Memory Memory
    • 14,99 €

Publisher Description

A short, accessible primer on human memory, its workings, feats, and flaws, by two leading psychological researchers.

Why do we vividly recall a traumatic childhood event but forget where we left our keys five minutes ago? How can a scent take us back fifty years while a colleague’s name eludes us? In this compact introduction, two leading psychological researchers describe memory—how it works and why it sometimes doesn’t; how it can be tricked, trained, or improved; and what changes with time.
 
In a manner as engaging as it is informative, Fergus Craik and Larry Jacoby explain the strengths and weaknesses of memory. They trace evolving ideas about memory’s function and present a down-to-earth account of modern views. Citing the latest research, they outline the processes for acquiring and retrieving memories and explore the distinction between conscious and unconscious processes. With insights into the workings of the brain, Craik and Jacoby also provide a succinct account of feats and failures of memory, emotion and false memories, and the effects of aging. Their book draws a clear picture, at once broad and concise, of current and classical views of memory, that most essential and often mysterious feature of human life.  

GENRE
Science & Nature
RELEASED
2023
14 February
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
272
Pages
PUBLISHER
MIT Press
SIZE
1.1
MB

More Books by Fergus Craik & Larry Jacoby

Remembering Remembering
2021
Advances in Psychological Science, Volume 2 Advances in Psychological Science, Volume 2
2014
Varieties of Memory and Consciousness Varieties of Memory and Consciousness
2014
Memories, Thoughts, and Emotions Memories, Thoughts, and Emotions
2013

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