When the memory retrieval process breaks down, people wonder
exactly why and how such a thing occurs. In many cases, failed
retrieval is accompanied by a tip-of-the-tongue state, a feeling
that an unretrieved item is stored in memory. Tip-of-the-tongue
states stand at the crossroads of several research traditions
within cognitive science. Some research focuses on the nature of
the retrieval failure. Other research tries to determine what
tip-of-the-tongue states can tell us about the organization of
lexical memory that is, what aspects of a word we can recall when
we are otherwise unable to do so. Still other research focuses on
the nature of the experience of a tip-of-the-tongue state. Each of
these perspectives is represented in this book, which presents the
best theoretical and empirical work on these subjects. Much of the
work is cross-disciplinary, but what unifies the topics in this
book is that they concern strong phenomenological states of knowing
that are not accompanied by recall or recognition of the desired
information."
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