Learning and memory: from brain to behavior
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York
Worth Publishers, Macmillan Learning
[2016]
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Ausgabe: | Third edition |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke |
Beschreibung: | xxv, 516, 13, 10, 49, 14, 10 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme (farbig) |
ISBN: | 9781464105937 9781319154059 |
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Jiom HBrain to UBzfi
avLOX
THIRD EDITION
Mark A Gluck
Rutgers University-Newark
Eduardo Mercado
University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
Catherine E Myers
Department of Veterans Affairs, VA New Jersey Health Care System,
and Rutgers University-New Jersey Medical School
worth publishers
I Macmillan Learning
New York
BRIEF CONTENTS
Preface xvi
Introductory Module
CHAPTER 1 The Psychology of Learning and Memory 1
CHAPTER 2 The Neuroscience of Learning and Memory 35
Learning Module
CHAPTER 3 Habituation, Sensitization, and Familiarization:
Learning about Repeated Events 71
CHAPTER 4 Classical Conditioning:
Learning to Predict Significant Events 115
CHAPTER 5 Operant Conditioning:
Learning the Outcome of Behaviors 167
CHAPTER 6 Generalization, Discrimination Learning,
and Concept Formation 213
CHAPTER 6 Generalization, Discrimination Learning,
and Concept Formation 213
CHAPTER 7 Episodic and Semantic Memory:
Memory for Facts and Events 267
CHAPTER 8 Skill Memory:
Learning by Doing 311
CHAPTER 9 Working Memory and Cognitive Control 351
Integrative Topics Module
CHAPTER 10 Emotional Influences on Learning and Memory 395
CHAPTER 11 Social Learning and Memory:
Observing, Interacting, and Reenacting 439
CHAPTER 12 Development and Aging:
Learning and Memory across the Lifespan 473
Answers to Test Your Knowledge, Quiz Yourself, and Concept
Check A-1
Glossary G-1
References R-1
Name Index NI-1
Subject Index SI-1
CONTENTS
Preface xvi
Introductory Module
1 CHAPTER 1 The Psychology of Learning and Memory
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Top Ten Tips for a Better
Memory 3
From Philosophy and Natural History to Psychology 4
The Empiricism and Associationism of Aristotle 4
Descartes and Dualism 5
John Locke and His Reliance on Empiricism 7
William James and Associationism 8
Charles Darwin and the Theory of Natural Selection 10
The Birth of Experimental Psychology 13
Hermann Ebbinghaus and Human Memory Experiments 13
Ivan Pavlov's Conditioning Studies 15
Edward Thorndike and the Law of Effect 16
The Reign of Behaviorism 18
John Watson's Behaviorism 18
Clark Hull and Mathematical Models of Learning 20
B F Skinner's Radical Behaviorism 21
The Neo-Behaviorism of Edward Tolman 22
The Cognitive Approach 24
W K Estes and Mathematical Psychology 24
Gordon Bower: Learning by Insight 26
George Miller and Information Theory 27
The Connectionist Models of David Rumelhart 29
Synthesis 31
35 CHAPTER 2 The Neuroscience of Learning and Memory
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Top Five Tips for Faster
Forgetting 36
Structural Properties of Nervous Systems 36
What Brains Are Like 37
The Fluman Brain 38
Comparative Neuroanatomy 39
Neurons 41
Observing Learning-Related Changes in Brain Structure 42
Structural Neuroimaging in Humans 42
Effects of Learning 44
Functional Properties of Learning and Memory Systems 45
What Brains Do 46
Incoming Stimuli: Sensory Pathways into the Brain 47
Outgoing Responses: Motor Control 48
The Synapse: Where Neurons Connect 49
Observing Learning-Related Changes in Brain Function 51
Functional Neuroimaging and Electroencephalography 52
Recording from Neurons 55
Manipulating Nervous System Activity 56
Taking a Hand in Brain Function 57
Effects of Brain Injuries 57
Electromagnetic Control of Neurons 59
Chemical Control of Brain States 61
Causing Changes in Neural Connections 62
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Can a Pill Improve
Your Memory? 63
Hebbian Learning 63
Long-Term Potentiation and Long-Term Depression 64
Synthesis 67
Learning Module
71 CHAPTER 3 Habituation, Sensitization,
and Familiarization
Behavioral Processes 72
Recognizing and Responding to Repetition 73
The Process of Habituation 73
