Published Books
The Tip of the Tongue State
By Alan S. Brown
This book brings together the body of empirical findings and theoretical interpretations of the tip of the tongue (TOT) experience – when a well-known or familiar word cannot immediately be recalled. Although research has been published on TOTs for over a century, the experience retains its
Published July 2011 by Psychology Press
Mnemonology
Mnemonics for the 21st Century
By James B. Worthen, and R. Reed Hunt.
This book bridges the gap between basic memory research and mnemonic applications through a careful analysis of the processes that underlie effective memory aids. The book traces the history of mnemonics, examines popular techniques, and discusses the current relevance of mnemonics to both
Published July 2010 by Psychology Press
Principles of Memory
By Aimée M. Surprenant, and Ian Neath.
In over 100 years of scientific research on human memory, and nearly 50 years after the so-called cognitive revolution, we have nothing that really constitutes a widely accepted and frequently cited law of memory, and perhaps only one generally accepted principle. The purpose of this monograph is
Published June 2009 by Psychology Press
Emotional Memory Across the Adult Lifespan
By Elizabeth A. Kensinger
Though many factors can influence the likelihood that we remember a past experience, one critical determinant is whether the experience caused us to have an emotional response. Emotional experiences are more likely to be remembered than nonemotional ones, and over the past couple of decades there
Published December 2008 by Psychology Press
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Space and Sense
By Susanna Millar
How do we perceive the space around us, locate objects within it, and make our way through it? What do the senses contribute? This book focuses on touch in order to examine which aspects of vision and touch overlap in spatial processing. It argues that spatial processing depends crucially on
Published April 2008 by Psychology Press
Hypothetical Thinking
Dual Processes in Reasoning and Judgement
By Jonathan St. B. T. Evans
Hypothetical thought involves the imagination of possibilities and the exploration of their consequences by a process of mental simulation. Using a recently developed theoretical framework called Hypothetical Thinking Theory, Jonathan St. B. T. Evans provides an integrated theoretical account of a
Published May 2007 by Psychology Press
Associative Illusions of Memory
False Memory Research in DRM and Related Tasks
By David Gallo
The last decade has seen a flurry of experimental research into the neurocognitive underpinnings of illusory memories. Using simple materials and tests (e.g., recalling words or pictures), methods such as the famed Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) task have attracted considerable attention. These
Published August 2006 by Psychology Press
Working Memory Capacity
By Nelson Cowan
The idea of one's memory "filling up" is a humorous misconception of how memory in general is thought to work; it is actually has no capacity limit. However, the idea of a "full brain" makes more sense with reference to working memory, which is the limited amount of information a person can hold
Published September 2005 by Psychology Press
Semantic Priming
Perspectives from Memory and Word Recognition
By Timothy P. McNamara
Semantic priming has been a focus of research in the cognitive sciences for more than thirty years and is commonly used as a tool for investigating other aspects of perception and cognition, such as word recognition, language comprehension, and knowledge representations. Semantic Priming:
Published July 2005 by Psychology Press
The Deja Vu Experience
By Alan S. Brown
Most of us have been perplexed by a strange sense of familiarity when doing something for the first time. We feel that we have been here before, or done this before, but know for sure that this is impossible. In fact, according to numerous surveys, about two-thirds of us have experienced déj&
Published May 2004 by Psychology Press
Saying, Seeing and Acting
The Psychological Semantics of Spatial Prepositions
By Kenny R. Coventry, and Simon C. Garrod.
Our use of spatial prepositions carries an implicit understanding of the functional relationships both between objects themselves and human interaction with those objects.This is the thesis rigorously explicated in Saying, Seeing and Acting. It aims to account not only for our theoretical
Published February 2004 by Psychology Press
Space, Objects, Minds and Brains
By Lynn C. Robertson
Lynn Robertson has been studying how brain lesions affect spatial abilities for over 20 years, and her work has revealed some surprising facts about space and its role in visual perception. In this book she combines evidence collected in her laboratory with findings from others to explore the
Published October 2003 by Psychology Press
Visuo-spatial Working Memory and Individual Differences
By Cesare Cornoldi, and Tomaso Vecchi.
In this timely and comprehensive text, Cesare Cornoldi and Tomaso Vecchi describe their recently developed experimental approach to the investigation of visuo-spatial cognition, based upon the analysis of individual differences. A review of the most influential theoretical advances in the study of
Published April 2003 by Psychology Press
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The Creativity Conundrum
A Propulsion Model of Kinds of Creative Contributions
By Robert J. Sternberg, James C. Kaufman and Jean E. Pretz.
This book challenges traditional notions of creativity as a trait, and brings forward ideas of multiple types of creativity, along with the possibility of development of creativity.
Published February 2002 by Psychology Press
Hypothesis-testing Behaviour
By Fenna H. Poletiek
How do people search evidence for a hypothesis? A well documented answer in cognitive psychology is that they search for confirming evidence. However, the rational strategy is to try to falsify the hypothesis. This book critically evaluates this contradiction. Experimental research is discussed
Published December 2000 by Psychology Press
Mental Models and the Interpretation of Anaphora
By Alan Garnham
The interpretation of anaphora - how we interpret expressions such as definite pronouns (he, she, it) and verbal elliptical phrases (such as "did so, too") in the course of ordinary conversation or reading - is an important aspect of language comprehension. In this book the author examines the
Published November 2000 by Psychology Press
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Rationality and Reasoning
By Jonathon St. B.T. Evans, and David E. Over.
