Table of Content
PART ONE: Everyday Memory
Memory for people: integration of face, voice, name, and biographical information. – Bennett L. Schwartz
Memory for Pictures and Actions –...
Table of Content
PART ONE: Everyday Memory
Memory for people: integration of face, voice, name, and biographical information. – Bennett L. Schwartz
Memory for Pictures and Actions – Neil W. Mulligan
Prospective Memory and Aging: When It Becomes Difficult and What You Can Do About It. – Gilles O. Einstein & Mark A. Mc Daniel
Memory Source Monitoring Applied – D. Stephen Lindsay
Spatial Memory: From Theory to Application – Douglas H. Wedell & Adam T. Hutcheson
Working memory beyond the laboratory – Jackie Andrade
False Memory – Eryn J. Newman & Maryanne Garry
Forgetting – Colleen M. Kelley
Memory and Emotion – Klaus Fiedler and Mandy Hutter
Effects of Environmental Context on Human Memory – Steven M. Smith
The Testing Effect – Kathleen B. Mc Dermott, Kathleen M. Arnold, & Steven M. Nelson
Breakdowns in everyday memory functioning following moderate-to-severe Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) – Eli Vakil
PART TWO: Social and individual differences in memory
Sociocultural and functional approaches to autobiographical memory – Robyn Fivush & Theodore E. A. Waters
What Everyone Knows About Aging and Remembering Ain′t Necessarily So – Michael Ross & Emily Schryer
The Effects of Self-Reference on Memory: A Conceptual and Methodological Review of Inferences Warranted by the Self-Reference Effect – Stanley B. Klein & Christopher R. Nelson
Putting the Social Back Into Human Memory – William Hirst, Alin Coman & Dora Coman
When I think of you: Memory for persons and groups – Natalie A. Wyer
Memory, attitudes, and persuasion – Geoffrey Haddock
Consumer memory dynamics: Effects of branding and advertising on formation, stability and use of consumer memory – Shanker Krishnan & Lura Forcum
What Do Lay People Believe about Memory? – Sean M. Lane and Tanya Karam-Zanders
Autobiographical Memory Dynamics in Survey Research – Robert F. Belli
Individual differences in remembering – Colin M. Mac Leod, Tanya R. Jonker, and Greta James
Experts’ Superior Memory: From Accumulation of Chunks to Building Memory Skills that Mediate Improved Performance and Learning – K. Anders Ericsson and Jerad H. Moxley
PART THREE: Subjective experience of memory
Memory Complaints in Adulthood and Old Age – Christopher Hertzog and Ann Pearman
Understanding People’s Metacognitive Judgments: An Isomechanism Framework and Its Implications for Applied and Theoretical Research – John Dunlosky and Sarah K. Tauber
Metacognitive Control of Study – Janet Metcalfe
Metacognitive Control of Memory Reporting – Morris Goldsmith, Ainat Pansky and Asher Koriat
Involuntary autobiographical memories in daily life and in clinical disorders – Dorthe Berntsen & Lynn A.Watson
Epistemic Feelings and Memory – Chris J.A. Moulin & Celine Souchay
PART FOUR: Eyewitness memory
Eyewitness Recall: An Overview of Estimator-Based Research – Pär Anders Granhag, Karl Ask & Erik Mac Giolla
Interviewing Witnesses – Ronald P. Fisher, Nadja Schreiber Compo, Jillian Rivard, & Dana Hirn
Estimating the Reliability of Eyewitness Identification – Tim Valentine
System-based Research on Eyewitness Identification – Scott D. Gronlund and Curt A. Carlson
Social Influences on Eyewitness Memory – Amy Bradfield Douglass & Lorena Bustamante
Young children’s eyewitness memory. – Gabrielle Principe, Andrea Follmer Greenhoot & Stephen J. Ceci
The Older Eyewitness – James C. Bartlett
Eliciting Verbal and Nonverbal Cues to Deceit by Outsmarting the Liars – Aldert Vrij