Stimulus Specificity and Dishabituation 75
Factors Influencing the Rate and Duration of Habituation 76
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Sex on the Beach 77
The Process of Sensitization 78
Dual Process Theory 80
Opponent Process Theory 81
The What and Where of Exposure-Based Learning 82
Novel Object Recognition 82
Priming 83
Perceptual Learning 84
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Unconscious Racial Bias 86
Spatial Learning 88
Brain Substrates 91
An Invertebrate Model System 92
Habituation in Sea Hares 92
Sensitization in Sea Hares 94
Perceptual Learning and Cortical Plasticity 96
Cortical Plasticity during Development 98
Cortical Changes in Adults after Exposure 99
Temporal Lobe Involvement in Spatial Learning and Familiarity 101
Identifying Places 102
Recognizing Familiar Objects 104
Clinical Perspectives 105
Rehabilitation after Stroke: Habituation Gone Awry 106
Sensitization to Stress in Anxiety and Depression 107
Human-Machine Interfaces: Regaining Sensory Modalities through
Perceptual Learning 108
Synthesis 110
115 CHAPTER 4 Classical Conditioning
Behavioral Processes 117
Basic Concepts of Classical Conditioning 117
How Pavlov Conditioned Dogs to Salivate 117
Appetitive Conditioning 119
Aversive Conditioning 119
Understanding the Conditioned Response 121
Mammalian Conditioning of Motor Reflexes: Eyeblink Conditioning 121
Learning a New Association 124
Refining the Basic Principles 125
Conditioned Compensatory Responses 125
What Cues Can Be CSs or USs? 126
Extinguishing an Old Association 127
Compound Conditioning and Overshadowing 128
Error Correction and the Modulation of US Processing 129
The Informational Value of Cues 129
Kamin's Blocking Effect 130
The Rescorla-Wagner Model of Conditioning 132
Error-Correction Learning 132
Associative Weights and Compound Conditioning 134
Using the Rescorla-Wagner Model to Explain Blocking 134
Influence of the Rescorla-Wagner Model 135
Error Correction in Human Category Learning 136
Cue-Outcome Contingency and Judgments of Causality 139
Stimulus Attention and the Modulation of CS Processing 140
An Attentional Approach to Stimulus Selection 141
An Attentional Explanation of Latent Inhibition 142
Other Determinants of Conditioning 143
Timing 144
Associative Bias and Ecological Constraints 145
Brain Substrates 147
Mammalian Conditioning of Motor Reflexes 147
Electrophysiological Recording in the Cerebellum 149
Brain Stimulation as a Substitute for Behavioral Training 150
Impaired Conditioning Following Cerebellar Damage 151
Error Correction through Inhibitory Feedback 152
The Hippocampus in CS Modulation 153
Invertebrates and the Cellular Basis of Learning 155
Presynaptic versus Postsynaptic Changes during Learning 157
Long-Term Structural Changes and the Creation of New Synapses 157
Clinical Perspectives 159
Classical Conditioning in Tolerance to Addictive Drugs 159
Reducing Medication through Classical Conditioning 161
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Extinguishing a Drug
Habit 162
Synthesis 163
167 CHAPTER 5 Operant Conditioning
Behavioral Processes 168
The Discovery of Operant Conditioning 168
Classical versus Operant Conditioning 169
Free-Operant Learning 170
Components of the Learned Association 172
Discriminative Stimuli 172
Responses 173
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Bomb-Detecting Dogs 175
Reinforcers 175
Punishers 177
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: The Problem with
Punishment 180
Putting It All Together: Building the S^- R^O Association 180
Timing Affects Learning 180
Outcomes Can Be Added or Subtracted 181
Reinforcement Need Not Follow Every Response 184
Choice Behavior 188
Variable-Interval Schedules and the Matching Law 188
Behavioral Economics and the Bliss Point 189
The Premack Principle: Responses as Reinforcers 190
Brain Substrates 192
The Dorsal Striatum and Stimulus-Response (S^- R) Learning 193
The Orbitofrontal Cortex and Learning to Predict Outcomes 194
Mechanisms of Reinforcement Signaling in the Brain 195
Wanting and Liking in the Brain 195
Dopamine: How the Brain Signals Wanting? 196
Endogenous Opioids: How the Brain Signals Liking? 199
How Do Wanting and Liking Interact? 200
