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Among the most prolifically treated topics in grammaticalization
approaches to semantic change is the development of periphrastic
past constructions, particularly the 'have'-perfects in Romance and
other Indo-European languages. This issue is an intriguing one for
language researchers since it offers the opportunity to observe
language change both as an incipient process that involves the
transition of some lexical element into a more 'grammatical' role
as well as a process of semantic generalization without the
necessity of overt structural reorganization. This book explores
the development of the periphrastic past (or preterito perfecto
compuesto) in Spanish, with special attention to its
cross-dialectal distribution vis-a-vis the simple perfective past
(or preterito), and assumes a multi-disciplinary perspective,
drawing on insights from semantic and pragmatic as well as
sociolinguistic approaches to language change. The resulting
proposals, developed on the basis of spoken language data from
cross-dialectal samples of Spanish, address the nature of language
change and the variable forces that shape it.
In this useful text, Mark L. Howe presents the most complete
book-length exegesis of the research and theory concerning the
emergence and development of declarative, long-term memory from
birth through early adolescence. The book also contains the first
presentation of Howe's theory that memory is an adaptive mechanism
that is used to guide the development and survival of the organism
in an initially novel, yet changing environment.
The book is divided into four parts: In the first part, Howe
discusses why memory development is important; in the second, he
discusses infantile amnesia and autobiographical memory; in the
third part, Howe explores a series of key factors that have an
impact on early memory development--distinctiveness, emotion,
stress, and maltreatment; and finally, he gives a detailed
presentation of the theory of memory as an adaptation, and applies
results to real-world problems.
In addition to reviewing the basic-science research on both humans
and nonhuman animals, Howe devotes a significant portion of the
book to clinical and forensic topics, including the roles of stress
and trauma in memory development, the development of false
recollection, memory for traumatic experiences, the effects of
depression, PTSD, and dissociation on early memory development, and
nonhuman animal research on the nature of infantile amnesia. In
bringing together this diverse-yet-influential body of literature,
Howe presents a valuable resource for anyone interested in research
on memory.
Allison Avery loves to win. After acing every academic challenge
she's come up against, she's finally been accepted into her dream
Ph.D. program at Claymore University, studying medieval literature
under a professor she's admired for years. Sure, grad school isn't
easy - the classes are intense, her best friend is drifting away,
and her students would rather pull all-nighters than discuss The
Knight's Tale - but she's got this. Until she discovers her
ex-boyfriend has also been accepted. Colin Benjamin might be the
only person who loves winning more than Allison does, and when
they're both assigned to TA for the same professor, the game is on.
What starts as a personal battle of wits (and lit) turns into
all-out war when their professor announces a career-changing
research trip opportunity - with one spot to fill. Competing with
Colin is as natural as breathing, and after he shattered her heart
two years ago, Allison refuses to let him come out on top. But when
a family emergency and a late night road trip - plus a very sexy
game of Scrabble - throw them together for a weekend, she starts to
wonder if they could be stronger on the same team. And if they fall
for each other all over again, Allison will have to choose between
a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and what could be a
twice-in-a-lifetime love.
Cognitive therapy is fast becoming one of the more popular and well
respected forms of psychotherapy. In both research and clinical
practice, several advantages of cognitive therapy have been
identified. Cognitive therapy is structured enough to provide a
therapeutic framework for clinicians, as well as a theoretical
framework for clinical researchers, yet flexible enough to address
an individual's problems in a highly idio syncratic manner.
Accompanying the popularity of cognitive therapy is the expansion
of its application beyond the areas in which it was initially
developed and validated (the "traditional" areas of depression and
anx iety) to areas where validation has not yet occurred (the
"nontraditional" areas). We strongly believe that such broadening
of cognitive therapy should be encouraged, but that conceptual
models to guide the therapist and researcher in these areas should
be explicated. It is the purpose of this text to provide a
conceptual framework for dealing with select, nontraditional
populations. The idea and motivation for this text develops from a
cognitive therapy interest group in Toronto. All of the authors
contributing to this text are involved in this group. We represent
a group of cognitive thera pists functioning in a variety of
diverse settings, including clinical re search units, general
hospital settings, private or public rehabilitation centers, and
private practices. Thus, the diversity of referrals for cogni tive
therapy within our group is great."
