Memory in Mind and Brain
โ Scribed by Oleg V. Khlevniuk; Vadim A. Staklo
- Publisher
- Yale University Press
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 232
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
โฆ Table of Contents
Contents
Acknowledgments
General Introduction
Part I. Challenging Questions
1. Remembering and Forgetting in Dreaming Sleep: The Riddle of the Dream
2. Sense and Nonsense in Dreams
Part II. Mind, Psychoanalysis: The First Key
3. The Dream: The Sleeping Mind at Work
4. A Serious Methodological Challenge
5. Memory and Dreams In Clinical Psychoanalytic Process: The Role of the Analyst's Memory
Part III. Brain, Cognitive Neuroscience: The Second Key
6. The Brain Awake: Perceiving and Remembering: There is More to Seeing Than Meets the Eye
7. Perception, Memory, and Feeling: There Is More to Memories Than Remembering
8. The Sleeping Brain: The Physiology of Dreaming Sleep
Part IV. The Interface of Mind and Brain: What Dream Imagery Reveals
9. Cabbages and Kings
10. Mind, Metaphor, and Brain: Confronting the Conceptual Challenge
11. Revising Dream Theory
Epilogue: Another Dream
References
Index
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
CONTENTS: The Magic Box The Roads of Thought Concentration of MindAids to Concentration Mental Images Familiarization Familiarization of Forms Familiarization of Memory Projection of the MemorySimplification and SymbolizationModes of Comparison A Logical Series Footsteps of Thought The Power of
<p>This book explores new points of view of human memory in the link among mind, brain, and society. Research of human memory traditionally has been in the field of experimental psychology, and a number of psychological researchers have come upon important findings regarding human memory. They have
This book explores new points of view of human memory in the link among mind, brain, and society. Research of human memory traditionally has been in the field of experimental psychology, and a number of psychological researchers have come upon important findings regarding human memory. They have pro