Punishment Signaling in the Brain 200
Clinical Perspectives 202
Drug Addiction 203
Behavioral Addiction 204
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Addicted to Love? 206
Treatments for Addiction 206
Synthesis 208
213 CHAPTER 6 Generalization, Discrimination Learning,
and Concept Formation
Behavioral Processes 214
Generalization: When Similar Stimuli Predict Similar Outcomes 215
Generalization as a Search for Similar Consequences 216
The Challenge of Incorporating Similarity into Learning Models 217
Shared Elements and Distributed Representations 220
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: How Does Amazon com
Know What You Want to Buy Next? 220
Discrimination Learning and Stimulus Control: When Similar Stimuli
Predict Different Outcomes 224
Discrimination Learning and Learned Specificity 225
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Sleep Better Through
Stimulus Control 225
Peak Shifts in Generalization 227
Errorless Discrimination Learning and Easy-to-Hard Transfer 229
Beyond Similarity: When Dissimilar Stimuli Predict the Same
Outcome 230
Sensory Preconditioning: Co-occurrence and Stimulus Generalization 231
Acquired Equivalence: Novel Similar Predictions Based on Prior Similar
Consequences 232
Negative Patterning: When the Whole Means Something Different
than the Parts 233
Concept Formation, Category Learning, and Prototypes 237
Emergence of Concepts Through Discrimination Learning 238
Configural Learning in Categorization 238
Prototypes and the Structure of Natural Categories 241
Generalization Errors Based on Faulty Reasoning about Categories 241
Brain Substrates 243
Cortical Representations and Generalization 245
Cortical Representations of Sensory Stimuli 245
Shared-Elements Models of Receptive Fields 246
Topographic Organization in Generalization 248
Plasticity of Cortical Representations 249
Generalization and the Hippocampal Region 251
Effect of Damage to the Hippocampal Region 251
Modeling the Role of the Hippocampus in Adaptive Representations 253
Clinical Perspectives 254
Generalization Deficits in Schizophrenia 254
Acquired Equivalence in Schizophrenia 255
Other Studies of Transfer Generalization in Schizophrenia 257
Stereotypes, Discrimination, and Racism in Generalizations about
Other People 258
Synthesis 263
267 CHAPTER 7 Episodic and Semantic Memory
Behavioral Processes 268
Features of Episodic and Semantic Memories 269
What Distinguishes Episodic from Semantic Memory? 270
Which Comes First, Episodic or Semantic Memory? 271
Can Nonhumans Have Episodic and Semantic Memory? 272
Encoding New Memories 274
Mere Exposure to Information Does Not Guarantee Memory 274
Memory Is Better for Information That Relates to Prior Knowledge 275
Deeper Processing at Encoding Improves Recognition Later 276
Retrieving Existing Memories 276
Memory Retrieval Is Better When Study and Test Conditions Match 277
More Cues Mean Better Recall 278
Struggling (and Even Failing) to Remember Can Improve Memory 278
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Total Recall! The Truth about
Extraordinary Memorizers 279
When Memory Fails 280
Forgetting 280
Interference 281
Source Monitoring 282
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Remembering Computer
Passwords 283
False Memory 284
Memory Consolidation and Reconsolidation 286
Metamemory 288
Brain Substrates 290
Neuronal Networks for Semantic Memory 290
The Medial Temporal Lobes in Memory Storage 292
The Hippocampus Is Critical for Forming New Episodic Memory 292
Is the Hippocampus Critical for Forming New Semantic Memory? 294
Functional Neuroimaging of the Healthy Hippocampal Region 294
The Hippocampus and Cortex Interact during Memory Consolidation 296
The Frontal Cortex in Memory Storage and Retrieval 298
Subcortical Structures Involved in Episodic and Semantic Memory 300
The Basal Forebrain May Help Determine What the Hippocampus Stores 300
The Diencephalon May Help Guide Consolidation 301
Clinical Perspectives 302
Transient Global Amnesia 302
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: The Cost of Concussion 303
Functional Amnesia 304
Synthesis 307
311 CHAPTER 8 Skill Memory
Behavioral Processes 312