This book highlights both recent innovations in professional health
curricula and continuing education and interventions aimed at
improving student attitudes towards geriatrics and aging. The
contributors cover areas including simulation, online training, and
standardized patients for evaluation, but also emphasize the
important end-result of clinical training: to take care of real
older adults outside the classroom. Importantly, this underscores
the development of powerful learning experiences of students by
sensitizing them to the frameworks of palliative care, cancer care,
sexuality, and aging research, all of which serves as a powerful
catalyst for creating a 'pipeline' of students who embrace aging as
a central theme of their future work. As increased training in
geriatrics is required to attune the health care workforce to the
needs of older adults, this book will be of interest to those
seeking to create a more age-friendly healthcare curriculum. This
book was originally published as a special issue of the Gerontology
& Geriatrics Education journal.
This Norton Critical Edition includes: Marie Borroff's acclaimed
verse translation, marginal glosses and explanatory footnotes.
Laura L. Howes's full introduction along with Borroff's seminal
essay, "The Metrical Forms" as well as her "Translator's Note". For
comparative study and classroom discussion, two French tales of Sir
Gawain, four selections from the original Middle English poem and a
passage from the Alliterative Morte Arthure. Nine critical essays
on the poem's central themes, four of them new to the Second
Edition. A chronology and a selected bibliography. About the Series
Read by more than 12 million students over fifty-five years, Norton
Critical Editions set the standard for apparatus that is right for
undergraduate readers. The three-part format-annotated text,
contexts and criticism-helps students to better understand, analyse
and appreciate the literature, while opening a wide range of
teaching possibilities for instructors. Whether in print or in
digital format, Norton Critical Editions provide all the resources
students need.
This book highlights both recent innovations in professional health
curricula and continuing education and interventions aimed at
improving student attitudes towards geriatrics and aging. The
contributors cover areas including simulation, online training, and
standardized patients for evaluation, but also emphasize the
important end-result of clinical training: to take care of real
older adults outside the classroom. Importantly, this underscores
the development of powerful learning experiences of students by
sensitizing them to the frameworks of palliative care, cancer care,
sexuality, and aging research, all of which serves as a powerful
catalyst for creating a 'pipeline' of students who embrace aging as
a central theme of their future work. As increased training in
geriatrics is required to attune the health care workforce to the
needs of older adults, this book will be of interest to those
seeking to create a more age-friendly healthcare curriculum. This
book was originally published as a special issue of the Gerontology
& Geriatrics Education journal.
Increasingly, scholars from many disciplines have begun to
incorporate various modalities from the humanities and arts -
novels, films, artwork, and other forms of expression - to help
connect students with the experience of aging in deeply meaningful
and person-centered ways. This collection examines how these
approaches are incorporated into gerontology and geriatrics
education. Rather than focusing solely on measurable outcomes, such
as changes in learning over time - which is the purview of
empirical pedagogy - chapters focus on strategies for successfully
incorporating a specific work into the classroom, descriptions of
humanities and/or arts exercises with students or older adults, and
other ways that explore how the humanities and arts can be applied
successfully and meaningfully in educational settings. This book
was originally published as a special issue of Geronotology &
Geriatrics Education.
Memory is often the primary evidence in the courtroom, yet
unfortunately this evidence may not be fit for purpose. This is
because memory is both fallible and malleable; it is possible to
forget and also to falsely remember things which never happened.
The legal system has been slow to adapt to scientific findings
about memory even though such findings have implications for the
use of memory as evidence, not only in the case of eyewitness
testimony, but also for how jurors, barristers, and judges weigh
evidence. Memory and Miscarriages of Justice provides an
authoritative look at the role of memory in law and highlights the
common misunderstandings surrounding it while bringing the modern
scientific understanding of memory to the forefront. Drawing on the
latest research, this book examines cases where memory has played a
role in miscarriages of justice and makes recommendations from the
science of memory to support the future of memory evidence in the
legal system. Appealing to undergraduate and postgraduate students
of psychology and law, memory experts, and legal professionals,
this book provides an insightful and global view of the use of
memory within the legal system.
Cognitive therapy is fast becoming one of the more popular and well
respected forms of psychotherapy. In both research and clinical
practice, several advantages of cognitive therapy have been
identified. Cognitive therapy is structured enough to provide a
therapeutic framework for clinicians, as well as a theoretical
framework for clinical researchers, yet flexible enough to address
an individual's problems in a highly idio syncratic manner.
