Involuntary MemoryISBN: 978-1-4051-3638-9
Paperback
248 pages
May 2007, Wiley-Blackwell
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Contributors.
Acknowledgements.
1. Involuntary Memory: Concept and Theory: John H. Mace (University of New Haven).
2. Involuntary Autobiographical Memories: Speculations, Findings, and an Attempt to Integrate Them: Dorthe Berntsen (University of Aarhus).
3. Does Involuntary Remembering Occur during Voluntary Remembering?: John H. Mace (University of New Haven).
4. The Role of Involuntary Memories in Posttraumatic Disorder and Psychosis: Craig Steel (King’s College London) and Emily A. Holmes (University of Oxford).
5. Effects of Age on Involuntary Autobiographical Memories: Simone Schlagman (University of Hertfordshire), Lia Kvavilashvili (University of Hertfordshire), & Joerg Schulz (University of Hertfordshire).
6. Cues to the Gusts of Memory: Christopher T. Ball (College of William & Mary), John H. Mace (University of New Haven), and Hercilia Corona (University of New Haven).
7. Can We Elicit Involuntary Autobiographical Memories in the Laboratory?: Christopher T. Ball (College of William & Mary).
8. Interaction between Retrieval Intentionality and Emotional Intensity: Investigating the Neural Correlates of Experimentally Induced Involuntary Memories: Nicoline M. Hall (Aarhus University Hospital).
9. How Deliberate, Spontaneous and Unwanted Memories Emerge in a Computational Model of Consciousness: Bernard J. Baars (The Neurosciences Institute), Uma Ramamurthy (University of Memphis), and Stan Franklin (University of Memphis).
10. Involuntary Memories: Three Variations on the Unexpected: George Mandler (University of California and University College, London).
Name Index.
Subject Index