The Déjà Vu Experience (2nd Ed.) Second Edition Essays in Cognitive Psychology Series
Auteurs : Cleary Anne M., Brown Alan S.
The Déjà vu Experience, Second Edition covers the latest scientific discoveries regarding the strange sense of familiarity most of us have felt at one time or another when doing something for the first time. The book sheds light on this mysterious phenomenon, considering the latest neurophysiological investigations and research on possible reasons why déjà vu is often associated with a sense of predicting the future or knowing what happens next.
In addition to summarizing the major historical and contemporary theoretical approaches to the déjà vu experience, this book aspires to stimulate additional research on this curious subjective phenomenon. Drawing on research from a range of fields including psychology, philosophy, and religion, it aims to demystify some of the more unsettling, spooky-seeming aspects of the déjà vu experience, elucidating possible mechanisms and underlying reasons for its occurrence. This edition has been thoroughly updated throughout to include over 200 new professional articles and book chapters related to déjà vu that have been published in the 18 years since the original book.
By placing the scientific study of déjà vu within its historical context and covering a broad range of perspectives on the subject, this title will be invaluable to upper-level undergraduates, postgraduates, and researchers of Cognitive Psychology, specifically those focusing on Memory Phenomena.
List of Figures Preface Acknowledgments Part I The Study of Déjà vu 1. Introduction 2. Methods of Investigating Déjà vu 3. Incidence of Déjà vu 4. Nature of the Déjà vu Experience Part II Factors Related to Déjà vu 5. Physical and Psychological Variables Related to Déjà vu 6. Epilepsy and Déjà vu 7. Are Certain Brain Regions Associated with Déjà vu? 8. Schizophrenia and Déjà vu Part III Theory 9. Familiarity Explanations of Déjà vu 10. Processing Disruption Explanations of Déjà vu 11. Other Related Experiences 12. Association of Déjà vu with the Paranormal Part IV Summary and Future Directions 13. Future Directions References Author Index Subject Index
Anne M. Cleary is a Professor of Cognitive Psychology at Colorado State University. She received her BS from John Carroll University in Ohio, and her PhD from Case Western Reserve University in Ohio. Dr. Cleary has published 63 professional articles and book chapters, as well as two previous books.
Alan S. Brown retired as an Emeritus Professor in the Psychology Department at Southern Methodist University, after teaching there for 44 years. He received his BA from the College of Wooster in Ohio, and PhD from Northwestern University in Illinois. Dr. Brown has published 87 professional articles and book chapters, as well as eight books, covering various theoretical and applied aspects of human memory and cognition.
Date de parution : 07-2021
15.2x22.9 cm
Date de parution : 07-2021
15.2x22.9 cm
Thème de The Déjà Vu Experience :
Mots-clés :
deja vu; psychology of deja vu; physiopathology of deja vu; psychopathology of deja vu; jamais vu; parapsychology and deja vu; psychodynamics of deja vu; dual processes and deja vu; neurology and deja vu; memory and deja vu; cognitive anomalies; unexplained psychological phenomena; double perception and deja vu; perception and deja vu; memory; human memory; Vu Experience; sociology of deja vu; DRM Paradigm; Déjà Vu; Recollective Confabulation; DRM; TLE; NORC; Deja Vu Experience; Higher Familiarity Ratings; Vu Incidence; Intracranial Electroencephalography; Perirhinal Cortices; TLE Patient; Retrieval Mode; Rhinal Cortices; Scalp EEG; DES Total Score; Median Incidence Rate; Texas Survey; Grey Matter Volume Differences; Capgras Syndrome; NORC Survey; Focal Seizures; Medial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy