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Remembering the Times of Our Lives

Memory in Infancy and Beyond

Hardcover

Published: 8th August 2006
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The purpose of Remembering the Times of Our Lives: Memory in Infancy and Beyond is to trace the development from infancy through adulthood in the capacity to form, retain, and later retrieve autobiographical or personal memories.

It is appropriate for scholars and researchers in the fields of cognitive psychology, memory, infancy, and human development.

"What do children remember about their lives? Why do they seem to forget so much and yet also show evidence of being affected by early experiences? In this book, Patricia Bauer draws on a wide range of evidence to tell a compelling scientific detective story concerning what we know (so far) about these questions. The book is beautifully written, well-organized, and analytically probing, and yet at the same time reflective, literate, and absorbing."-Nora S. Newcombe, Ph.D., Professor, Temple University This masterly treatment of how memory develops is the most comprehensive and scholarly work on this subject available anywhere. It should be the authoritative reference for years to come as well as a wonderful source of information for anyone interested in what infants can learn, how they learn it, and what they can remember later. -Larry R. Squire, Ph.D., UCSD and Veterans Affairs Medical Center "Patricia Bauer has written a timely, valuable, and highly readable integration of perspectives on the development and character of autobiographical memory. She masterfully combines evidence from the cognitive psychology of autobiographical memory in adults with that from developmental psychology and cognitive neuroscience into a novel synthesis that elucidates the course of cognitive development. Furthermore, she combines the data from experimental analyses of memory with its function in the social and cultural context in which it is naturally expressed, making the story entertaining and crossing the boundaries between laboratory science and real life. All these threads are brought together in a fascinating account of the transition from infancy, characterized by forgetting of the experiences of a developing mind, to adulthood as characterized by a growing reliance on remembering our personal past."-Howard Eichenbaum, Ph.D., Director, Center for Memory and Brain, Boston University

Acknowledgmentsp. ix
Autobiographical Memory and Its Significance
Remembering the Times of Our Livesp. 3
Autobiographical Memory in Adultsp. 20
Infantile or Childhood Amnesiap. 50
Memory in Infancy and Very Early Childhood
Declarative Memory in the First Years of Lifep. 87
The Neural Bases of Declarative Memory in Adultsp. 121
Development of the Neural Substrate for Declarative Memoryp. 177
Autobiographical Memory in Childhood
Event and Autobiographical Memory in the Preschool Yearsp. 221
"What Develops" in Preschoolers' Recall of Specific Past Events?p. 254
The Context of Autobiographical Memory Developmentp. 279
The "Fates" of Early Memories
Crossing the Great Divides of Childhood Amnesiap. 313
The Shifting Balance of Remembering and Forgettingp. 349
Glossaryp. 380
Referencesp. 384
Author Indexp. 415
Subject Indexp. 427
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

ISBN: 9780805840407
ISBN-10: 0805840400
Series: Developing Mind Series
Audience: Professional
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Number Of Pages: 448
Published: 8th August 2006
Dimensions (cm): 22.9 x 15.2  x 2.9
Weight (kg): 0.736