Duncan / Phillips / McLeod | Measuring the Mind | Buch | 978-0-19-856642-7 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 418 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 627 g

Duncan / Phillips / McLeod

Measuring the Mind

Speed, control, and age
Erscheinungsjahr 2005
ISBN: 978-0-19-856642-7
Verlag: Oxford University Press

Speed, control, and age

Buch, Englisch, 418 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 627 g

ISBN: 978-0-19-856642-7
Verlag: Oxford University Press


What are the fundamental mechanisms of decision making, processing speed, memory and cognitive control? How do these give rise to individual differences, and how do they change as people age? How are these mechanisms implemented in neural unctions, in particular the functions of the frontal lobe? How do they relate to the demands of everyday, 'real life' behaviour? Over almost five decades, Pat Rabbitt has been among the most distinguished of British cognitive psychologists. His work has been widely influential in theories of mental speed, cognitive control and aging, influencing research in experimental psychology, neuropsychology and individual differences.

This volume, dedicated to Pat Rabbitt, brings together a distinguished group of 16 contributors actively pursuing research in the fields of speed, memory, and control, and the application of these fields to individual differences and aging. With the latest work from senior figures in the field, and a focus on fundamental topics in both teaching and research, the book will be valuable to students and scientists in experimental psychology and cognitive neuroscience.

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Weitere Infos & Material


- Section I: Reaction time and mental speed

- 1: Roger Ratcliff, Anjali Thapar, Philip L. Smith and Gail McKoon: Ageing and response times: a comparison of sequential sampling models

- 2: David F. Hultsch, Michael A. Hunter, Stuart W. S. MacDonald and Esther Strauss: Inconsistency in response time as an indicator of cognitive ageing

- 3: Elizabeth A. Maylor and Derrick G. Watson: Ageing and the ability to ignore irrelevant information in visual search and enumeration tasks

- 4: Mike Anderson and Jeff Nelson: Individual differences and cognitive models of the mind: using the differentiation hypothesis to distinguish general and specific cognitive processes

- 5: Ian J. Deary and Geoff Der: Reaction time parameters, intelligence aging and death: the West of Scotland Twenty-07 study

- 6: John Wearden: The wrong tree: time perception and time experience in the elderly

- Section II: Cognitive control and frontal lobe function

- 7: Stephen Monsell: The chronometrics of task-set control

- 8: Louise H. Phillips and Julie D. Henry: An evaluation of the frontal lobe theory of cognitive ageing

- 9: Paul W. Burgess, Jon S. Simons, Iroise Dumontheil and Sam J. Gilbert: The gateway hypothesis of rostral prefrontal cortex (area 10) function

- 10: John Duncan: Prefrontal cortex and Spearman's g

- Section III: Memory and age

- 11: Fergus I. M. Craik: On reducing age-related declines in memory and executive control

- 12: Alan Baddeley, Hilary Baddeley, Dino Chincotta, Simona Luzzi and Christobel Meikle: Working memory and ageing

- 13: Timothy J. Perfect and Helen C. Moon: The own-age effect in face recognition

- Section IV: Real-world cognition

- 14: Alan Kingstone, Daniel Smilek, Elina Birmingham, Dave Cameron and Walter Bischof: Cognitive ethology: giving real life to attention research

- 15: Peter McLeod, Peter Sommerville and Nick Reed: Are automated actions beyond conscious access?

- 16: Robert J. Hockey: Operator functional state: the prediction of breakdown in human performance



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