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— Wikipedian ♀ — | |
Name | Mary Kate Leahy |
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Current location | Dayton, OH |
Education and employment | |
Occupation | Student |
Education | University of Dayton |
Contact info | |
leahy.marykate@gmail.com |
Memento Mori (the short story)
A journal article: Aggleton, J.P. (2008). Understanding anterograde amnesia: Disconnections and hidden lesions. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 61(10), 1441-1471.
Scholarly URL: Cantu, R. (2001, July-Septe). Retrieved from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC155413/
A book: Ebbinghaus, H. (1913). Memory: A contribution to experimental psychology. Teachers College, Columbia University.
A book: Hothersall, D. (1984). History of Psychology. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
A journal article: Nielsen, J. M. (1954). Anterograde amnesia. Bulletin of the Los Angeles Neurological Society, 19, 125-127.
OUTLINE I. History of psychology and memory a. The Wikipedia article does not discuss the history of memory in psychology and that it is something I hope to add to the article in the background section or make my own subtitle. II. Anterograde amnesia a. Discuss what anterograde amnesia is b. Talk about how traumatic events affect anterograde amnesia like in the story and movie
Three new references include:
A journal article:
Aggleton, J.P. (2008). Understanding anterograde amnesia: Disconnections and hidden lesions. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 61(10), 1441-1471.
A book:
Hothersall, D. (1984). History of Psychology. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
A journal article:
Nielsen, J. M. (1954). Anterograde amnesia. Bulletin of the Los Angeles Neurological Society, 19, 125-127.
This user is a psychologist. |
This user is a member of APS-Wikipedia Initiative. |
Hi Mary Kate, This is Dr. D. I have evaluate the articles you have selected and these are my reactions that follow. In short, most will not work. However, I think the article, Memento Mori, will. See my comments below and let me know what you think and what you decide. Thanks, Dr. d. Kohlberg's stages of moral development—quite a lot done with this; you may have difficulty finding enough to add. Word superiority effect—already requested by a student earlier Oliver Zangwill—too recent to have much of relationship to earlier history of psychology Negativity effect—very recent. Not what we are looking for in relation to the history of psychology Memento Mori (short story)—this could be interesting because there is nothing there relating the movie/story to early investigations of memory in the history of psychology. If you plan to do this, it would be great! WebFlower1 (talk) 00:59, 2 March 2012 (UTC)