Memory for Odors

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autobiographical recollection
Category=JMR
De Wijk
discrimination
episodic recall
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
explicit retrieval
identification
Impaired Odor Identification
Inherent Structural Limitation
intervals
korsakoff
Korsakoff Patients
Korsakoff's Disease
Korsakoff’s Disease
naming
nonhuman animal studies
Odor Aversion
Odor Cues
Odor Detection Threshold
Odor Identification
Odor Identification Ability
Odor Identification Performance
Odor Memory
Odor Recognition
Odor Recognition Memory
Odor's Name
odor-evoked memory research
Odor’s Name
Olfactory Imagery
olfactory perception
patients
Prepyriform Cortex
Primary Olfactory Cortex
Pyriform Cortex
recognition
retention
Retention Interval
Semantic Information
sensory coding theory
target
Target Odor
Temporal Lobectomy
Verbal Suppression Tasks
Vice Versa
wijk

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138980860
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jul 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The power of odors to unlock human memory is celebrated in literature and anecdote, but poorly documented by science. Odors -- perhaps more than other stimuli -- are widely believed to evoke vivid and complex past experiences easily. Yet in contrast to the frequency with which odors are thought to evoke memories of the past, scientific evidence is thus far scant.

For years, voluminous data have been collected on odor sensitivity, whereas relatively few studies exist on memory for odors per se. Moreover, the memory data that do exist are thus far only poorly integrated with the most modern attitudes on human memory. The major goal of this volume is to point the way toward a better state of affairs, one in which the study of odor memory is legitimatized as a proper specialization and is informed by the most promising ideas in the mainstream study of memory. This volume explores three tendencies in modern memory theory that have not yet sufficiently penetrated the odor-memory work: memory coding, memory and knowledge, and implicit and explicit memory.

Opinion Research Corporation. Yale University.