Involuntary MemoryISBN: 978-1-4051-3638-9
Paperback
248 pages
May 2007, Wiley-Blackwell
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Involuntary memory was identified by the pioneering memory
researcher Hermann Ebbinghaus more than a century ago, but it was
not until very recently that cognitive psychologists began to study
this memory phenomenon. This book is the first to examine key
topics and cutting-edge research in involuntary memory.
- Discusses topics such as involuntary memories in everyday life,
across the life-span, and in the laboratory; the special ways in
which involuntary memories sometimes manifest themselves and a
number of theoretical treatments of the topic.
- Presents innovative research that not only represents the starting point of the study of involuntary memory, but also places it in such broader topics as autobiographical memory, consciousness and memory, aging and memory, implicit and explicit memory, depression, and psychosis.