1: Levels of Processing: Development of an idea
2: Processing views of remembering - A brief historical survey
3: Remembering: A personal view
4: Encoding and encoding-retrieval interactions
5: Retrieval Processes
6: From short-term memory to working memory: Evolution of a
construct
7: Aging I: Early studies and theoretical views
8: Aging II: Later empirical work
9: Neuroimaging Studies
10: Final Reflections and Future Trends
Fergus I. M. Craik obtained his B.Sc. from the University of
Edinburgh in 1960, and his PhD in psychology from the University of
Liverpool in 1965. He was on the faculty of Birkbeck College,
University of London from 1965-1971 before moving to the University
of Toronto in 1971, where he was a faculty member until he retired
in 2000. He chaired the Department of Psychology at Toronto from
1985-1990 and was appointed University Professor in 1997. He has
been
associated with the Rotman Research Institute of Baycrest in
Toronto since 1988, and was appointed Senior Scientist at that
Institute in 2000; he retired from the Institute in 2018. Craik's
research work
involves the experimental study of human memory processes; other
interests are cognitive aging, and the effects of bilingualism on
cognitive functions in health and disease. Craik held the Glassman
Chair in Neuropsychology and Aging from 1996 - 2000; he has
received honorary doctorates from the Universities of Bordeaux,
Saarland and Edinburgh.
For all memory researchers this work is a treasure as it contains
detailed accounts of key experiments in the history of memory
research...selected by an author who has been instrumental in
formulating and establishing the view that memory is the
physiological process of remembering and not a part of the
brain.
*K.S. Millar, CHOICE Connect, Vol. 59 No. 8*
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