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This Classic Edition of the best-selling textbook offers an in-depth overview of approaches to the study of memory. With empirical research from both the real world and the neuropsychological clinic, the book explains the fundamental workings of human memory in a clear and accessible style. This edition contains a new introduction and concluding chapter in which the author reflects on how the book is organized, and also on how the field of memory has developed since it was first published.

Essentials of Human Memory evolved from a belief that, although the amount we know about memory has increased enormously in recent years, it is still possible to explain it in a way that would be fully understood by the general reader.

After a broad overview of approaches to the study of memory, short-term and working memory are discussed, followed by learning, the role of organizing in remembering and factors influencing forgetting, including emotional variables and claims for the role of repression in what has become known as the false memory syndrome. The way in which knowledge of the world is stored is discussed next, followed by an account of the processes underlying retrieval, and their application to the practical issues of eyewitness testimony. The breakdown of memory in the amnesic syndrome is discussed next, followed by discussion of the way in which memory develops in children, and declines in the elderly. After a section concerned with mnemonic techniques and memory improvement, the book ends with an overview of recent developments in the field of human memory.

Written by the leading expert in human memory, recently awarded the British Psychological Society Research Board Lifetime Achievement Award, Essentials of Human Memory will be of interest to students of Cognitive Psychology, Neuropsychology, and anyone with an interest in the workings of memory.

338 pages, Kindle Edition

First published February 1, 1999

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About the author

Alan Baddeley

35 books18 followers
Alan Baddeley is Professor of Psychology at York and one of the world's leading authorities on human memory. He is celebrated for devising the ground-breaking and highly influential working memory model with Graham Hitch in the early 1970s, a model which still proves valuable today in recognising the functions of short-term memory. He was awarded a CBE for his contributions to the study of memory, is a Fellow of the Royal Society, of the British Academy and of the Academy of Medical Sciences.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for ㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤ.
1 review3 followers
June 2, 2021
A minutious and exhausted, textbook about memory. Most marvellous experience as a reader. Recommend
Profile Image for Dr. George H. Elder.
48 reviews7 followers
June 27, 2012
Baddeley is the real deal as far as general memory theory goes. Some of his research is getting a bit dated, and he isn't all that much into imaging studies and the like. But one cannot find a better writter when it comes to explaining and catagorizing the different types of memory that exist. Here we find the semantic, procedural, episodic, etc, breakdown that has become accepted as the norm in many circles. Baddeley expresses his ideas clearly, and provides many examples to support his view, usually via the application of study results that are adequately explained. His works are seminal, and I still refer to them on a regular basis.
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