Mechanisms of Sensory Working Memory Attention and Perfomance XXV
Coordonnateurs : Jolicoeur Pierre, Lefebvre Christine, Martinez-Trujillo Julio
Mechanisms of Sensory Working Memory: Attention and Performance XXV provides an update on research surrounding the memory processes that are crucial for many facets of cognitive processing and experience, with new coverage of emerging areas of study, including a new understanding of working memory for features of stimuli devoid of verbal, phonological, or long-term memory content, such as memory for simple visual features (e.g., texture or color), simple auditory features (e.g., pitch), or simple tactile features (e.g., vibration frequency), now called sensory memory to distinguish from verbal memory.
This contemporary focus on sensory memory is just beginning, and this collection of original contributions provides a foundational reference for the study mechanisms of sensory memory. Students, scholars, and researchers studying memory mechanisms and processes in cognitive neuroscience, cognitive science, neuroscience, and psychology will find this book of great value to their work.
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Sensational Memorability: Working Memory for Things We See, Hear, Feel, or Somehow Sense
Chapter 3. The Brain Mechanisms of Working Memory: An Evolving Story
Chapter 4. The Contribution of Human Superior Intraparietal Sulcus to Visual Short-Term Memory and Perception
Chapter 5. Neural Bases of the Short-term Retention of Visual Information
Chapter 6. What are the Roles of Sensory and Parietal Activity in Visual Short-Term Memory?
Chapter 7. Hemispheric Organization of Visual Memory: Analyzing Visual Working Memory With Brain Measures
Chapter 8. Visual Working Memory and Attentional Object Selection
Chapter 9. Individual Differences in Visual Working Memory Capacity: Contributions of Attentional Control to Storage
Chapter 10. Working Memory and Aging: A Review
Chapter 11. Defining a Role for Lateral Prefrontal Cortex in Memory-Guided Decisions About Visual Motion
Chapter 12. Working Memory Representations of Visual Motion along the Primate Dorsal Visual Pathway
Chapter 13. Neurophysiological Mechanisms of Working Memory: Cortical Specialization and Plasticity
Chapter 14. Neural and Behavioral Correlates of Auditory Short-Term and Recognition Memory
Chapter 15. Brain Activity Related to the Retention of Tones in Auditory Short-Term Memory
Chapter 16. The Interplay Between Auditory Attention and Working Memory
Chapter 17. Neuroimaging of the Mind’s Ear Using Representational Similarity Analysis
Chapter 18. Remembering Touch: Using Interference Tasks to Study Tactile and Haptic Memory
Chapter 19. Human Cortical Representation of Tactile Short-Term Memory for Stimulation Patterns on the Hand: Evidence From Magnetoencephalography
Chapter 20. The Role of Spatial Attention in Tactile Short-Term Memory
Cognitive Neuroscience, Cognitive Psychology
Dr. Martinez-Trujillo is an associate professor at the departments of Physiology and Pharmacology and Psychiatry and a scientist at the Robarts Research Institute, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada. He studied Medicine at the University of Havana, Cuba and continued pursuing his medical training in Neurology and Clinical Neurophysiology at the Cuban Neuroscience Center. He continued his scientific training and obtained an MSc and PhD in Neurobiology at the Neurology Department of the University of Tübingen, Germany. He came to Canada in 2000 to pursue postdoctoral training at the Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto. In 2004 he became a Canada Research Chair and assistant professor at McGill University Department of Physiology in Montreal, Canada. In 2014 he joined Western University as associate professor and Western Research Chair in Autism. Dr. Martinez-Trujillo’s scientific work is dedicated to investigate the brain mechanisms underlying cognition, more specifically underlying the allocation of attention, and how these mechanisms fail during neurological and mental disease. His work has been published and acknowledged in prestigious scientific journal such as Nature, Nature Neuroscience
- Introduces the study of sensory mechanisms of working memory as distinct from verbal memory
- Covers visual memory, auditory memory, and tactile memory
- Includes translational content as the breakdown of working memory is often associated with a disease, disorder, or trauma to the brain
Date de parution : 07-2016
Ouvrage de 312 p.
21.4x27.6 cm