Vencislav Popov and Lynne Reder
    Part 5: Retrieval Processes
    28. Serial Recall
    Mark J. Hurlstone
    29. Free Recall and Memory Search
    Lynn J. Lohnas
    30. Discrimination, Recognition, and Classification
    Michael L. Mack and Thomas J. Palmeri
    31. Global Matching Models of Recognition Memory
    Adam F. Osth and Simon Dennis
    32. Recognition Memory: The Role of Recollection and Familiarity
    Andrew P. Yonelinas, Michelle M. Ramey, and Cameron Riddell
    33. Evidence Accumulation and Decision Processes
    Jeffrey Starns and Andrew Heathcote
    34. Pattern Completion and the Medial Temporal Lobe Memory System
    Stephanie Theves, Xenia Grande, Emrah Duzel, and Christian F. Doeller
    35. Neural Mechanisms of Familiarity
    Daniela Montaldi and Alex Kafkas
    36. Frontoparietal Contributions to Retrieval
    Michael D. Rugg
    37. Content Reinstatement
    Yufei Zhao and Brice A. Kuhl
    38. Context Reinstatement
    Jeremy R. Manning
    39. Autobiographical Memory
    Carina L. Fan, Stephanie Simpson, H. Moriah Sokolowski, and Brian Levine
    Volume 2
    Part 6: Interference, Inhibition, and Consolidation
    40. Interference Theory: History and Current Status
    Colin M. MacLeod
    41. Inhibition as a Cause of Forgetting
    Laura C. Marsh and Michael C. Anderson
    42. Current Perspectives on Directed Forgetting
    Lili Sahakyan
    43. Systems Consolidation, Transformation, and Reorganization: Multiple Trace Theory, Trace Transformation Theory, and Their Competitors
    Morris Moscovitch and Asaf Gilboa
    44. Memory Reconsolidation: Making Predictions Better
    Lynn Nadel and Per B. Sederberg
    45. Sleep and Memory
    Eitan Schechtman, Robert Stickgold, and Ken A. Paller
    Part 7: Memory Distortion, Inference, and Prediction
    46. Memory Errors and Distortion
    Daniel L. Schacter, Alexis C. Carpenter, Aleea L. Devitt, and Preston P. Thakral
    47. Schema, Inference, and Memory
    Nicole L. Varga, Neal W. Morton, and Alison R. Preston
    48. Prospective Cognition and Its Links with Memory
    Donna Rose Addis and Annick F. N. Tanguay
    49. Prospective Memory
    Ute J. Bayen, Jan Rummel, Nicola Ballhausen, and Matthias Kliegel
    50. Metacognition: Puzzles, Biases, and Remedies
    Janet Metcalfe
    51. The Rational Analysis of Memory
    Samuel J. Gershman
    Part 8: Individual Differences and Development
    52. Individual Differences in Working and Long-Term Memory
    Nash Unsworth
    53. Memory in Infancy and Childhood
    Nora S. Newcombe, Susan L. Benear, Chi T. Ngo, and Ingrid R. Olson
    54. Memory Development in Middle Childhood and Adolescence
    Simona Ghetti
    55. Memory and Aging
    Leah L. Light
    56. Neurobiological Aging and Memory: Average Patterns and Individual Differences
    Lars Nyberg, Kristine Walhovd, and Anders Fjell
    57. Expertise and Memory
    Guillermo Campitelli, David Z. Hambrick, and Alessandro Guida
    Part 9: Disorders and Therapies of Memory
    58. Amnesic Syndrome
    Virginie Patt and Mieke Verfaellie
    59. Cognitive Aging and the Transition to Early Alzheimer's Disease
    Elizabeth C. Mormino and William J. Jagust
    60. Memory in Frontotemporal Dementia
    Ophir Keret, Cutter Lindbergh, and Bruce Miller
    61. Semantic Dementia
    Karalyn Patterson and Matthew A. Lambon Ralph
    62. The Mnemonic Consequences of Moderate to Severe Traumatic Brain Injury
    Eli Vakil
    63. Basal Ganglia Diseases
    Sephira G. Ryman and Kathleen L. Poston
    64. Learning and Memory in People with Schizophrenia
    J. Daniel Ragland
    65. Memory, Depression, and Anxiety
    Caitlin Hitchcock and Tim Dalgleish
    66. Memory and Stress
    Lars Schwabe
    67. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
    Chris R. Brewin and Anke Ehlers
    68. Brain Stimulation
    Youssef Ezzyat and Nanthia Suthana
    Part 10: Education
    69. Acquiring an Accurate Mental Model of Human Learning: Toward an Owner's Manual
    Steven C. Pan and Robert A. Bjork
    70. Elements of Effective Learning
    Jeffrey D. Karpicke and Garrett M. O'Day
    71. Memory and Metacognitive Processes Recruited During Educational Assessment
    Bridgid Finn and Burcu Arslan
    72. Principles of Expertise for Skill Learning
    Alice F. Healy, James A. Kole, and Robert W. Proctor
    73. Memory and Human Intelligence
    Robert L. Greene
    Part 11: Memory and Society
    74. Memory for Salient Shared Events: A Top-Down Approach to Collective Memory
    William Hirst and Clinton Merck
    75. Collaborative Remembering and Collective Memory
    Suparna Rajaram
    76. Event Memory in Fact and Fiction
    Matthew A. Bezdek, Andrew C. Butler, and Jeffrey M. Zacks
    77. Music and Memory
    Daniel J. Levitin and Lindsay Fleming
    78. Memory of Past Experiences and Economic Decisions
    Ulrike Malmendier and Jessica A. Wachter
    79. Memory and the Law
    Barbara A. Spellman and Charles A. Weaver, III
    80. Eyewitness Memory
    Laura Mickes and John T. Wixted
    81. Brain-Based Memory Detection and the New Science of Mind Reading
    Jesse Rissman and Emily R. Murphy
    82. Memory in the Digital Age
    Benjamin C. Storm and Julia S. Soares
    Index

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