Preface
Part I. Background
1. Overview and History of Memory Research
2. Neuroscience of Memory
3. Methods and Principles
Part II. Core Memory Topics
4. Sensory and Short-Term Memory
5. Working Memory
6. Nondeclarative Memory
7. Episodic Memory: Past and Future
8. Forgetting
9. Semantic Memory
Part III. Special Topics in Memory
10. Forms of Amnesia
11. Memory for Space and Time
12. Autobiographical Memory
13. Memory and Reality
14. Memory and the Law
15. Metamemory
16. Memory in Infancy and Childhood
17. Memory and Aging
18. Formal Models of Memory
Appendix
Indices
Biography
Gabriel A. Radvansky received his BA from Cleveland State University under the supervision of Mark Ashcraft and Ben Wallace, and his MA and PhD from Michigan State University in 1992 under the supervision of Rose T. Zacks. He has been a faculty member in the Department of Psychology at the University of Notre Dame since 1993. He is an expert in human memory with over 100 publications. He has served as associated editor for the journals Memory & Cognition, the Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, and Collabra.
Praise for the Fourth Edition
"Human Memory has an unconventional and appealing organization. It covers critical topics that are omitted from most textbooks and weaves historical and modern research together into a format that will serve well for both beginning and advanced study of the topic. Most importantly, it covers both the theoretical and the applied side of human memory research, making it a valuable resource for understanding how and where the formal study of human memory fits into the social sciences more broadly."
Aaron S. Benjamin, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, U.S.A.
"This is an impressive text: Comprehensive, well-written and sure to be a winner. Radvansky provides a great blend of classic and contemporary research and the pedagogical features built into the book will be helpful for students."
Henry L. Roediger III, Washington University in St. Louis, U.S.A.






