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9780198529675

Handbook of Binding and Memory Perspectives from Cognitive Neuroscience

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  • ISBN13:

    9780198529675

  • ISBN10:

    0198529678

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2006-08-17
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

The creation and consolidation of a memory can rest on the integration of any number of possibly disparate features and contexts - colour, sound, emotion, arousal, context. How is it that these bind together to form a coherent memory? What is the role of binding in memory formation? What arethe neural processes that underlie binding? Do these binding processes change with age?This book offers an unrivalled overview of one of the most debated hotspots of modern memory research: binding. It contains 28 chapters on binding in different domains of memory, presenting classic research from the field of cognitive neuroscience. It is written by renowned scientists and leaders inthe field who have made fundamental contributions to the rapidly expanding field of neurocognitive memory research. As well as presenting a state-of-the-art account of recent views on binding and its importance for remembering, it also includes a review of recent publications in the area, of benefitto both students and active researchers. More than just a survey, it supplies the reader with an integrative view on binding in memory, fostering deep insights not only into the processes and their determinants, but also into the neural mechanisms enabling these processes. The content also encompasses a wide range of binding-related topics, including feature binding, the binding of items and contexts during encoding and retrieval, the specific roles of familiarity and recollection, as well as task- and especially age-related changes in these processes. A major sectionis dedicated to in-depth analyses of underlying neural mechanisms, focusing on both medial temporal and prefrontal structures. Computational approaches are covered as well.For all students and researchers in memory, the book will not only enhance their understanding of binding, but will instigate innovative and pioneering ideas for future research.

Table of Contents

Contributors x
Abbreviations xiv
Introduction
Levels of binding: types, mechanisms, and functions of binding in remembering
3(22)
Hubert D. Zimmer
Axel Mecklinger
Ulman Lindenberger
Section 1 Neural mechanisms of binding
Memory binding in hippocampal relational networks
25(28)
Howard Eichenbaum
Part or parcel? Contextual binding of events in episodic memory
53(32)
Iris Trinkler
John A. King
Hugo J. Spiers
Neil Burgess
Adaptive binding
85(30)
Don M. Tucker
Phan Luu
Binding principles in the theta frequency range
115(30)
Wolfgang Klimesch
Relationship between event-related potentials and oscillatory dynamics in episodic retrieval
145(18)
Emrah Duzel
Markus Neufang
Sebastian Guderian
Rhinal-hippocampal contribution to declarative memory formation
163(30)
Guillen Fernandez
Jurgen Fell
Section 2 A computational approach to mechanisms of binding
Neural mechanisms of binding in the hippocampus and neocortex: insights from computational models
193(28)
Daniel M. Cer
Randall C. O'Reilly
Binding in working memory and long-term memory: towards an integrated model
221(30)
Jaap M. J. Murre
Gezinus Wolters
Antonino Raffone
The role of time in human memory and binding: a review of the evidence
251(40)
Gordon D. A. Brown
Teresa McCormack
Ageing deficit in neuromodulation of representational distinctiveness and conjunctive binding: computational explorations of possible links
291(24)
Shu-Chen Li
Ulman Lindenberger
Section 3 Binding in perception and knowledge representation
Object tokens, binding, and visual memory
315(24)
Anne Treisman
Psychophysiological evidence for binding and unbinding arithmetic knowledge representations
339(24)
Frank Rosier
Kerstin Jost
Michael Niedeggen
Motivated binding: top-down influences in the encoding of compound objects
363(16)
Andreas Voss
Klaus Rothermund
Jochen Brandtstadter
Brain correlates of binding processes of emotion and memory
379(34)
Esther Fujiwara
Hans J. Markowitsch
Section 4 Binding processes during retrieval
Associations and dissociations in recognition memory systems
413(32)
M. W. Brown
E. C. Warburton
Unpacking explicit memory: the contribution of recollection and familiarity
445(22)
Joel R. Quamme
Andrew P. Yonelinas
Neal E. A. Kroll
Event-related potential explorations of dual processes in recognition memory
467(26)
Tim Curran
Katharine L. Tepe
Carley Piatt
Mnemonic binding in the medial temporal lobe
493(24)
Barbara J. Knowlton
Laura L. Eldridge
Functional imaging studies of intentional and incidental reactivation: implications for the binding problem
517(10)
Lars Nyberg
Binding memory fragments together to form declarative memories depends on cross-cortical storage
527(18)
Ken A. Paller
Retrieval inhibition in episodic recall: effects on feature binding
545(26)
Karl-Heinz Bauml
Section 5 Binding in the ageing brain
Remembering items and their contexts: effects of ageing and divided attention
571(24)
Fergus I. M. Craik
Prefrontal and medical temporal lobe contributions to relational memory in young and older adults
595(32)
Roberto Cabeza
Binding of memories: adult-age differences and the effects of divided attention in young adults on episodic memory
627(30)
Moshe Naveh-Benjamin
Binding of source and content: new directions revealed by neuropsychological and age-related effects
657(20)
Mark A. McDaniel
Karin M. Butler
Courtney C. Dornburg
Age-associated changes in episodic memory: event-related potential investigations of recollection and familiarity
677(28)
David Friedman
Episodic memory impairment in preclinical Alzheimer's disease: the role of encoding, consolidation, and retrieval factors
705(14)
Brent J. Small
Lars Backman
Index 719

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