1st Edition
Memories That Matter How We Remember Important Things
List of Figures
List of Tables
Preface
About this Book
Reminder Cues
I Introduction
1 Pondering the past and fantasising of the future
1.1 Why study memory
1.2 Memory is special
1.3 Memory as a recording
1.4 Memory is a reconstruction
1.5 Memory is the basis of imagination
II Fundamentals
2 Considering the functional purpose
2.1 Memory for everyday events
2.2 Story narratives
2.3 Truths and lies
2.4 Verbatim recall
2.5 Availability
3 Structure and organisation
3.1 Taxonomy of memory
3.2 Memory strength and precision
3.3 Associations and order
3.4 Memory capacity
3.5 Broader memory principles
4 Individual variability
4.1 Aging
4.2 Variability in memory ability
4.3 Ability to imagine: Phantasia
4.4 Memory abilities at the extremes
4.5 Patient H.M.
5 Neurobiological architecture
5.1 Memory is distributed, yet modular
5.2 Cortical specialisation
5.3 Medial temporal lobe
5.4 Role of the hippocampus
5.5 Progression of Alzheimer’s disease
III Motivation
6 Memories of emotions past
6.1 Flashbulb memories
6.2 Emotional experiences
6.3 Confounds and considerations
6.4 Memory is multifaceted
6.5 Good is not merely the opposite of bad
7 Remembering the wins
7.1 Experimental procedures
7.2 Choices and lingering biases
7.3 Decisions from experience
7.4 Variations in procedures
7.5 Individual differences in reward sensitivity
8 Making it personal
8.1 Autobiographical memory
8.2 Lifespan distribution of memories
8.3 Self narratives and identity
8.4 Self-reference effect
8.5 Egocentric bias
9 Moving to remember
9.1 Enactment
9.2 Semantic properties of motoric stimuli
9.3 Neurobiology
9.4 The treachery
9.5 Drawing
10 A domain-general influence of motivation
10.1 Considering a common motivational process
10.2 Neurobiology of motivational domains
10.3 A generalised view of availability
10.4 Animacy effects
10.5 Adaptive memory
IV Deliberate Strategies
11 Strategies for deliberate memorisation
11.1 Repetition, repetition
11.2 Content-specific mnemonics
11.3 Scaffold mnemonics
11.4 Understanding and information relevance
11.5 Gamification
12 Memory experts across diverse domains
12.1 Structured knowledge
12.2 Perceptual identification
12.3 Schematic frameworks
12.4 Verbatim recall
12.5 Memory champions
13 Extended mind, expanded memory
13.1 Daily external aids
13.2 Veridical recordings, but also highlight reels
13.3 Remembering how instead of what
13.4 Memory in a digital society
13.5 Fictional future technologies
V Conclusion
14 Final thoughts
14.1 Memory systems and taxonomy
14.2 Neurobiology of cognition
14.3 Technological innovations
14.4 Assumptions and generalisations
14.5 Here be dragons
Quiz Answers
References
Index
Biography
Christopher R. Madan is an Assistant Professor in the School of Psychology at the University of Nottingham.






