
Science of Memory
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Content
- Intro
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- 1 Memory concepts
- 1. Memory
- 2 Memory: It's all about representations
- 3 Memory: Why the engram is elusive
- 4 Memory: Delineating the core
- 5 Integrative comments: Memory: Distinctions and dilemmas
- 2. Learning
- 6 Learning: A pre-theoretical concept
- 7 Learning: The need for a hybrid theory
- 8 Learning: Challanges in the merging of levels
- 9 Integrative comments: Learning: Multiplicity of mechanisms
- 3. Coding and representation
- 10 Coding and representation: Time, space, history and beyond
- 11 Coding and representation: The importance of mesoscale dynamics
- 12 Coding and representation: Searching for a home in the brain
- 13 Integrative comments: Coding and representation: On appealing beliefs and paucity of data
- 4. Plasticity
- 14 Plasticity: New concepts, new challenges
- 15 Plasticity: A pragmatic compromise
- 16 Plasticity: On the level
- 17 Integrative comments: Plasticity: More than memory
- 5. Context
- 18 Context: What's so special about it?
- 19 Context: Mood, memory, and the concept of context
- 20 Context: A reference for focal experience
- 21 Integrative comments: Context: The concept in the human and animal memory domains
- 6. Encoding
- 22 Encoding: Models linking neural mechanisms to behavior
- 23 Encoding: A cognitive perspective
- 24 Integrative comments: Encoding: The proof is still required
- 7. Working memory
- 25 Working memory: Signals in the brain
- 26 Working memory: Multiple models, multiple mechanisms
- 27 Working memory: What it is, and what it is not
- 28 Integrative comments: Working memory: The mind is richer than the models
- 8. Consolidation
- 29 Consolidation: Molecular restlessness
- 30 Consolidation: Challenging the traditional view
- 31 Consolidation: The demise of the fixed trace
- 32 Integrative comments: Consolidation: From hypothesis to paradigm to concept
- 9. Persistence
- 33 Persistence: Necessary, but not sufficient
- 34 Persistence: Discrepancies between behaviors and brains
- 35 Integrative comments: Persistence: In search of molecular persistence
- 10. Retrieval
- 36 Retrieval: Molecular mechanisms
- 37 Retrieval: Properties and effects
- 38 Retrieval: On its essence and related concepts
- 39 Integrative comments: Retrieval: Varieties and puzzles
- 11. Remembering
- 40 Remembering: Defining and measuring
- 41 Remembering: A process and a state
- 42 Remembering: Metacognitive monitoring and control processes
- 43 Integrative comments: Remembering: A controversy and a challenge
- 12. Transfer
- 44 Transfer: Its transfer into neurobiology
- 45 Transfer: Analysis in rats and other species
- 46 Transfer: Rediscovering a central concept
- 47 Transfer: Specificity and generality
- 48 Integrative comments: Transfer: The ubiquitous concept
- 13. Inhibition
- 49 Inhibition: Diversity of cortical functions
- 50 Inhibition: Attentional regulation of cognition
- 51 Inhibition: Manifestations in long-term memory
- 52 Inhibition: Elusive or illusion?
- 53 Integrative comments: Inhibition: An essential and contentious concept
- 14. Forgetting
- 54 Forgetting: Once again, it's all about representations
- 55 Forgetting: The fate of once learned, but "forgotten", material
- 56 Forgetting: Its role in the science of memory
- 57 Integrative comments: Forgetting: It's not just the opposite of remembering
- 15. Memory systems
- 58 Memory systems: A biological concept
- 59 Memory systems: Multiple systems in the brain and their interactions
- 60 Memory systems: A cognitive construct for analysis and synthesis
- 61 Integrative comments: Memory systems: An incentive, not an endpoint
- 16. Phylogeny and evolution
- 62 Phylogeny and evolution: It takes two to tango
- 63 Phylogeny and evolution: On comparing species at multiple levels
- 64 Phylogeny and evolution: Implications for understanding the nature of a memory system
- 65 Integrative comments: Phylogeny and evolution: Ecology, evolutionary biology, and the science of memory
- Epilogue
- 66 Remember the future
- References
- Author index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- R
- S
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- U
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- W
- X
- Y
- Z
- Subject index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- K
- L
- M
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