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Full Description
In eight chapters by leading researchers, Memory for Action presents our actual knowledge on memory for actions and the opposing explanaions for these phenomena. It gives an overview of the results from laboratory research on action memory and on memory for activities in social contexts, and presents recent results on memory for intended actions. Additionally, these results are put in relation to the information and to the brain modules which are necessary for successful control of actions.
Contents
1: Hubert D. Zimmer and Ronald Cohen: Remembering Actions: A Specific Type of Memory?
2: Melissa J. Guynn, Mark A. Daniel, and Gilles O. Einstein: Remembering to Perform Actions: A Different Type of Memory?
3: Johannes Engelkamp: Action Memory: A System-oriented Approach
4: Reza Kormi-Nouri and Lars-Gran Nilsson: The Motor Component is not Crucial!
5: Mary Ann Foley and Hilary Horn Ratner: The Role of Action-Based Structures in Activity Memory
6: Comment: What is the Meaning of a Memory-Systems Approach? Lars-Gran Nilsson and Reza Kormi-Nouri
7: Kormi-Nouri and Nilsson Johannes Engelkamp: Comment: What Does it Mean that the Motor Component is Not Crucial? Comments on
8: Hubert D. Zimmer: Why Do Actions Speak Louder than Words: Action Memory as a Variant of Encoding Manipulations or the Result of a Specific Memory System?