Research on applied memory is one of the most active, interesting and vibrant areas in experimental psychology today. This book provides descriptions of cutting-edge research and applies them to three key areas of contemporary investigation: education, the law and neuroscience. In the area of education, findings from the study of memory are described which could have a major impact on testing practice, revision techniques for examinations and teaching basic literacy and numeracy. In applications to the law, recent findings shed new light on the dynamics of child abuse investigations, the status of traumatic memories recovered after long delays and a further challenge for the eyewitness: change blindness. Finally, in neuroscience, contributions cover the frightening question of whether patients can remember incidents during surgical operations under anaesthetic, the unexpected impact of handedness and rapid eye movements on memory proficiency and the status of déjà vu: mystical experience or memory error? These accounts of recent research on applied memory have been written by leading experts in the field from both Europe and America, with the non-specialist in mind. They will interest students who wish to extend their reading beyond core material in cognitive psychology, graduates on more specialised courses in education, forensics and neuropsychology, and all those who wish to enrich their knowledge of the contemporary frontiers of applied memory research.
Author(s): Graham M. Davies, Daniel B. Wright
Edition: 1
Year: 2010
Language: English
Pages: 275
Current Issues in Applied Memory Research......Page 2
Contents......Page 6
Preface......Page 12
Introduction......Page 14
Applications to education......Page 22
1. Benefits of testing memory......Page 26
2. Retrieval-induced forgetting......Page 63
3. More than just a memory......Page 85
Applications to law......Page 110
4. Mechanisms underlying recovered memories......Page 113
5. Factors affecting the reliability of children’s forensic reports......Page 132
6. Change blindness and eyewitness testimony......Page 155
Applications to neuroscience......Page 174
7. Implicit memory, anesthesia and sedation......Page 178
8. Episodic memory and interhemispheric interaction......Page 198
9. Déjà vu......Page 219
Discussion......Page 249
Author index......Page 258
Subject index......Page 268