Features of Skill Memories 312
How Different Are Cognitive from Perceptual-Motor Skill Memories? 313
Which Comes First, Cognitive or Perceptual-Motor Skill Memory? 315
Can Nonhumans Have Cognitive Skill Memories? 315
Encoding New Memories 316
More Repetition Does Not Guarantee Improvement 316
Timing and Sequencing of Practice Matters 319
Skill Memories Are Often Formed Unconsciously 320
Expertise Requires Extensive Practice 322
Talent Takes Time to Blossom 325
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Are Some Cognitive Skills
Easier for Men Than Women? 327
Retrieving Existing Memories 327
When Memory Fails 329
Brain Substrates 331
The Basal Ganglia and Skill Learning 332
Learning Deficits after Lesions 333
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Are Video Games Good
for the Brain? 335
Neural Activity During Perceptual-Motor Skill Learning 335
Brain Activity During Cognitive Skill Learning 336
Cortical Representations of Skills 337
Cortical Expansion 338
Are Skill Memories Stored in the Cerebral Cortex? 339
The Cerebellum and Timing 341
Clinical Perspectives 344
Parkinson's Disease 345
Fluman-Machine Interfaces: Learning to Consciously Control
Artificial Limbs 346
Synthesis 347
351 CHAPTER 9 Working Memory and Cognitive Control
Behavioral Processes 352
Transient Memories 353
Sensory Memory 353
Short-Term Memory 354
Working Memory 356
Baddeley's Working-Memory Model 356
The Phonological Loop 357
The Visuospatial Sketchpad 358
Is Working Memory a Place or a State? 360
Cognitive Control 361
Controlled Updating of Short-Term Memory Buffers 363
Setting Goals and Planning 365
Task Switching 367
Stimulus Selection and Response Inhibition 367
Are Working Memory and Cognitive Control the Keys to Intelligence? 369
Brain Substrates 371
The Frontal Lobes and Consequences of Frontal-Lobe Damage 371
Behavior Changes Following Frontal-Lobe Damage 372
Deficits in Working Memory Following Frontal-Lobe Damage 373
Divisions of the Prefrontal Cortex (PFC) 374
Frontal Brain Activity during Working-Memory Tasks 375
Mapping Executive Processing and Working Memory onto PFC Anatomy 378
Maintenance (Rehearsal) versus Manipulation (Cognitive Control) 378
Visuospatial and Phonological-Verbal Working Memory 380
The Neural Bases of State-Based Accounts of Working Memory 381
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Give Your Working Memory
a Break 382
Goal Abstraction and Frontal-Lobe Organization 382
Prefrontal Control of Long-Term Declarative Memory 384
Clinical Perspectives 387
The Prefrontal Cortex in Schizophrenia 387
Inefficient Prefrontal Cortical Systems in Schizophrenia 388
Dopamine and the Genetics of Schizophrenia 388
Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder 389
Synthesis 391
Integrative Topics Module
395 CHAPTER 10 Emotional Influences on Learning
and Memory
Behavioral Processes 396
What Is Emotion? 396
Autonomic Arousal and the Fight-or-Flight Response 397
Theories of Emotion 398
Assessing Emotion in Nonhuman Animals 402
Fear Responses Across Species 402
Beyond Fear 404
Learning Emotional Responses: Focus on Fear 404
Conditioned Emotional Responses: Learning to Predict Danger 404
Conditioned Escape: Learning to Get Away from Danger 406
Conditioned Avoidance: Learning to Avoid Danger Altogether 406
Learned Flelplessness 408
Effect of Emotions on Memory Storage and Retrieval 409
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Immunizing against
Learned Helplessness 409
Emotion and Encoding of Memories 410
Emotion and Retrieval of Memories 410
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Truth or Consequences 414
Brain Substrates 415
The Amygdala: A Central Processing Station for Emotions 416
The Central Nucleus: Expressing Emotional Responses 416
Two Pathways for Emotional Learning in the Amygdala 418
The Amygdala and Episodic Memory Storage 420
The Role of Stress Hormones 421
Retrieval and Reconsolidation 423
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: A Little Stress Is a Good
Thing 423
Encoding Emotional Contexts in the Hippocampus 425
Feelings and the Frontal Lobes 426
Clinical Perspectives 428
Phobias 428
What Causes Phobias? 429
Treating Phobias 430
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder 431