Accompanying the popularity of cognitive therapy is the expansion
of its application beyond the areas in which it was initially
developed and validated (the "traditional" areas of depression and
anx iety) to areas where validation has not yet occurred (the
"nontraditional" areas). We strongly believe that such broadening
of cognitive therapy should be encouraged, but that conceptual
models to guide the therapist and researcher in these areas should
be explicated. It is the purpose of this text to provide a
conceptual framework for dealing with select, nontraditional
populations. The idea and motivation for this text develops from a
cognitive therapy interest group in Toronto. All of the authors
contributing to this text are involved in this group. We represent
a group of cognitive thera pists functioning in a variety of
diverse settings, including clinical re search units, general
hospital settings, private or public rehabilitation centers, and
private practices. Thus, the diversity of referrals for cogni tive
therapy within our group is great."
This book considers the role of cross-dialectal data in our
understanding of linguistic variability, focusing on the widely
discussed dichotomy between past tense forms and relying primarily
on spoken language data from different varieties of Spanish.
It is a truism that as we age there are a number of underlying
physiological changes conspiring to alter our level of behavioral
and cognitive function ing. Despite the inherent interrelatedness
of these behavioral and cognitive changes, all too often the papers
we read confine themselves to specific, isolated components of the
developing process. Although exceptions nat urally exist, we
believe that these exceptions should become rule. Although an
integrated approach is important in all areas of adult devel
opment, it is perhaps particularly germane in the study of atypical
aging. Here, changes in overall functioning can occur in rapid
succession, with the synchrony of decline between different
subprocesses making it difficult to factor changes in one process
from changes in another. For example, because changes in cognitive
functioning co-occur with other dramatic changes in (motoric)
response capacities, it is unclear how one can effec tively study
changes in the ability to cognize independent of changes in the
very mechanisms (ability to execute motor sequences) so often used
to index cognitive performance."
For some time now, the study of cognitive development has been far
and away the most active discipline within developmental
psychology. Although there would be much disagreement as to the
exact proportion of papers published in developmental journals that
could be considered cognitive, 50% seems like a conservative
estimate. Hence, a series of scholarly books devoted to work in
cognitive development is especially appropriate at this time. The
Springer Series in Cognitive Developmemt contains two basic types
of books, namely, edited collections of original chapters by
several authors, and original volumes written by one author or a
small group of authors. The flagship for the Springer Series is a
serial publication of the "advances" type, carrying the subtitle
Progress in Cognitive Development Research. Each volume in the
Progress sequence is strongly thematic, in that it is limited to
some well defined domain of cognitive-developmental research (e.
g., logical and math ematical development, development of
learning). All Progress volumes will be edited collections. Editors
of such collections, upon consultation with the Series Editor, may
elect to have their books published either as contributions to the
Progress sequence or as separate volumes. All books written by one
author or a small group of authors are being published as separate
volumes within the series. A fairly broad definition of cognitive
development is being used in the selection of books for this
series."
Emerging Themes in Cognitive Development, Volumes I and II offer
the full spectrum of current knowledge and research trends in
cognitive developmental psychology. The first volume provides a
foundation by describing key discoveries in new areas of research
and by thoroughly examining fundamental aspects of the field,
including several demonstrations of formal modeling; the gains in
prediction and precision that can be won by such mathematical
analyses are the hallmark of cognitive development as a maturing
science. The second volume traces the development of cognitive
competence - denoting a change or increment in cognitive
proficiency, understanding, or mastery - and includes analyses of
innovative and previously unpublished studies. The primary
challenge issued by many of the authors in this volume is to ensure
the incorporation of new knowledge into educational practices.
These volumes, which are milestones in cognitive developmental
psychology, interest every researcher in the field.
Emerging Themes in Cognitive Development presents two volumes of
the newest research and theory in cognitive development available
at the outset of the 1990s. These ideas are firmly rooted in
research from the 1980s and, in some sense, these volumes represent
a culmination of that research and of even earlier work.
Nevertheless, these volumes are offered as catalysts more than
summaries, because each presents the freshest and most recently
gathered data of many scientists whose insights have had an
important impact on the field. The latest ideas of these
researchers will, in some cases, immediately prove to be dominant
themes of research and theory. In other cases, of course, it will
take longer for the concepts presented to capture the imagination
of students and colleagues who are still invested in meritori ous
research on other themes. In either case, the syntheses and innova
tions proposed are not likely to escape the careful study of the
serious scholar, and it is to such scholars that these volumes are
dedicated."
