You are here

The Sage website, including online ordering services, may be unavailable due to system maintenance on 23rd January between 1:30 pm and 3:30 pm IST. If you need assistance please contact our Customer Service team. Thank you for your patience and we apologise for the inconvenience.

Disable VAT on Taiwan

Unfortunately, as of 1 January 2020 SAGE Ltd is no longer able to support sales of electronically supplied services to Taiwan customers that are not Taiwan VAT registered. We apologise for any inconvenience. For more information or to place a print-only order, please contact uk.customerservices@sagepub.co.uk.

The SAGE Handbook of Applied Memory
Share
Share

The SAGE Handbook of Applied Memory

Edited by:


752 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
A fabulous collection of essays on memory in the real world. The leading scholars have been assembled to produce a volume that is intellectually rich, up-to-date, and truly important.
- Elizabeth F. Loftus
, Distinguished Professor, University of California, Irvine

"An invaluable resource for anyone wishing to access the current state of knowledge of, or contemplating research into, the growing area of applied memory research."
- Graham Davies
, Editor, Applied Cognitive Psychology

The SAGE Handbook of Applied Memory
is the first of its kind to focus specifically on this vibrant and progressive field. It offers a broad and comprehensive coverage of recent theoretical and empirical research advances in the psychology of memory as they apply to a range of applied issues, and offers advanced students and researchers the opportunity to survey the literature in the psychology of memory across a range of applied domains.

Arranged into four sections: Everyday Memory; Social and Individual Differences in Memory; Subjective Experience of Memory; and Eyewitness Memory, this handbook provides a comprehensive summary and evaluation of scientific memory research as well as theory in a broad range of applied topics including those in cognitive, forensic and experimental psychology.

Brought together by world-leading scholars from across the globe, The SAGE Handbook of Applied Memory will be of great interest to all advanced students and academics with an interest in all aspects of applied memory.
 
PART ONE: Everyday Memory
Bennett L. Schwartz
Memory for people: integration of face, voice, name, and biographical information.
Neil W. Mulligan
Memory for Pictures and Actions
Gilles O. Einstein & Mark A. McDaniel
Prospective Memory and Aging: When It Becomes Difficult and What You Can Do About It.
D. Stephen Lindsay
Memory Source Monitoring Applied
Douglas H. Wedell & Adam T. Hutcheson
Spatial Memory: From Theory to Application
Jackie Andrade
Working memory beyond the laboratory
Eryn J. Newman & Maryanne Garry
False Memory
Colleen M. Kelley
Forgetting
Klaus Fiedler and Mandy Hutter
Memory and Emotion
Steven M. Smith
Effects of Environmental Context on Human Memory
Kathleen B. McDermott, Kathleen M. Arnold, & Steven M. Nelson
The Testing Effect
Eli Vakil
Breakdowns in everyday memory functioning following moderate-to-severe Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
 
PART TWO: Social and individual differences in memory
Robyn Fivush & Theodore E. A. Waters
Sociocultural and functional approaches to autobiographical memory
Michael Ross & Emily Schryer
What Everyone Knows About Aging and Remembering Ain't Necessarily So
Stanley B. Klein & Christopher R. Nelson
The Effects of Self-Reference on Memory: A Conceptual and Methodological Review of Inferences Warranted by the Self-Reference Effect
William Hirst, Alin Coman & Dora Coman
Putting the Social Back Into Human Memory
Natalie A. Wyer
When I think of you: Memory for persons and groups
Geoffrey Haddock
Memory, attitudes, and persuasion
Shanker Krishnan & Lura Forcum
Consumer memory dynamics: Effects of branding and advertising on formation, stability and use of consumer memory
Sean M. Lane and Tanya Karam-Zanders
What Do Lay People Believe about Memory?
Robert F. Belli
Autobiographical Memory Dynamics in Survey Research
Colin M. MacLeod, Tanya R. Jonker, and Greta James
Individual differences in remembering
K. Anders Ericsson and Jerad H. Moxley
Experts’ Superior Memory: From Accumulation of Chunks to Building Memory Skills that Mediate Improved Performance and Learning
 
