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El. knyga: Dynamic Cognitive Processes

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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-Jun-2006
  • Leidėjas: Springer Verlag, Japan
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9784431274315
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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-Jun-2006
  • Leidėjas: Springer Verlag, Japan
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9784431274315
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The conference from which this book derives took place in Tsukuba, Japan in March 2004. The fifth in a continuing series of conferences, this one was organized to examine dynamic processes in "lower order" cognition from perception to attention to memory, considering both the behavioral and the neural levels. We were fortunate to attract a terrific group of con­ tributors representing five countries, which resulted in an exciting confer­ ence and, as the reader will quickly discover, an excellent set of chapters. In Chapter 1, we will provide a sketchy "road map" to these chapters, elu­ cidating some of the themes that emerged at the conference. The conference itself was wonderful. We very much enjoyed the vari­ ety of viewpoints and issues that we all had the opportunity to grapple with. There were lively and spirited exchanges, and many chances to talk to each other about exciting new research, precisely what a good confer­ ence should promote. We hope that the readers of this book will have the same experiencemoving from careful experimental designs in the cogni­ tive laboratory to neural mechanisms measured by new technologies, from the laboratory to the emergency room, from perceptual learning to changes in memory over decades, all the while squarely focusing on how best to explain cognition, not simply to measure it. Ultimately, the goal of science is, of course, explanation. We also hope that the reader will come away absolutely convinced that cognition is a thoroughly dynamic, interactive system.
Preface v
Contributors ix
1 Dynamic Cognitive Processes in Broad Perspective
1(10)
Colin M. MacLeod
Bob Uttl
Nobuo Ohta
2 Acquisition of Long-Term Visual Representations: Psychological and Neural Mechanisms
11(26)
Marlene Behrmann
Joy Geng
Chris Baker
3 Top-Down and Bottom-Up Processes in the Perception of Reversible Figures: Toward a Hybrid Model
37(22)
Thomas C. Toppino
Gerald M. Long
4 Dynamic Uses of Memory in Visual Search Over Time and Space
59(20)
Glyn W. Humphreys
Jason Braithwaite
Chris N. L. Olivers
Derrick G. Watson
5 Memory for Information Perceived Without Awareness
79(22)
Philip M. Merikle
Stephen D. Smith
6 The Devil Is in the Detail: A Constructionist Account of Repetition Blindness
101(30)
Bruce W. A. Whittlesea
Andrea D. Hughes
7 Creation Theory of Cognition: Is Memory Retrieved or Created?
131(28)
Takafumi Terasawa
8 The Role of Inhibitory Control in Forgetting Unwanted Memories: A Consideration of Three Methods
159(32)
Michael C. Anderson
9 Encoding Deselection and Long-Term Memory
191(28)
Suparna Rajaram
Stephanie Travers
10 List Method Directed Forgetting: Return of the Selective Rehearsal Account
219(30)
Erin D. Sheard
Colin M. MacLeod
11 Conscious and Unconscious Processes in Hypermnesia
249(24)
Hajime Otani
Koichi Kato
Robert L. Widner, Jr.
12 Age-Related Changes in Event-Cued Prospective Memory Proper
273(32)
Bob Uttl
13 Prospective Memory Retrieval Revisited
305(28)
Peter Graf
14 Hippocampal Complex Contribution to Retention and Retrieval of Recent and Remote Episodic and Semantic Memories: Evidence from Behavioral and Neuroimaging Studies of Healthy and Brain-Damaged People
333(48)
Morris Moscovitch
Robyn Westmacott
Asaf Gilboa
Donna Rose Addis
R. Shayna Rosenbaum
Indre Viskontas
Sandra Priselac
Eva Svoboda
Marilyne Ziegler
Sandra Black
Fuqiang Gao
Cheryl Grady
Morris Freedman
Stefan Kohler
Larry Leach
Brian Levine
Mary Pat McAndrews
Lynn Nadel
Guy Proulx
Brian Richards
Lee Ryan
Kathryn Stokes
Gordon Winocur
Name Index 381(10)
Subject Index 391