Synopses & Reviews
During the past decade, evidence of dissociation between conscious and nonconscious information processing has emerged from the study of normal subjects and brain damaged patients. The thirty-five original contributions in this book cover the latest work on this important topic across such traditional areas of research as vision, face recognition, spatial attention, control processes, semantic memory, episodic memory, and learning. Each section is introduced by an overview chapter that presents and evaluates the available empirical evidence in a given area and is followed by several experimental papers. The book opens with the Association Lecture, by George Mandler, "On Remembering without Really Trying: Hypermnesia, Incubation, and Mind Popping."
A Bradford Book
Attention and Performance series
Synopsis
A Bradford Book. Attention and Performance series
Synopsis
uring the past decade, evidence of dissociation betweenconscious and nonconscious information processing has emergedfrom the study of normal subjects and brain damaged patients.The thirty-five original contributions in this book cover thelatest work on this important topic.