PART THREE: Subjective experience of memory
Christopher Hertzog and Ann Pearman
Memory Complaints in Adulthood and Old Age
John Dunlosky and Sarah K. Tauber
Understanding People’s Metacognitive Judgments: An Isomechanism Framework and Its Implications for Applied and Theoretical Research
Janet Metcalfe
Metacognitive Control of Study
Morris Goldsmith, Ainat Pansky and Asher Koriat
Metacognitive Control of Memory Reporting
Dorthe Berntsen & Lynn A.Watson
Involuntary autobiographical memories in daily life and in clinical disorders
Chris J.A. Moulin & Celine Souchay
Epistemic Feelings and Memory
 
PART FOUR: Eyewitness memory
Pär Anders Granhag, Karl Ask & Erik Mac Giolla
Eyewitness Recall: An Overview of Estimator-Based Research
Ronald P. Fisher, Nadja Schreiber Compo, Jillian Rivard, & Dana Hirn
Interviewing Witnesses
Tim Valentine
Estimating the Reliability of Eyewitness Identification
Scott D. Gronlund and Curt A. Carlson
System-based Research on Eyewitness Identification
Amy Bradfield Douglass & Lorena Bustamante
Social Influences on Eyewitness Memory
Gabrielle Principe, Andrea Follmer Greenhoot & Stephen J. Ceci
Young children’s eyewitness memory.
James C. Bartlett
The Older Eyewitness
Aldert Vrij
Eliciting Verbal and Nonverbal Cues to Deceit by Outsmarting the Liars

This is a fabulous collection of essays on memory in the real world. The leading scholars have been assembled to produce a volume that is intellectually rich, up-to-date, and truly important.

Elizabeth F. Loftus
Distinguished Professor, University of California, Irvine

This Handbook is an invaluable resource for anyone wishing to access the current state of knowledge of, or contemplating research into, the growing area of applied memory research. Its chapters are authored by leading international researchers who have been brought together to share their insights within its pages.

Graham Davies
Editor, Applied Cognitive Psychology

Spectacular collection! ... This is a handbook that I will buy.

Professor Don Read
Simon Fraser University

Timothy J Perfect

Tim Perfect is Professor of Experimental Psychology at Plymouth University, UK. He received his PhD from the University of Manchester in 1989, and worked at Liverpool and Bristol Universities before joining Plymouth University in 1999. His research focuses on theory and application in long-term memory. He has been on the editorial boards of Memory, and Applied Cognitive Psychology, and is on the governing boards of the Society for Applied Research in Memory and Cognition, and the Experimental Psychology Society. He has also co-edited 3 other books: Models of Cognitive Aging, Applied Metacognition, and The Handbook of Applied Cognition, 2nd... More About Author

D Stephen Lindsay, Interim Editor in Chief

D. Stephen (Steve) Lindsay is Professor of Psychology at the University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.  He received a BA from Reed College in 1981 and a PhD from Princeton University in 1987.  Most of his research explores the cognitive processes by which individuals attribute thoughts, images, and feelings to particular sources (e.g., memory, knowledge, inference).  He served as Editor of Journal of Experimental Psychology: General from 2002 to 2007, and recently began a term as an Associate Editor of Psychological Science.  Prior to co-editing this volume, he co-edited two other books on human memory.  He... More About Author

SAGE Knowledge is the ultimate social sciences digital library for students, researchers, and faculty. Hosting more than 4,400 titles, it includes an expansive range of SAGE eBook and eReference content, including scholarly monographs, reference works, handbooks, series, professional development titles, and more.

The platform allows researchers to cross-search and seamlessly access a wide breadth of must-have SAGE book and reference content from one source.