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Full Description
We remember in social contexts. We reminisce about the past together, collaborate to remember shared experiences, and, even when we are alone, we remember in the context of our communities and cultures.
Taking an interdisciplinary approach throughout, this text comprehensively covers collaborative remembering across the fields of developmental psychology, cognitive psychology, social psychology, discourse processing, philosophy, neuropsychology, design, and media studies. It highlights points of overlap and contrast across the many disciplinary perspectives and, with its sections on 'Approaches of Collaborative Remembering' and 'Applications of Collaborative Remembering', also connects basic and applied research.
Written with late-stage undergraduates and early-stage graduates in mind, the book is also a valuable tool for memory specialists and academics in the fields of psychology, cognitive science and philosophy who are interested in collaborative memory research.
Contents
I Introduction
1: Michelle L. Meade, Celia B. Harris, Penny Van Bergen, John Sutton, and Amanda J. Barnier: Collaborative Remembering: Background and Approaches
II Approaches to Studying Collaborative Remembering
2: Catherine A. Haden, Maria Marcus, and Erin Jan: Socializing Early Skills for Remembering Through Parent-Child Conversations During and After Events
3: Robyn Fivush, Widaad Zaman, and Natalie Merrill: Developing Social Functions of Autobiographical Memory within Family Storytelling
4: Suparna Rajaram: Collaborative Inhibition in Group Recall: Cognitive Principles and Implications
5: William Hirst and Jeremy Yamashiro: Social Aspects of Forgetting
6: Fiona Gabbert and Rebecca Wheeler: Memory Conformity Following Collaborative Remembering
7: Gerald Echterhoff and René Kopietz: The Socially Shared Nature of Memory: From Joint Encoding to Communication
8: Linda A. Henkel and Alison Kris: Collaborative Remembering and Reminiscence in Older Adults
9: Nicole Müller and Zaneta Mok: Memories and Identities in Conversation with Dementia
10: Lucas M. Bietti and Michael J. Baker: Multimodal Processes of Joint Remembering in Complex Collaborative Activities
11: Steven D. Brown and Paula Reavey: Contextualizing Autobiographical Remembering: An Expanded View of Memory
12: Chris McVittie and Andy McKinlay: Collaborative Processes in Neuropsychological Interviews
13: Kourken Michaelian and Santiago Arango-Muñoz: Collaborative Memory Knowledge: A Distributed Reliabilist Perspective
14: Robert A. Wilson: Group-level Cognizing, Collaborative Remembering, and Individuals
15: M. Pasupathi and C. Wainryb: Remembering Good and Bad Times Together: Functions of Collaborative Remembering
16: Magdalena Abel, Sharda Umanath, James V. Wertsch, and Henry L. Roediger, III: Collective Memory: How Groups Remember Their Past
17: Qi Wang: Culture in Collaborative Remembering
III Applications of Collborative Memory
18: Elaine Reese: Encouraging Collaborative Remembering Between Young Children and Their Caregivers
19: Karen Salmon: Parent-Child Construction of Personal Memories via Reminiscing Conversations: Implications for the Development and Treatment of Childhood Psychopathology
20: Helen Paterson and Lauren Monds: Forensic Applications of Social Memory Research
21: Andrew Hoskins: Digital Media and the Precarity of Memory
22: Elise van den Hoven, Mendel Broekhuijsen, and Ine Mols: Design Applications for Social Remembering
23: Rupa Gupta Gordon, Melissa C. Duff, and Neal J. Cohen: Applications of Collaborative Memory: Patterns of Success and Failure in Individuals with Hippocampal Amnesia
24: Helena Blumen: Collaborative Memory Interventions for Age-Related and Alzheimer s Disease- Related Memory Decline
25: Lars-Christer Hydén and Mattias Forsblad: Collaborative Remembering in Dementia: A Focus on Joint Activities
IV Conclusion
26: Michelle L. Meade, Celia B. Harris, Penny Van Bergen, John Sutton, and Amanda J. Barnier: Concluding Remarks: Common Themes and Future Directions