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9780805815405

Basic and Applied Memory Research: Volume 1: Theory in Context; Volume 2: Practical Applications

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780805815405

  • ISBN10:

    0805815406

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1996-09-01
  • Publisher: Psychology Pres
  • Purchase Benefits
List Price: $180.00

Summary

Basic researchers unlock the secrets of nature; applied researchers unlock the means by which those secrets of nature can change people's lives. Neither basic nor applied research has an independent impact. These volumes examine the convergence of basic and applied research in the field of memory. Volume 1: Theory and Context,focuses on the methods for understanding and applying basic memory theory, while Volume 2: Practical Applications,expands the understanding of practical memory research by providing in-depth research examples and findings. If the science of memory is to make a significant contribution to society, coordinating our basic and applied efforts and determining how they complement each other become of paramount importance. These volumes will help in this regard--both as textbooks demonstrating how to investigate memory and apply basic memory theory, and as reference sources leading to a better understanding of certain problems in basic and applied memory research. Readers of these volumes will gain a thorough grasp of the way major themes relate to basic and applied research collaboration, how programmatic basic and applied research can be conducted on particular memory problems, and the manner in which basic and applied work in major problem areas has been incorporated into the field of memory. Both volumes present important information that will be indispensable to researchers and students alike.

Table of Contents

Contributors ix(4)
Preface xiii(4)
Cathy McEvoy
Acknowledgments xvii
PART ONE: ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BASIC AND PRACTICAL MEMORY RESEARCH 1(35)
1 Memory as Something That Can Be Counted Versus Memory as Something That Can Be Counted On
3(16)
Asher Koriat
Morris Goldsmith
2 Personal Reflections on the Study of Practical Memory in the Mid-1990s: The Complete Cognitive Researcher
19(17)
Michael Pressley
PART TWO: EYEWITNESS MEMORY AND MEMORY FOR FACES 36(42)
3 Memory for Cars and Their Drivers: A Test of the Interest Hypothesis
37(14)
Graham Davies
Anetta Kurvink
Rebecca Mitchell
Noelle Robertson
4 The Costs and Benefits of Verbally Rehearsing Memory for Faces
51(16)
Jonathan W. Schooler
Robert S. Ryan
Lynne Reder
5 Children's Memory Following Misleading Postevent Information: A Contextual Approach
67(11)
Michael P. Toglia
Jeffrey S. Neuschatz
Helen Hembrooke
Stephen J. Ceci
PART THREE: REMEMBERING TO DO THINGS 78(44)
6 Remembering to Do Things: Remembering a Forgotten Topic
79(16)
Gilles O. Einstein
Mark A. McDaniel
7 Remembering to Take Medications: The Importance of Nonmemory Variables
95(16)
Denise C. Park
Christopher B. Mayhorn
8 Personality Variables and Prospective Memory Performance
111(11)
Alan Searleman
PART FOUR: LEARNING AND INTELLIGENCE 122(30)
9 Practice Effects in Memory: Data, Theory, and Unanswered Questions
123(16)
David G. Payne
Michael J. Wenger
10 Memory and Analogical Reasoning
139(13)
Elke van der Meer
PART FIVE: MEMORY AND SURVEYS 152(56)
11 The Use of Strategic Processes by Survey Respondents
153(13)
Gordon B. Willis
12 Estimating Frequency: A Multiple Strategy Perspective
166(13)
Frederick G. Conrad
Norman R. Brown
13 Answering Question Sequences: Attention Switching and Memory Organization
179(14)
Paul A. Mullin
Erin R. Cashman
Holly R. Straub
14 Implications of Models of Survey Cognition for Memory Theory
193(15)
Jared B. Jobe
Douglas J. Herrmann
PART SIX: BELIEFS ABOUT MEMORY 208(48)
15 Individual Differences in Memory Style and Autobiographical Memory
209(14)
Jerome R. Sehulster
16 Relations Among Basic Processes, Beliefs, and Performance: A Lifespan Perspective
223(14)
John C. Cavanaugh
David Baskind
17 Mnemonics and Metacognition
237(19)
Cesare Cornoldi
Rossana De Beni
PART SEVEN: SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL ASPECTS OF MEMORY 256(60)
18 Biases in Children's Memory for Collaborative Exchanges
257(12)
Mary Ann Foley
Hillary Horn Ratner
19 Conversational Remembering
269(18)
David Manier
Elizabeth Pinner
William Hirst
20 Selective Encoding of Emotional Information
287(14)
Andrew Mathews
21 Cursing: A Damned Persistent Lexicon
301(15)
Timothy B. Jay
PART EIGHT: MEMORY AIDS--FROM STRATEGIES TO AUTOMATION 316(64)
22 Memory Aids
317(16)
Margaret Jean Intons-Peterson
23 The Promise of Compact Disc-Interactive Technology for Memory Training With the Elderly
333(10)
Dana J. Plude
Lisa K. Schwartz
24 Automated Voice Messages for Health Care
343(10)
Von O. Leirer
Elizabeth Decker Tanke
Daniel G. Morrow
25 Automation of Flight Data in Air Traffic Control
353(14)
O. U. Vortac
Ami L. Barile
Chris A. Albright
Todd R. Truitt
Carol A. Manning
Dana Bain
26 Automated Instructional Systems and Ecological Notions of Memory
367(13)
Theodore M. Schlechter
PART NINE: CLINICAL ASPECTS OF MEMORY 380(42)
27 Correlated Testing to Detect Cognitive Change
381(10)
Herman Buschke
Martin Sliwinski
Gail Kuslansky
28 The Functional Deficits That Underline Amnesia: Evidence From Amnesic Forgetting Rate and Item-Specific Implicit Memory
391(16)
Andrew R. Mayes
29 A Taxonomy of Priming: Implication for Aging
407(15)
John M. Rybash
PART TEN: INTERVENTIONS FOR MEMORY-IMPAIRED POPULATIONS 422(59)
30 The NMDA Receptor Complex: Enhancement of Memory in Aging and Dementia
423(16)
Barbara L. Schwartz
Shahin Hashtroudi
Robert L. Herting
T. Daniel Fakouhi
Stephen I. Deutsch
31 Conceptual and Practical Issues in the Development and Assessment of Drugs That Would Enhance Cognition
439(16)
H. J. Weingartner
D. Hommer
S. Molchan
A. Raskin
J. K. Robinson
T. Sunderland
32 Curious Memory Phenomena: Implications for Treatment After Traumatic Brain Injury
455(14)
Rick Parente
Amie Elliot
Maxwell Twum
33 Multimodal Memory Rehabilitation for the Toxic Solvent Injured Population
469(12)
Miriam Schooler Bendiksen
Ivan Bendiksen
Author Index 481(16)
Subject Index 497

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