Publication | Closed Access
The contents of long-term memory and the emergence of knowledge
83
Citations
135
References
2008
Year
NeuropsychologyKnowledge EmergesAffective NeurosciencePsycholinguisticsCognitionHuman MemoryExplicit MemorySituational ConceptionPsychologySocial SciencesEpisodic MemoryCognitive DevelopmentMemoryCognitive NeuroscienceSemantic MemoryCognitive ScienceMemory SystemSocial CognitionImplicit MemoryEpistemologyNeuroscienceMultimodal ComponentsEmotionLong-term Memory
Through a review of the literature, this paper proposes arguments in favour of a multimodal, dynamic, functional, and situational conception of memory. Memory is assumed to contain traces that reflect past experiences. The properties of these experiences are considered to be distributed across multiple neuronal systems, which are responsible, in particular, for sensorimotor and emotional processing. Memory is dynamic because knowledge emerges almost continuously from the activation and integration of these multimodal components. Memory is functional and situational because knowledge emerges from the subject's activity in a given situation, that is from a type of resonance between the properties of the past experiences that have shaped the neuronal networks and the properties of present experiences.
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