1st Edition

Memory for Actions

By Johannes Engelkamp Copyright 1998
176 Pages
by Routledge

Psychological experiments demonstrate that we remember self-performed actions better and more easily than actions performed by others, which we only perceived, or actions which were only reported to us. In everyday life, we remember whether or not we have already performed certain actions. Questions such as “Did you get some petrol?”, “Did you pay the waiter?”, “Have you posted the letter?” as a... Read more

Preface.  1. Introduction  2. Explanations for Episodic Memory  3. Early Findings and Explanations for the Retention of Self-Performed Tasks  4. Theoretical Integration I: Actions as Described by the Multimodal Theory  5. Empirical Inconsistencies and Theoretical Controversies  6. Theoretical Integration II: Expansion and Differentiation of the Multimodal Theory  7. Recent Studies on Encoding and Retrieval  8. Theoretical Integration III: Inclusion of Retrieval Processes  9. Memory for Actions and Its Implications for Theories on Episodic Memory  10. Widening the Perspective.  References.  Author Index.  Subject Index.

Biography

Johannes Engelkamp (1937–2024) was at the time of original publication, based in the Department of Psychology, University of the Saarland, Saarbrücken, Germany.