D. T. Wessells Jr.; Austin Kutscher; Irene B. Seeland; Florence E. Selder; Daniel J. Cherico; Elizabeth J. Clark Taylor & Francis Inc (1989) Kovakantinen kirja
Daniel Ennockl; Nicolas Raschauer; Eva Schulev-Steindl; Wolfgang Wessely; Daniel Ennackl; Daniel Enn Ckl Springer Verlag GmbH (2008) Kovakantinen kirja
Bernd Langenkämper; Falco Hänsch; Jens Wessels LL. M.; Martin Hilbertz; Daniel Martz; Roland Ronig; Gerwin Schlegel NWB Verlag (2022) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Maaike Zimmerman; Vincent Hunink; Thomas D. McCreight; Danielle Mal-Maeder; Stelios Panayotakis; V. Schmidt; B. Wesseling Egbert Forsten Publishing (1998) Kovakantinen kirja
Taylor & Francis Ltd Sivumäärä: 148 sivua Asu: Kovakantinen kirja Painos: 1 Julkaisuvuosi: 2004, 17.06.2004 (lisätietoa) Kieli: Englanti
The beginning of the 1990's saw a partisan debate about the nature of recovered memories for highly emotional events. Some authors claimed that recovered memories of trauma always referred to veridical memories that had been inaccessible for years. Others argued that such memories were false by definition and that they were created by therapeutic attempts to uncover trauma that was believed to lie at the root of anxiety or depression. Although the debate soon moved to a middle ground, both sides fuelled the development of relevant experimental paradigms to explore the mechanisms for how false memories might be created and also how true memories might be forgotten. Examples are studies looking at memory implanting, false word memory, and retrieval-induced forgetting in the mid-1990's. Many studies using such paradigms, however, relied on emotionally neutral material. Studies relating to trauma were less readily available. Now more and more researchers are bridging this gap, testing whether emotive material can be implanted and forgotten and whether there are special populations more susceptible to these effects. This special issue brings together papers examining emotion and memory malleability, both providing a picture of the state-of-the-art research and pushing the field forward.