Learning and Memory: Major Ideas, Principles, Issues and Applications
By (Author) Robert W. Howard
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
24th January 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Psychological theory, systems, schools and viewpoints
153.1
Hardback
256
This book surveys the entire field of learning and memory. It describes the major approaches to its study and looks at basic assumptions and philosophical underpinnings. Howard integrates work from quite different perspectives into a single framework, and describes peripheral areas not usually mentioned in mainstream books, such as prenatal learning, constraints on knowledge, nonconnectionist machine learning, intelligence and learning, and skills learning. He gives the reader a broad knowledge of what the field is all about, what its parts are and how they interrelate, its major principles and key applications. The primary contribution of this work is the integration of current thinking about learning with the literature and research on memory.
.,."should appeal to upper division-undergraduate and graduate students and professionals already familiar with the basic principles and theories of learning and memory."-Choice
...should appeal to upper division-undergraduate and graduate students and professionals already familiar with the basic principles and theories of learning and memory.-Choice
..."should appeal to upper division-undergraduate and graduate students and professionals already familiar with the basic principles and theories of learning and memory."-Choice
ROBERT W. HOWARD teaches at the University of Newcastle, Australia. He is the author of three books: Coping and Adapting (1984), Concepts and Schemata (1987), and All About Intelligence: Human, Animal and Artificial (1991), and many journal articles.