ABSTRACT

Memory and consciousness have been objects of fascination to psychologists and other brain scientists for over one hundred years. Because of the complexity of the two topics, however, and despite great efforts spent on their study, the progress in their understanding over most of this time has been rather slow. Recently, thanks to new techniques and to changing pre-theoretical orientations, the study of the role of the brain in memory and consciousness has received an immense boost, and has become a central focus of research activity by thousands of researchers worldwide.

The volume reviews recent progress on our understanding of memory, consciousness and the brain and identifies a number of acute outstanding problems. The purpose of the volume, based on a conference in Tallinn, is to look to the future, and not simply to share knowledge from ongoing research. In this sense, the volume does not contain a comprehensive overview of the field, but rather showcases a selection of exciting ideas in cognitive neuroscience. Contributors include some of the world's best-known cognitive brain scientists who have greatly contributed to our understanding of memory as a relation between the brain and the mind, as well as a number of highly promising younger researchers in the field. Memory, Consciousness and the Brain will be essential reading for anyone interested in the latest cutting-edge thinking at the interface of these topics, and in the future directions in which it may take us.

part I|155 pages

Memory

chapter 1|4 pages

Memory, Shmemory, Lest we Forget Mnemosyne

The Vocabulary of Memory and Mindfulness in Antiquity

chapter 5|14 pages

Divided Attention and Memory

Impairment of Processing or Consolidation?

chapter 10|19 pages

The Seven Sins of Memory

Perspectives from Functional Neuroimaging

chapter 11|18 pages

Memory, Consciousness, and Temporality

What is Retrieved and who Exactly is Controlling the Retrieval?

part II|105 pages

Consciousness

chapter 16|13 pages

Affectively Burnt in

A Proposed Role of the Right Frontal Lobe

chapter 17|15 pages

‘Hot' Emotions in Human Recollection

Toward a Model of Traumatic Memory

part III|111 pages

The Brain

chapter 22|12 pages

Testing Tulving

The Split Brain Approach

chapter 23|12 pages

Repressed Memories

chapter 24|15 pages

Remote Episodic Memory and Retrograde Amnesia

Was Endel Tulving Right all Along?

chapter 25|17 pages

From Location to Integration

How Neural Interactions Form the Basis for Human Cognition

chapter 26|11 pages

Human Intelligence

A Case Study of how more and more Research can Lead Us to Know Less and Less about a Psychological Phenomenon, Until Finally we Know much Less than we did before we Started Doing Research