Table of Contents
Preface
Quirks of Autobiographical Memory
Chapter 1: Autobiographical editing: Revising our Personal Past
Alan S. Brown, Lindy M. Fields, Katie Croft Cadero, Mike Chmielewski,
Deanna Denman & Elizabeth J. Marsh
Chapter 2: Quirks in Autobiographical Memory
Bogdan Kostic & Ari L. Cunningham
Chapter 3: Broadening the Autobiographical Record to Include Memories of Fiction
Elizabeth J. Marsh & Brenda W. Yang
Chapter 4: Eating the Memories
W. Robert Batsell, Jr.
Chapter 5: Blocked and Recovered Memories
Steven M. Smith & Zsolt Beda
Quirks of Our Knowledge and Awareness of Our Own Memories
Chapter 6: When More is Less: Cue Depreciation in Memory
Zehra F. Peynircioğlu
Chapter 7: The Charming Quirks of Implicit Memory
David B. Mitchell
Chapter 8: Negative Effects of Repetition and Testing
Neil W. Mulligan
Chapter 9: When and Why We (Sometimes) Forget Really Important Things
Alan D. Castel & Matthew G. Rhodes
Chapter 10: Fluency Illusions in Metamemory
Monika Undorf
Chapter 11: Knowing More or Thinking that You Know More? Context-dependent Illusions of Knowing
Katarzyna Zawadzka & Maciej Hanczakowski
Quirky Sensations of Memory
Chapter 12: Memory Under the SEA (Subjective Experience of Agency)
Zachary J. Bucknoff & Janet Metcalfe
Chapter 13: Tip-of-the-tongue States: Past and Future
Bennett L. Schwartz & Ali Pournaghadi
Chapter 14: The Butcher on the Bus Experience
Alan S. Brown
Chapter 15: Partial Retrieval is a Distinct yet Infrequent Phenomenon in Human Memory
Khrista K. Doshier & Anthony J. Ryals
Chapter 16: The Déjà vu Phenomenon’s Entry into the Realm of Science
Anne M. Cleary, Andrew M. Huebert, & Katherine L. McNeely-White
Chapter 17: Converging on an Understanding of the Déjà vu Experience
Courtney B.A. Aitken & Akira R. O’Connor
Chapter 18: Repetition, or Déjà vu and Embodied Consciousness
Joseph Neisser
Epilogue