This book addresses an apparent paradox in the psychology of thinking. On the one hand, human beings are a highly successful species. On the other, intelligent adults are known to exhibit numerous errors and biases in laboratory studies of reasoning and decision making. There has been much debate
Published June 1999 by Psychology Press
Memory for Actions
By Johannes Engelkamp
Psychological experiments demonstrate that we remember self-performed actions better and more easily than actions performed by others, which we only perceived, or actions which were only reported to us. In everyday life, we remember whether or not we have already performed certain actions.
Published November 1998 by Psychology Press
Superior Memory
By Elizabeth Valentine, and John Wilding.
This book examines the nature and causal antecedents of superior memory performance. The main theme is that such performance may depend on either specific memory techniques or natural superiority in the efficiency of one or more memory processes.Chapter 2 surveys current views about the structure
Published September 1997 by Psychology Press
Anxiety and Cognition
A Unified Theory
By Michael Eysenck
It is argued in this book that there are three major approaches to anxiety. First, there is anxiety as an emotional state. Second, there is trait anxiety as a dimension of personality. Third, there is anxiety as a set of anxiety disorders. What is attempted is to produce a unified theory of anxiety
Published May 1997 by Psychology Press
Superportraits
Caricatures and Recognition
By Gillian Rhodes
As Nixon's unpopularity increased during Watergate, his nose and jowls grew to impossible proportions in published caricatures. Yet the caricatures remained instantly recognizable. Caricatures can even be superportraits, with the paradoxical quality of being more like the face than the face
Published February 1997 by Psychology Press
Affect, Cognition and Change
Re-Modelling Depressive Thought
By Philip Barnard, and John Teasdale.
This text, a collaboration between a clinical psychologist and a cognitive psychologist, offers a cognitive account of depression.
Published February 1995 by Psychology Press
The Cognitive Neuropsychology of Schizophrenia
By Christopher Donald Frith
Schizophrenic patients have bizarre experiences which reflect a disorder in the contents of consciousness. For example, patients hear voices talking about them or they are convinced that alien forces are controlling their actions. Their abnormal behaviour includes incoherence and lack of will. In
Published January 1995 by Psychology Press
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Flashbulb Memories
By Martin Conway
This book provides a state-of-the-art review and critical evaluation of research into 'flashbulb' memories. The opening chapters explore the 'encoding' view of flashbulb memory formation and critically appraise a number of lines of research that have opposed this view. It is concluded that this
Published December 1994 by Psychology Press
Visuo-spatial Working Memory
By Robert H. Logie
Representation of the visual and spatial properties of our environment is a pivotal requirement of everyday cognition. We can mentally represent the visual form of objects. We can extract information from several of the senses as to the location of objects in relation to ourselves and to other
Published November 1994 by Psychology Press
Connectionist Modelling in Cognitive Neuropsychology: A Case Study
A Special Issue of Cognitive Neuropsychology
By David C. Plaut, and Tim Shallice.
Computational models offer tools for exploring the nature of human cognitive processes. In connectionist, neural network, or parallel distributed processing models, information processing takes the form of cooperative and competitive interactions among many simple, neuron-like processing units.
Published September 1994 by Psychology Press
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Reading and the Mental Lexicon
By Marcus Taft
Over the last twenty years a major area of cognitive psychology has developed centred upon research into the issues of how visually presented words are processed so that they can be read and understood. The focus has been on how words are stored in the mental lexicon and retrieved during the
Published December 1993 by Psychology Press
Implicit Learning
Theoretical and Empirical Issues
By Dianne C. Berry, and Zoltan Dienes.
There is considerable debate over the extent to which cognitive tasks can be learned non-consciously or implicitly. In recent years a large number of studies have demonstrated a discrepancy between explicit knowledge and measured performance. This book presents an overview of these studies and
Published November 1993 by Psychology Press
Working Memory and Language Processing
By Susan E. Gathercole, and Alan D. Baddeley.
This book evaluates the involvement of working memory in five central aspects of language processing: vocabulary acquisition, speech production, reading development, skilled reading, and comprehension. The authors draw upon experimental, neuropsychological and developmental evidence in a
Published September 1993 by Psychology Press
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Deduction
By R.M.J. Byrne, and P.N. Johnson-Laird.
How do people make deductions? The orthodox answer to the question is that deductive reasoning depends on a mental logic containing formal rules of inference. The authors of this book have spent several years investigating the process. They repudiate the orthodox theory. They argue instead that
Published October 1992 by Psychology Press
Anxiety
The Cognitive Perspective
By Michael W. Eysenck
Theorists are increasingly arguing that it is fruitful to approach anxiety from the cognitive perspective, and the empirical evidence supports that contention. The cognitive perspective is also adopted in this book, but the approach represents a development and extension of earlier ones. For
Published June 1992 by Psychology Press