Cases of Amnesia
Cases of Amnesia
Contributions to Understanding Memory and the Brain
MacPherson, Sarah E.; Della Sala, Sergio
Taylor & Francis Ltd
01/2019
404
Dura
Inglês
9781138545557
15 a 20 dias
453
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 deja 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 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 deja 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....................................................................................................