Aging, Representation, and Thought

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A01=Matthew Sharps
adult learning mechanisms
Adult Life Span
age related cognitive decline research
Auditory Imagery
Auditory Images
Author_Matthew Sharps
Category=JMR
Cognitive Aging
contextual reasoning
Environmental Support Hypothesis
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Exposure Time
feature
Feature Intensive Processing
Free Recall Performance
Gestalt Processing
information integration
intensive
Item Specific Detail
Item Specific Information
List Format
mental imagery processes
Mental Rotation Paradigm
perceptual chunking
Pictorial Items
Pictorial Stimuli
processing
Semantic Information
Shared Processing Resources
Significant Primacy Effect
spatial cognition
Spatial Memory
Spatial Memory Performance
Specialized Anatomical Structures
Stimulus Item
Task Demand Characteristics
Visual Spatial Processing
Visuospatial Sketchpad

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412847612
  • Weight: 226g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Nov 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The brain contains many distinct functional and anatomical regions. Despite these differences, brain tissues are sufficiently uniform in the fact that they can engage in various types of processing. How can functionally different kinds of processes, such as verbal memory and reasoning, visual and auditory memory, and mental imagery, all be supported by the relatively uniform electrochemical activity of a brain's neurons? How are they appropriately segregated and integrated as needed? In Aging, Representation, and Thought, Matthew J. Sharps provides an empirically based, functional answer to what is, from the standpoint of modern cognitive psychology, a critical theoretical issue.

Sharps argues that the crucial factor is the degree to which information is subjected to processing that is more gestalt or feature-intensive in nature. Sharps shows that purely gestalt processing deals with information in large "chunks," providing for relatively little incisive analysis. Purely feature-intensive processing, on the other hand, tends to ignore the overall nature and context of information in favor of comparatively minute analyses. It provides for relatively comprehensive analysis, but also for slow, cumbersome processing. Neither process, however, works in isolation, and Sharps demonstrates how information processing occurs on a continuum between the two extremes.

Sharps' theoretical perspective is amply borne out by the results of specific experiments in all of the cognitive realms he addresses. He provides relatively comprehensive explanations for a variety of phenomena including the diminution of specific cognitive processes with age, and errors in eyewitness memory, reasoning, and decision-making at all levels of human activity. Aging, Representation, and Thought will be of interest to psychologists, students of adult development and aging, and management specialists.

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