Causes and Treatment of PTSD 431
Vulnerability to PTSD 432
Synthesis 435
439 CHAPTER 11 Social Learning and Memory
Behavioral Processes 440
Copying What Is Seen 441
Social Learning Theory 442
Studies of True Imitation: Copying Actions 443
Studies of Emulation: Copying Goals 445
Reproducing Actions Without Copying 445
Copying What Is Heard 449
Vocal Imitation 449
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Karaoke 450
Learning to Vocalize Without Imitating 450
Social Transmission of Information 452
Learning Through Social Conformity 453
Effects of Media on Behavior 456
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Learning What to Like from
Super Bowl Ads 459
Brain Substrates 459
Mirror Neurons 460
Song Learning in Bird Brains 461
Hippocampal Encoding of Socially Transmitted Food Preferences 463
Clinical Perspectives 464
Autism Spectrum Disorder 464
Imitative Deficits after Stroke 467
Synthesis 468
473 CHAPTER 12 Development and Aging
Behavioral Processes 474
The Developing Memory: Infancy through Childhood 474
Learning before Birth 474
Conditioning and Skill Learning in Young Children 476
Development of Episodic and Semantic Memory 477
Sensitive Periods for Early Learning 479
Imprinting 479
Sensitive Periods for Vision and Birdsong 480
Language Learning 480
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Teaching Babies Signs
before Speech 482
Adolescence: Crossing from Childhood into Adulthood 483
Maturation of Working Memory 483
Male-Female Differences in Learning and Memory 484
The Aging Memory: Adulthood through Old Age 485
Working Memory in Aging Adults 486
Conditioning and Skill Learning in Aging Adults 486
Episodic and Semantic Memory: Old Memories Fare Better Than New
Learning 487
Metamemory and Aging 488
Brain Substrates 489
The Genetic Basis of Learning and Memory 489
Genetic Variation and Individual Differences in Learning Abilities 489
Selective Breeding and Twin Studies 490
Epigenetics 492
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Can Exposure to Classical
Music Make Babies Smarter? 493
Neurons and Synapses in the Developing Brain 494
Early Overproduction of Neurons 494
Pruning of Synapses 494
Sensitive Periods for Neuronal Wiring 495
Brain Changes in Adolescence 496
Profound Changes in Prefrontal Cortex 496
Effects of Sex Plormones on Brain Organization 497
The Brain from Adulthood to Old Age 499
Localized Neuron and Synapse Loss 499
Loss of Synaptic Stability 501
Adult Neurogenesis: New Neurons for Old Brains? 503
Clinical Perspectives 505
Down Syndrome 505
Brain Abnormalities and Memory Impairments in Down Syndrome 506
Animal Models of Down Syndrome 507
Alzheimer's Disease 507
Progressive Memory Loss and Cognitive Deterioration 508
Plaques and Tangles in the Brain 508
Diagnosing and Treating Alzheimer's Disease 511
Genetic Basis of Alzheimer's Disease 512
Learning and Memory in Everyday Life: Can Mental Exercise Protect
against Alzheimer's Disease? 513
A Connection between Down Syndrome and Alzheimer's Disease 513
Synthesis 515
Answers to Test Your Knowledge, Quiz Yourself,
and Concept Check A-1
Glossary G-1
References R-1
Name Index NI-1 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Gluck, Mark A. Mercado, Eduardo Myers, Catherine E. |
author_GND | (DE-588)137909047 (DE-588)137908881 (DE-588)137908970 |
author_facet | Gluck, Mark A. Mercado, Eduardo Myers, Catherine E. |
author_role | aut aut aut |
author_sort | Gluck, Mark A. |
author_variant | m a g ma mag e m em c e m ce cem |
building | Verbundindex |
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callnumber-raw | BF318 QP408 |
callnumber-search | BF318 QP408 |
callnumber-sort | BF 3318 |
callnumber-subject | BF - Psychology |
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ctrlnum | (OCoLC)957581224 (DE-599)BVBBV043575635 |
dewey-full | 153.1 |
dewey-hundreds | 100 - Philosophy & psychology |
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edition | Third edition |
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genre | 1\p (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content |
genre_facet | Lehrbuch |
