Thinking About Human Memory
Thinking About Human Memory provides a novel analytical approach to
understanding memory that considers the goals of the memory task, the
cues and information available, the opportunity to learn, and interference
from irrelevant information (noise). Each of five chapters describing this
approach introduces historical ideas and demonstrates how current thinking
both differs from and is derived from them. These chapters also contain
analyses of current problems designed to demonstrate the power of the
approach. In a subsequent chapter, the authors discuss how memory is con-
trolled by the environment, by others, and by ourselves, and then apply their
insights to the problem solving of children, our hominin ancestors, and scrub
jays. Finally, the questions of how to define episodic memory and how to
investigate phylogenetic and developmental changes in memory are
addressed. This book will appeal to memory researchers, including applied
researchers, and advanced students.
michael s. humphreys is Professor Emeritus in the School of Psychology
at the University of Queensland, Australia.
kerry a. chalmers is Senior Lecturer in the School of Psychology at the
University of Newcastle, Australia.
www.cambridge.org © in this web service Cambridge University Press
Cambridge University Press
978-1-107-08714-9 - Thinking About Human Memory
Michael S. Humphreys and Kerry A. Chalmers
Frontmatter
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