1: Alan Baddeley: The concept of episodic memory
2: John M.Gardiner: Episodic memory and autonoetic consciousness: a
first-person approach
3: Andrew P.Yonelinas: Components of episodic memory: the
contribution of recollection and familiarity
4: Martin A.Conway: Sensory-perceptual episodic memory and its
context: autobiographical memory
5: Daniel L.Schacter and Chad S.Dodson: Misattribution, false
recognition, and the sins of memory
6: Andrew R.Mayes and Neil Roberts: Theories of episodic memory
7: Michael D.Kopelman and Narinder Kapur: The loss of episodic
memories in retrograde amnesia: single-case and group studies
8: John R.Hodges and Kim S.Graham: Episodic memory: insights from
semantic dementia
9: Faraneh Vargha-Khadem, David G.Gadian, Mortimer Mishkin:
Dissociations in cognitive memory: the syndrome of developmental
amnesia
10: Eleanor A.Maguire: Neuroimaging studies of autobiographical
event memory
11: Richard G.M. Morris: Episodic-like memory in animals:
psychological criteria, neural mechanisms and the value of
episodic-like tasks to investigate animal models of
neurodegenerative disease
12: John P.Aggleton and John M.Pearce: Neural systems underlying
episodic memory: insights from animal research
13: N.S.Clayton, D.P.Griffiths, N.J.Emery, A.Dickenson: Elements of
episodic-like memory in animals
14: Neil Burgess, Suzanna Becker, John A.King, John O'Keefe: Memory
for events and their spatial context: models and experiments
15: Endel Tulving: Episodic memory and common sense: how far apart?
Professor Alan Baddeley FRS CBE has published prolifically over the
past 30 years. He is unquestionably one of the most well known
names in memory research throughout the world Professor John
Aggleton is the editor of the classic book, The Amygdala (2nd
edition published by OUP in 2000). Professor Martin Conway is a
leading cognitive psychologist in the UK. His previous book for OUP
- Recovered Memories and
False Memories - was very well received, and commercially
successful
... it is a pleasure to read a collection of fifteen chapters whose quality is so consistently high ... this book provides an important summary of many results and current views relating to episodic memory. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, Vol 6, No 11 Episodic Memory provides an excellent overview of the current state of memory research in general and episodic memory in particular, and offers the opportunity to update, in a very readable way, on the current state of play in a key area of British experimental psychology. The Psychologist
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