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Full Description
Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Advances in Understanding Adaptive Memory presents the latest theories and research on what is known about adaptive memory, often referred to as survival memory. Conceptually, this is the study of memory systems that evolved to aid remembering survival and fitness-relevant information.
In this volume survival is contextualized from many converging perspectives within psychology, including comparative psychology. Therefore, adaptive memory in animals, especially non-human primates, is covered in one of the book's four sections. The unification of viewpoints is achieved thematically, stemming from forensic science, cognitive neuroscience, biology, computer science, and anthropology. This interdisciplinary approach binds the chapters together and facilitates an integrative analysis of adaptive-survival memory in the concluding chapter.
Contents
1: Michael P. Toglia, William Blake Erickson, Jeanette Altaribba, & Henry Otgaar: Advances in the Integrative Study of Survival Memory
Section 1- Scenario Studies
2: Juliana K. Leding: Hunting Prey, Evading Predators, and Finding Mates: Possible Causes of the Animacy Effect in Memory
3: D. Merika W. Sanders & Daniel L. Schacter: Adaptive Memory Distortions: An Expanding Frontier of Cognitive Psychology and Neuroscience
4: An Examination of the Survival Processing Effect under Conditions that Enhance Elaborative Encoding
5: Allison M. Wilck & Jeanette Altarriba: Do Tests of Implicit Memory Challenge Survival Processing Accounts?
6: Mary C. Avery and Jeanette Altarriba: Useful and New: Creativity's Contribution to Adaptive Memory and Survival
Section 2 - Understanding Adaptive Memory through the Lenses of Anthropology and Comparative Psychology
7: Michael J. O'Brien & R. Alexander Bentley: The Memory of Crowds: The Evolution of Social Learning and Multilevel Adaptive Knowledge in Early Homo sapiens
8: Bonnie M. Perdue, Megan L. Wilson, Terry L. Maple: A Comparative Approach to Investigating Adaptive Memory and Cognitive Processes Across Species
9: Ken Sayers & Corinna N. Ross: Adaptive memory, primates, and human evolution
10: Bennett L. Schwartz, Pinar Kurdoglu-Ersoy, Kelsey L. Hess & Ali Pournaghdali: Natural Ecology and Comparative Approaches to Human Memory
Section 3 - Age-related Perspectives in Understanding Adaptive Memory
11: Sarah J. McMillana, Joseph S. Venticinquea & Michael P. Toglia: Developmental Considerations in Survival-Related Memory and Decision-Making Under Conditions of Risk and Uncertainty
12: Lauren M. Knott, Mark L. Howe, Jane Wang, & Henry Otgaar: The Development of Adaptive Memory During Childhood
13: Nathaniel R. Greene & Moshe Naveh-Benjamin: On the Adaptative Reliance on Fuzzy Memory Representations in Adult Aging
Section 4 - Emerging Perspectives on Adaptive Memory: Cognitive Neuroscience and Forensic Science
14: Meike Kroneisen, Glen Forester, & Siri-Maria Kamp: Neurocognitive mechanisms of the survival processing effect
15: · Ivan Mangiulli, Marko Jelicic, Henry Otgaar: Survival Processing Advantage as Possible Explanation for Remembering Criminal Events: A Path Forward
16: Dawn R. Weatherford & Kara Moore: Adaptive Memory Research in Forensic Face Matching and Memory
17: William Blake Erickson & Charlie Frowd: Eyes that Never Blink: Bridging Concepts in Facial Recognition by Humans and Machines
18: Daniel M. Bialer, Minyu Chang, Chapter J. Brainerd, Valerie F. Reyna: A Fuzzy-Trace Theory Account of Survival Processing
Conclusions and Future Directions
Jeanette Altarriba, William Blake Erickson, Henry Otgaar, & Michael P. Toglia: Adaptive Memory: Perspectives, Conclusions, and Future Directions