Brain, Vol. 125, No. 2, 439-441,
February 1, 2002
© 2002 Oxford University Press
Book Review |
THE OXFORD HANDBOOK OF MEMORY
Department of Psychology, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia
THE OXFORD HANDBOOK OF MEMORY.
Edited by E. Tulving and F. Craik.2000. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Price £45. Pp. 714. ISBN 0-19512-265-8..
The intricacies of human memory have fascinated philosophers and scholars for millennia. It is not surprising that it is so. Memory represents a key psychological process, allowing us to re-experience events from our past which may have taken place hours, days, months or even many years ago. Memory underlies other key psychological and behavioural processes such as perception, language and movement. And memory is also crucial for our sense of consciousness: without memory we would have no real sense of self or personal identity.
Because memory and learning have such a profound influence on other aspects of human existence, the scientific study of memory within experimental psychology (and the related cognitive and brain sciences) hashistoricallybeen inseparable from the scientific study of mental life and behaviour. Moreover, not only has memory fascinated people for centuries, butin the present dayit is one of the most active and fertile areas of contemporary psychological