Memory Distortion: How Minds, Brains, and Societies Reconstruct the PastDaniel L. Schacter, Joseph T. Coyle Harvard University Press, 1995 - 417 pagina's Hypnosis, confabulation, source amnesia, flashbulb memories, repression - these and numerous additional topics are explored in this timely collection of essays by eminent scholars in a range of disciplines. This is the first book on memory distortion to unite contributions from cognitive psychology, psychopathology, psychiatry, neurobiology, sociology, history, and religious studies. It brings the most relevant group of perspectives to bear on some key contemporary issues, including the value of eyewitness testimony and the accuracy of recovered memories of sexual abuse. |
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Pagina 60
... Remember : ( The subject indicated remembering without stating a source for the memory , e.g. , " I remember it " or " I memorized it . " ) 7. Familiar : ( The subject indicated a sense of familiarity about the item , e.g. , " I hear it ...
... Remember : ( The subject indicated remembering without stating a source for the memory , e.g. , " I remember it " or " I memorized it . " ) 7. Familiar : ( The subject indicated a sense of familiarity about the item , e.g. , " I hear it ...
Pagina 62
... remember seeing it . Even when given the choice of saying that they remember both seeing and reading the item , one in seven subjects still claim only that they saw it . Of course it must be kept in mind that subjects who saw the items ...
... remember seeing it . Even when given the choice of saying that they remember both seeing and reading the item , one in seven subjects still claim only that they saw it . Of course it must be kept in mind that subjects who saw the items ...
Pagina 63
... remember from your childhood . " The subjects were given a brief description of four events that supposedly occurred while the subject and family member were together . Three were true events and one was the false " lost " event ...
... remember from your childhood . " The subjects were given a brief description of four events that supposedly occurred while the subject and family member were together . Three were true events and one was the false " lost " event ...
Inhoudsopgave
History and Current Status | 1 |
Cognitive Perspectives | 11 |
The Reality of Illusory Memories | 47 |
Copyright | |
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Memory Distortion: How Minds, Brains, and Societies Reconstruct the Past Daniel L. Schacter,Joseph T. Coyle Gedeeltelijke weergave - 1995 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
activation adult altered American amnesia amygdala anxiety appear areas asked associated become Behavioral biases brain changes Chapter child clinical cognitive complex concerning conditioning confabulation connections consolidation cortex cultural depression disorder dissociative effects emotional encoding enhanced episodic et al evidence example experience Experimental explicit facilitation fact false Figure findings frontal function given human hypnosis impaired implicit important increase indicate individual influence interviewer involved Journal knowledge later learning lobe Loftus long-term McGaugh memory distortion nature neurons Neuroscience normal observed occur past patients pattern performance period present Press processes produced protein Psychology questions rats recall recent recollection remember reported representation response retrieval Review Schacter Science similar social specific Squire stimuli storage stress structures studies subjects suggest synaptic task temporal term theory tion traces traumatic units University York
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Victims of Memory: Sex Abuse Accusations and Shattered Lives Mark Pendergrast Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 1996 |