id | DE-604.BV043575635 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-10-02T14:00:32Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781464105937 9781319154059 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-028990391 |
oclc_num | 957581224 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-91 DE-BY-TUM DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-20 DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-91 DE-BY-TUM DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-20 DE-11 |
physical | xxv, 516, 13, 10, 49, 14, 10 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme (farbig) |
publishDate | 2016 |
publishDateSearch | 2016 |
publishDateSort | 2016 |
publisher | Worth Publishers, Macmillan Learning |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Gluck, Mark A. Verfasser (DE-588)137909047 aut Learning and memory from brain to behavior Mark A. Gluck (Rutgers University, Newark), Eduardo Mercado (University at Buffalo, The State University of New York), Catherine E. Myers (Department of Veterans Affairs, VA New Jersey Health Care System, and Rutgers University, New Jersey Medical School) Third edition New York Worth Publishers, Macmillan Learning [2016] © 2016 xxv, 516, 13, 10, 49, 14, 10 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme (farbig) txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke Learning Physiological aspects Learning, Psychology of Memory Physiological aspects Lernpsychologie (DE-588)4074166-7 gnd rswk-swf Gedächtnis (DE-588)4019614-8 gnd rswk-swf Lernen (DE-588)4035408-8 gnd rswk-swf 1\p (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Lernen (DE-588)4035408-8 s Gedächtnis (DE-588)4019614-8 s DE-604 Lernpsychologie (DE-588)4074166-7 s 2\p DE-604 Mercado, Eduardo Verfasser (DE-588)137908881 aut Myers, Catherine E. Verfasser (DE-588)137908970 aut HEBIS Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028990391&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Gluck, Mark A. Mercado, Eduardo Myers, Catherine E. Learning and memory from brain to behavior Learning Physiological aspects Learning, Psychology of Memory Physiological aspects Lernpsychologie (DE-588)4074166-7 gnd Gedächtnis (DE-588)4019614-8 gnd Lernen (DE-588)4035408-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4074166-7 (DE-588)4019614-8 (DE-588)4035408-8 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | Learning and memory from brain to behavior |
title_auth | Learning and memory from brain to behavior |
title_exact_search | Learning and memory from brain to behavior |
title_full | Learning and memory from brain to behavior Mark A. Gluck (Rutgers University, Newark), Eduardo Mercado (University at Buffalo, The State University of New York), Catherine E. Myers (Department of Veterans Affairs, VA New Jersey Health Care System, and Rutgers University, New Jersey Medical School) |
title_fullStr | Learning and memory from brain to behavior Mark A. Gluck (Rutgers University, Newark), Eduardo Mercado (University at Buffalo, The State University of New York), Catherine E. Myers (Department of Veterans Affairs, VA New Jersey Health Care System, and Rutgers University, New Jersey Medical School) |
title_full_unstemmed | Learning and memory from brain to behavior Mark A. Gluck (Rutgers University, Newark), Eduardo Mercado (University at Buffalo, The State University of New York), Catherine E. Myers (Department of Veterans Affairs, VA New Jersey Health Care System, and Rutgers University, New Jersey Medical School) |
title_short | Learning and memory |
title_sort | learning and memory from brain to behavior |
title_sub | from brain to behavior |
topic | Learning Physiological aspects Learning, Psychology of Memory Physiological aspects Lernpsychologie (DE-588)4074166-7 gnd Gedächtnis (DE-588)4019614-8 gnd Lernen (DE-588)4035408-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Learning Physiological aspects Learning, Psychology of Memory Physiological aspects Lernpsychologie Gedächtnis Lernen Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028990391&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT gluckmarka learningandmemoryfrombraintobehavior AT mercadoeduardo learningandmemoryfrombraintobehavior AT myerscatherinee learningandmemoryfrombraintobehavior |