Neuroimaging of Human Memory: Linking cognitive processes to neural systems
Frank Rösler, Charan Ranganath, Brigitte Röder, and Rainer Kluwe
Abstract
In the past twenty years, neuroimaging has provided us with a wealth of data
regarding human memory. This book asks: to what extent can neuroimaging constrain,
support or falsify psychological theories of memory? To what degree is research on
the biological bases of memory actually guided by psychological theory? In looking
at the close interaction between neuroimaging research and psychological theories of
human memory, this book presents an exploration of imaging research on human memory,
along with accounts of the significance of these findings with regard to fundamental
psychological quest ... More
In the past twenty years, neuroimaging has provided us with a wealth of data
regarding human memory. This book asks: to what extent can neuroimaging constrain,
support or falsify psychological theories of memory? To what degree is research on
the biological bases of memory actually guided by psychological theory? In looking
at the close interaction between neuroimaging research and psychological theories of
human memory, this book presents an exploration of imaging research on human memory,
along with accounts of the significance of these findings with regard to fundamental
psychological questions. The book starts with a summary of some of the conceptual
problems we face in understanding neuroimaging data. It then looks at the four areas
of human memory research that have been most intensively studied with modern brain
imaging tools — learning and consolidation, working memory control
processes and storage, long-term memory representations, and retrieval control
processes. Throughout, the book shows how brain imaging methods, such as functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and electroencephalography (EEG), can help us
increase our knowledge of how human memory is organized, how memory representations
are stored, consolidated and retrieved, and how access to memory contents is
controlled.
Keywords:
neuroimaging,
human memory,
psychological theory,
brain imaging tools,
working memory,
learning,
consolidation,
retrieval,
functional magnetic resonance imaging,
fMRI
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2009 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199217298 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: March 2012 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199217298.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Frank Rösler, Editor
Professor for Experimental and Biological Psychology, Philipps
University, Marburg, Germany
Charan Ranganath, Editor
Associate Professor, Center for Neuroscience and Department of
Psychology, University of California at Davis, Davis, USA
Brigitte Röder, Editor
Professor for Biological Psychology and Neuropsychology,
University of Hamburg, Germany
Rainer Kluwe, Editor
Professor for Psychology, Helmut Schmidt University, Hamburg,
Germany
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