Confabulation: Views From Neuroscience, Psychiatry, Psychology, and Philosophy
William Hirstein (ed.)
Oxford University Press (2009)
Abstract
[This download contains the introductory chapter.] People confabulate when they make an ill-grounded claim that they honestly believe is true, for example in claiming to recall an event from their childhood that never actually happened. This interdisciplinary book brings together some of the leading thinkers on confabulation in neuroscience, psychiatry, psychology, and philosophy.
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9780199208913 0199208913
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HIRCVF
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Archival date: 2015-02-09
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Temporal Consciousness and Confabulation: Escape From Unconscious Explanatory Idols.Gianfranco Dalla Barba
The Cognitive Consequences of Forced Fabrication: Evidence From Studies of Eyewitness Suggestibility.Q. Chrobak & Maria S. Zaragoza
False Memories: A Kind of Confabulation in Non-Clinical.Lauren French, Maryanne Garry & Elizabeth Loftus
False Memories: A Kind of Confabulation in Non-Clinical Subjects.Maryanne Garry, Lauren French & Loftus & Elizabeth
He is Not My Father, and That is Not My Arm: Accounting for Misidentifications of People and Limbs.William Hirstein & V. S. Ramachandran
'That's Not My Arm, Doctor': Accounting for Misidentifications with a Two-Phase Theory.William Hirstein & Ramachandran & S. V.
The Cognitive Consequences of Forces Confabulation: Evidence From Studies of Eyewitness Suggestibility.Quin M. Chrobak & Zaragoza & S. Maria
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2012-01-31
Total views
1,274 ( #4,086 of 70,033 )
Recent downloads (6 months)
50 ( #16,694 of 70,033 )
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