Memory and Emotion
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Overview
Understanding the interplay between memory and emotion is crucial for the work of researchers in many arenas—clinicians, psychologists interested in eyewitness testimony, psychobiologists, to name just a few. Memory and Emotion spans all these areas and brings them together into one volume. Daniel Reisberg and Paula Hertel have assembled contributions from the most visible and productive researchers working at the intersection of emotion and memory. The result is a sophisticated profile of our current understanding of how memory is shaped both by emotion and emotional disorder. The diverse list of topics includes the biology of traumatic memory, the memory disorders produced by depression, anxiety, and schizophrenia, the nature of emotional memory both in children and the elderly, and the collective memory processes at work in remembering the Holocaust. This unified collection of cutting-edge research will be an invaluable guide to scholars and students in many different research areas.
Synopsis
Psychologists, mostly from the US, but also France, Australia, and Britain, offer a range of approaches to studying links between the two fuzzy realms. Among them are the neuroanatomy of emotional memory, selective memory effects in anxiety disorders, memory for emotional and non-emotional events in depression, children's memories of emotional events, aging and emotional memory, and emotion and eyewitness memory. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR