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Cases of Amnesia : Contributions to Understanding Memory and the Brain
Cases of Amnesia : Contributions to Understanding Memory and the Brain
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ISBN No.: 9781138545557
Pages: 404
Year: 201901
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 231.76
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Chapter 1. Tim Shallice. The single-case study of memory. Chapter 2. Donald G. MacKay. The earthquake that reshaped the intellectual landscape of memory, mind and brain: Case H.M.


Chapter 3. Juliet Holdstock, Nicola M. Hunkin, Claire L. Isaac and Andrew R. Mayes. The case of YR: selective bilateral hippocampal lesions can have quite different effects on item recognition, associative recognition and recall. Chapter 4. Carina Tudor-Sfetea and Lisa Cipolotti.


Amnesic patient VC: what have we learnt from him?. Chapter 5. Michael D Kopelman and John Morton. What did amnesic actor AB teach us about learning his lines? . Chapter 6. Narinder Kapur and Steven Kemp. Cases of hippocampal memory loss: Dr Z, the engineer and the glove cutter. Chapter 7.


Chris J.A. Moulin. Persistent déjà vu, recollective confabulation and the case of patient AKP. Chapter 8. R. Shayna Rosenbaum and Morris Moscovitch. Case KC (Kent Cochrane) and his contributions to research and theory on memory and related, non-memory functions.


Chapter 9. Liliann Manning. Right is right for episodic memories in two contrasting case-studies, CH and JR: focal retrograde amnesia and public semantic amnesia. Chapter 10. Elliott D. Ross. Sensory-specific visual amnesia (Cases 1 and 2): An acquired visual-limbic disconnection syndrome. Chapter 11.


Michaela Dewar. Yes, I remember''- apparent consolidation under conditions of minimal sensory input in a case of severe anterograde amnesia: Case PB. Chapter 12. John Baker, Sharon Savage and Adam Zeman. VA: a case report of Transient Epileptic Amnesia. Chapter 13. Giuseppe Vallar. A "purest" impairment of verbal short term memory.


The case of PV and the phonological short-term input store. Chapter 14. Randi C. Martin. Semantic short-term memory and its role in sentence processing and long-term memory: Evidence from cases AB and ML. Chapter 15. Julie Snowden. Interrelationship between semantic memory and personal experience: evidence from semantic dementia patients EK and WM.


Chapter 16. Peter Garrard, John R. Hodges, Vijeya Ganesan and Karalyn Patterson. Iris Murdoch: days without writing. Chapter 17. Nelson Cowan and Candice C. Morey. The wealth of evidence from brain lesions affecting memory: How should we use it?.


Chapter 18. Roberto Cubelli. Biases and concerns with the single case approach in the neuropsychology of memory. Chapter 19. Simon Fischer-Baum and Yingxue Tian. The case for single case studies in memory research. Chapter 20. Max Coltheart.


Comments on the single-case approach to the study of memory and other domains of cognition. Chapter 5. Michael D Kopelman and John Morton. What did amnesic actor AB teach us about learning his lines? . Chapter 6. Narinder Kapur and Steven Kemp. Cases of hippocampal memory loss: Dr Z, the engineer and the glove cutter. Chapter 7.


Chris J.A. Moulin. Persistent déjà vu, recollective confabulation and the case of patient AKP. Chapter 8. R. Shayna Rosenbaum and Morris Moscovitch. Case KC (Kent Cochrane) and his contributions to research and theory on memory and related, non-memory functions.


Chapter 9. Liliann Manning. Right is right for episodic memories in two contrasting case-studies, CH and JR: focal retrograde amnesia and public semantic amnesia. Chapter 10. Elliott D. Ross. Sensory-specific visual amnesia (Cases 1 and 2): An acquired visual-limbic disconnection syndrome. Chapter 11.


Michaela Dewar. Yes, I remember''- apparent consolidation under conditions of minimal sensory input in a case of severe anterograde amnesia: Case PB. Chapter 12. John Baker, Sharon Savage and Adam Zeman. VA: a case report of Transient Epileptic Amnesia. Chapter 13. Giuseppe Vallar. A "purest" impairment of verbal short term memory.


The case of PV and the phonological short-term input store. Chapter 14. Randi C. Martin. Semantic short-term memory and its role in sentence processing and long-term memory: Evidence from cases AB and ML. Chapter 15. Julie Snowden. Interrelationship between semantic memory and personal experience: evidence from semantic dementia patients EK and WM.


Chapter 16. Peter Garrard, John R. Hodges, Vijeya Ganesan and Karalyn Patterson. Iris Murdoch: days without writing. Chapter 17. Nelson Cowan and Candice C. Morey. The wealth of evidence from brain lesions affecting memory: How should we use it?.


Chapter 18. Roberto Cubelli. Biases and concerns with the single case approach in the neuropsychology of memory. Chapter 19. Simon Fischer-Baum and Yingxue Tian. The case for single case studies in memory research. Chapter 20. Max Coltheart.


Comments on the single-case approach to the study of memory and other domains of cognition. ry on memory and related, non-memory functions. Chapter 9. Liliann Manning. Right is right for episodic memories in two contrasting case-studies, CH and JR: focal retrograde amnesia and public semantic amnesia. Chapter 10. Elliott D. Ross.


Sensory-specific visual amnesia (Cases 1 and 2): An acquired visual-limbic disconnection syndrome. Chapter 11. Michaela Dewar. Yes, I remember''- apparent consolidation under conditions of minimal sensory input in a case of severe anterograde amnesia: Case PB. Chapter 12. John Baker, Sharon Savage and Adam Zeman. VA: a case report of Transient Epileptic Amnesia. Chapter 13.


Giuseppe Vallar. A "purest" impairment of verbal short term memory. The case of PV and the phonological short-term input store. Chapter 14. Randi C. Martin. Semantic short-term memory and its role in sentence processing and long-term memory: Evidence from cases AB and ML. Chapter 15.


Julie Snowden. Interrelationship between semantic memory and personal experience: evidence from semantic dementia patients EK and WM. Chapter 16. Peter Garrard, John R. Hodges, Vijeya Ganesan and Karalyn Patterson. Iris Murdoch: days without writing. Chapter 17. Nelson Cowan and Candice C.


Morey. The wealth of evidence from brain lesions affecting memory: How should we use it?.


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