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  • × subject_ss:"Memory"
  1. Semantic knowledge and semantic representations (1995) 0.07
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    Content
    G. Gainotti, M.C. Silveri, A. Daniele, L. Giustolisi, Neuroanatomical Correlates of Category-specific Semantic Disorders: A Critical Survey. J. S. Snowden, H. L. Griffiths, D. Neary, Autobiographical Experience and Word Meaning. L. Cipolotti, E.K. Warrington, Towards a Unitary Account of Access Dysphasia: A Single Case Study. E. Forde, G.W. Humphreys, Refractory Semantics in Global Aphasia: On Semantic Organisation and the Access-Storage Distinction in Neuropsychology. A. E. Hillis, A. Caramazza, The Compositionality of Lexical Semantic Representations: Clues from Semantic Errors in Object Naming. H.E. Moss, L.K. Tyler, Investigating Semantic Memory Impairments: The Contribution of Semantic Priming. K.R. Laws, S.A. Humber, D.J.C. Ramsey, R.A. McCarthy, Probing Sensory and Associative Semantics for Animals and Objects in Normal Subjects. K.R. Laws, J.J. Evans, J. R. Hodges, R.A. McCarthy, Naming without Knowing and Appearance without Associations: Evidence for Constructive Processes in Semantic Memory? J. Powell, J. Davidoff, Selective Impairments of Object-knowledge in a Case of Acquired Cortical Blindness. J.R. Hodges, N. Graham, K. Patterson, Charting the Progression in Semantic Dementia: Implications for the Organisation of Semantic Memory. E. Funnell, Objects and Properties: A Study of the Breakdown of Semantic Memory. L.J. Tippett, S. McAuliffe, M. J. Farrar, Preservation of Categorical Knowledge in Alzheimer's Disease: A Computational Account. G. W. Humphreys, C. Lamote, T.J. Lloyd-Jones, An Interactive Activation Approach to Object Processing: Effects of Structural Similarity, Name Frequency, and Task in Normality and Pathology.
    Footnote
    This book is also a double special issue of the journal Memory which forms Issues 3 and 4 of Volume 3 (1995).
    LCSH
    Memory
    Humans / Memory (Mental processes)
    Series
    Memory; 3,3/4
    Subject
    Memory
    Humans / Memory (Mental processes)
  2. Welzer, H.: ¬Das kommunikative Gedächtnis : Eine Theorie der Erinnerung (2002) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Der Soziologe und Sozialpsychologe geht der Frage nach, was unser Erinnern letztlich bestimmt und beeinflusst, berichtet die Rezensentin. Sie hebt hervor, dass Welzer im Unterschied zu den meisten neueren Büchern über Gedächtnis und Erinnerung nicht nur die neuronalen und emotionalen Grundlagen des Erinnerns darstellt, sondern darüber hinaus die soziale Dimension des Gedächtnis in den Blick nimmt. Nur in der Gemeinschaft und in der Kommunikation mit anderen bildet sich Erinnerung, bringt die Rezensentin Welzers Grundthese auf den Punkt. Der Einfluss der Kommunikation auf Gehirn und Gedächtnis beginne bereits im Mutterleib, setzte sich mit dem "memory talk", mit dem Erwachsene Kleinkinder unwillkürlich in die Formulierung und Gewichtung von Erinnerung einweisen, fort und reiche bis zum Ausfüllen von Erinnerungslücken aus dem Fundus des "kommunikativen Unbewussten".
    LCSH
    Memory
    Subject
    Memory