From Conditioning to Conscious Recollection : Memory Systems of the Brain - Howard Eichenbaum

From Conditioning to Conscious Recollection

Memory Systems of the Brain

By: Howard Eichenbaum, Neal J. Cohen

Paperback | 1 January 2001

At a Glance

Paperback


$73.59

or 4 interest-free payments of $18.40 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 7 to 10 business days

This cutting-edge book offers a theoretical account of the evolution of multiple memory systems of the brain. The authors conceptualize these memory systems from both behavioral and neurobiological perspectives, guided by three related principles. First, that our understanding of a wide range of memory phenomena can be advanced by breaking down memory into multiple forms with different operating characteristics. Second, that different forms of memory representation are supported by distinct brain pathways with circuitry and neural coding properties. Third, that the contributions of different brain systems can be compared and contrasted by distinguishing between dedicated (or specific) and elaborate (or general) memory systems. A primary goal of this work is to relate the neurobiological properties of dedicated and elaborate systems to their neuropsychological counterparts, and in so doing, account for the phenomenology of memory, from conditioning to conscious recollection.
Industry Reviews
"The book succeeds brilliantly as a description of the idea of multiple memory systems in the brain and places this view in a rich historical context. Experiments to support the view are discussed thoroughly, with myriad graphs and diagrams to clarify exposition." -The Quarterly Journal Of Experimental Psychology. "Psychologists Eichenbaum (Boston U.) and Cohen (U. of Illinois-Urbana- Champaign) explore the notion that memory is implemented in the brain by multiple systems operating in parallel, each with distinct operating characteristics and mediated by separate brain pathways. They consider the history and implications of the theory, the evidence that supports it, and the nature of the systems discovered so far. The theory has been developed through recent studies in cognitive neuroscience."--SciTech Book News ". . .[A] comprehensive, data-rich treatment. . . . The strength, and the usefulness, of the book lies in the enormous amount of data that is presented. [. . .] This volume is a welcome summary of what has been accomplished to date and a compelling account of how the function of the hippocampus and related structures can be understood in terms of spatial and non-spatial relational memory."--Nature Neuroscience

More in Cognitivism, Cognitive Theory

Make It Stick : The Science of Successful Learning - Peter C. Brown
On the Nature of the Psyche : Routledge Classics - Jung C. G.
Bergson's Scientific Metaphysics : Matter and Memory Today - Yasushi Hirai
Advances in Adaptive Memory - Michael Toglia