For a number of decades now the study of children's memory
development, with few exceptions, has been synonymous with the
development of pro cesses that lead to the initial encoding and
immediate retention of informa tion. Although there is little doubt
that the study of such acquisition pro cesses is central to
understanding memory development, the long-term retention of
previously encoded information represents at least as important a
component of children's memory. Indeed, as both students of memory
development and educators, our interest is in the maintenance and
utiliza tion of knowledge over considerable periods of time, not
just in the immedi ate (e. g., classroom) context. Clearly, then,
without an understanding of how recently acquired information is
maintained in memory over extended periods of time, our theories of
long-term memory development remain incomplete at best. Although
children's forgetting and reminiscence was a topic of inquiry early
in this century, it is only recently, due in part to the current
controversy concerning the reliability of children's eyewitness
testimony, that the study of long-term retention has resurfaced in
the scientific literature. The purpose of this volume is to draw
together some of the principals involved in this resurgence to
summarize their recent research programs, present new and
previously unpublished findings from their labs, and outline the
issues they believe are important in the study of children's
long-term retention."
Increasingly, scholars from many disciplines have begun to
incorporate various modalities from the humanities and arts -
novels, films, artwork, and other forms of expression - to help
connect students with the experience of aging in deeply meaningful
and person-centered ways. This collection examines how these
approaches are incorporated into gerontology and geriatrics
education. Rather than focusing solely on measurable outcomes, such
as changes in learning over time - which is the purview of
empirical pedagogy - chapters focus on strategies for successfully
incorporating a specific work into the classroom, descriptions of
humanities and/or arts exercises with students or older adults, and
other ways that explore how the humanities and arts can be applied
successfully and meaningfully in educational settings. This book
was originally published as a special issue of Geronotology &
Geriatrics Education.
Human memory, like other biological systems, has been subject to
natural selection over the course of evolution. However, cognitive
systems do not fossilize, which means that current researchers must
infer evolutionary influences on human memory from current human
behavior rather than from fossils or artifacts. Examining the
potential for cognition as adaptation has often been ignored by
cognitive psychology. Recently, a number of researchers have
identified variables that affect human memory that may reflect
these ancestral influences. These include survival processing,
future-oriented processing, spatial memory, cheater detection, face
memory and a variety of social influences on memory. The current
volume grew out of discussion at the symposium on survival
processing at the SARMAC conference in June 2011, in New York City.
The goal of this volume will be to present the best theoretical and
empirical work on the adaptive nature of memory. It features the
most current work of a number of cognitive psychologists,
developmental psychologists, comparative psychologists and
cognitive neuroscientists, who have focused on this issue. This is
important because much this work is necessarily interdisciplinary
and is therefore spread out across a range of journals and
conferences.
Memory is often the primary evidence in the courtroom, yet
unfortunately this evidence may not be fit for purpose. This is
because memory is both fallible and malleable; it is possible to
forget and also to falsely remember things which never happened.
The legal system has been slow to adapt to scientific findings
about memory even though such findings have implications for the
use of memory as evidence, not only in the case of eyewitness
testimony, but also for how jurors, barristers, and judges weigh
evidence. Memory and Miscarriages of Justice provides an
authoritative look at the role of memory in law and highlights the
common misunderstandings surrounding it while bringing the modern
scientific understanding of memory to the forefront. Drawing on the
latest research, this book examines cases where memory has played a
role in miscarriages of justice and makes recommendations from the
science of memory to support the future of memory evidence in the
legal system. Appealing to undergraduate and postgraduate students
of psychology and law, memory experts, and legal professionals,
this book provides an insightful and global view of the use of
memory within the legal system.
Few questions in psychology have generated as much debate as those
concerning the impact of childhood trauma on memory. A lack of
scientific research to constrain theory has helped fuel arguments
about whether childhood trauma leads to deficits that result in
conditions such as false memory or lost memory, and whether
neurohormonal changes that are correlated with childhood trauma can
be associated with changes in memory. Scientists have also
struggled with more theoretical concerns, such as how to
conceptualize and measure distress and other negative emotions in
terms of, for example, discrete emotions, physiological response,
and observer ratings. To answer these questions, Mark L. Howe, Gail
Goodman, and Dante Cicchetti have brought together the most current
and innovative neurobiological, cognitive, clinical, and legal
research on stress and memory development. This research examines
the effects of early stressful and traumatic experiences on the
development of memory in childhood, and elucidates how early trauma
is related to other measures of cognitive and clinical functioning
in childhood. It also goes beyond childhood to both explore the
long-term impact of stressful and traumatic experiences on the
entire course of "normal" memory development, and determine the
longevity of trauma memories that are formed early in life. Stress,
Trauma, and Children's Memory Development will be a valuable
resource for anyone interested in early experience, childhood
trauma, and memory research.
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