Déjà vu and Other Dissociative States in Memory

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Déjà vu and Other Dissociative States in Memory

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 112 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781032412962
  • DDC分類 153.7

Full Description

This book collates the work of world-leading researchers on déjà vu and other dissociative states of memory and presents a snapshot of the state of the art in research on these strange phenomena.

Déjà vu is the eerie feeling of familiarity for something that you know you have not experienced before—the dissociation between what you feel about your memory and what you know to be true about it. For centuries, it has inspired authors, artists and musicians, leaving psychologists struggling to keep up. The past 20 years though, has seen an explosion in research on déjà vu and related experiences. From attempts to generate déjà vu in the laboratory, to the study of patients who present with unusual forms of the experience, cognitive psychology has begun applying a range of both novel and established techniques to study these psychological experiences that have long captivated the public imagination.

Déjà vu and Other Dissociative States in Memory is an insightful resource for scholars and researchers of Psychology including Cognitive Psychology, and Neuroscience. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Memory.

Contents

Introduction Déjà vu and other dissociative states in memory 1. Déjà vu and prescience in a case of severe episodic amnesia following bilateral hippocampal lesions 2. Déjà vu and the entorhinal cortex: dissociating recollective from familiarity disruptions in a single case patient 3. Overcoming familiarity illusions in a single case with persistent déjà vu 4. Relationship between déjà vu experiences and recognition-memory impairments in temporal-lobe epilepsy 5. Déjà vu experiences in anxiety 6. Déjà vu and the feeling of prediction: an association with familiarity strength 7. fMRI evidence supporting the role of memory conflict in the déjà vu experience 8. The the the the induction of jamais vu in the laboratory: word alienation and semantic satiation

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