The Wiley handbook on the cognitive neuroscience of memory /
The Wiley handbook on the cognitive neuroscience of memory /
edited by Donna Rose Addis, Morgan Barense, Audrey Duarte.
- 1 online resource.
- Wiley Handbooks in Cognitive Neuroscience .
Includes index.
Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.
Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; About the Editors; About the Contributors; Preface; Chapter 1 What We Have Learned about Memory from Neuroimaging; Introduction; Theoretical Concepts That are Difficult to Measure Behaviorally, e.g., Retrieval States; Supplementing Behavioral Dissociations with Neuroimaging Dissociations, e.g., Dual-Process Theories; Inferring Memory Processes Directly from Local Brain Activity (Reverse Inference); Anatomical and Functional Scale, High-Resolution fMRI, and Contact with Animal Models; Multivariate Pattern Analysis: Processes Versus Representations? Functional and Effective Connectivity in Memory, e.g., within MTLClosing the Loop: Inferring Causality from Neuroimaging Data; Conclusion; Note; References; Chapter 2 Activation and Information in Working Memory Research; Introduction; Activation and Information in the Interpretation of Physiological Signals; The signal-intensity assumption; Information-based analyses; Implications of MVPA for ROI-Based Analyses; Limitations and Outstanding Questions; Necessity; Sensitivity; Localized versus anatomically distributed; Conclusion; Acknowledgments; Notes; References. Chapter 3 The Outer Limits of Implicit MemoryIntroduction; Implicit Memory Concerns a Wide Range of Behaviors Measured in a Variety of Tasks; Implicit Memory Can Occur During Recollection Involving Long-term Semantic Memory; Implicit Memory Can Co-occur with Familiarity and Recollection in Explicit Tasks; Implicit Memory Concerns Many Stimulus Categories, Including Novel Objects and Words; Implicit Memory is not Necessarily Short-Lived; Implicit Memory is Supported by a Variety of Brain Regions, Even those that are Strongly Linked to Explicit Memory; Conclusions; References. Chapter 4 The Neural Bases of Conceptual Knowledge: Revisiting a Golden Age Hypothesis in the Era of Cognitive NeuroscienceIntroduction; Contemporary Support for the Golden Age Hypothesis; The Broader Architecture of the Cortical Semantic Network; The tripartite view: organization by modality and hemisphere; The many-hubs view: organization by multiple domain-specific convergence zones; The single-hub view: organization by a bilateral domain-general convergence zone; A Critical Appraisal and Comparison of the Three Views; Explaining domain- and modality-general semantic impairments. Explaining modality-specific impairmentsExplaining category-specific patterns of impairment and functional activation; Conclusions and Open Questions; References; Chapter 5 Encoding and Retrieval in Episodic Memory: Insights from fMRI; Introduction; Theoretical Framework; Empirical Findings; Encoding; Positive subsequent memory effects; Negative subsequent memory effects; Retrieval; Content-sensitive recollection effects; Concluding Comments; Acknowledgments; References; Chapter 6 Medial Temporal Lobe Subregional Function in Human Episodic Memory: Insights from High-Resolution fMRI.
"The Wiley Blackwell Handbook on the Cognitive Neuroscience of Memory presents a comprehensive overview of the latest, cutting-edge neuroscience research being done relating to the study of human memory and cognition"--
9781118332627 1118332628 9781118332610 111833261X 9781118332634 1118332636 1118332598 9781118332597
2015006247
Memory.
Cognitive neuroscience.
Brain--Imaging.
Memory.
Cognitive neuroscience.
Memory--Physiological aspects.
Memory.
PSYCHOLOGY--Cognitive Psychology.
Brain--Imaging.
Cognitive neuroscience.
Memory.
Electronic books.
QP406
612.8/23312
WL 337
Includes index.
Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.
Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; About the Editors; About the Contributors; Preface; Chapter 1 What We Have Learned about Memory from Neuroimaging; Introduction; Theoretical Concepts That are Difficult to Measure Behaviorally, e.g., Retrieval States; Supplementing Behavioral Dissociations with Neuroimaging Dissociations, e.g., Dual-Process Theories; Inferring Memory Processes Directly from Local Brain Activity (Reverse Inference); Anatomical and Functional Scale, High-Resolution fMRI, and Contact with Animal Models; Multivariate Pattern Analysis: Processes Versus Representations? Functional and Effective Connectivity in Memory, e.g., within MTLClosing the Loop: Inferring Causality from Neuroimaging Data; Conclusion; Note; References; Chapter 2 Activation and Information in Working Memory Research; Introduction; Activation and Information in the Interpretation of Physiological Signals; The signal-intensity assumption; Information-based analyses; Implications of MVPA for ROI-Based Analyses; Limitations and Outstanding Questions; Necessity; Sensitivity; Localized versus anatomically distributed; Conclusion; Acknowledgments; Notes; References. Chapter 3 The Outer Limits of Implicit MemoryIntroduction; Implicit Memory Concerns a Wide Range of Behaviors Measured in a Variety of Tasks; Implicit Memory Can Occur During Recollection Involving Long-term Semantic Memory; Implicit Memory Can Co-occur with Familiarity and Recollection in Explicit Tasks; Implicit Memory Concerns Many Stimulus Categories, Including Novel Objects and Words; Implicit Memory is not Necessarily Short-Lived; Implicit Memory is Supported by a Variety of Brain Regions, Even those that are Strongly Linked to Explicit Memory; Conclusions; References. Chapter 4 The Neural Bases of Conceptual Knowledge: Revisiting a Golden Age Hypothesis in the Era of Cognitive NeuroscienceIntroduction; Contemporary Support for the Golden Age Hypothesis; The Broader Architecture of the Cortical Semantic Network; The tripartite view: organization by modality and hemisphere; The many-hubs view: organization by multiple domain-specific convergence zones; The single-hub view: organization by a bilateral domain-general convergence zone; A Critical Appraisal and Comparison of the Three Views; Explaining domain- and modality-general semantic impairments. Explaining modality-specific impairmentsExplaining category-specific patterns of impairment and functional activation; Conclusions and Open Questions; References; Chapter 5 Encoding and Retrieval in Episodic Memory: Insights from fMRI; Introduction; Theoretical Framework; Empirical Findings; Encoding; Positive subsequent memory effects; Negative subsequent memory effects; Retrieval; Content-sensitive recollection effects; Concluding Comments; Acknowledgments; References; Chapter 6 Medial Temporal Lobe Subregional Function in Human Episodic Memory: Insights from High-Resolution fMRI.
"The Wiley Blackwell Handbook on the Cognitive Neuroscience of Memory presents a comprehensive overview of the latest, cutting-edge neuroscience research being done relating to the study of human memory and cognition"--
9781118332627 1118332628 9781118332610 111833261X 9781118332634 1118332636 1118332598 9781118332597
2015006247
Memory.
Cognitive neuroscience.
Brain--Imaging.
Memory.
Cognitive neuroscience.
Memory--Physiological aspects.
Memory.
PSYCHOLOGY--Cognitive Psychology.
Brain--Imaging.
Cognitive neuroscience.
Memory.
Electronic books.
QP406
612.8/23312
WL 337