ABSTRACT

First published in 1973. This book proposes and tests a theory about human memory, about how a person encodes, retains, and retrieves information from memory. The book is especially concerned with memory for sentential materials. We propose a theoretical framework which is adequate for describing comprehension of linguistic materials, for exhibiting the internal representation of propositional materials, for characterizing the interpretative processes which encode this information into memory and make use of it for remembering, for answering questions, recognizing instances of known categories, drawing inferences, and making deductions.

chapter 1|7 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|31 pages

Associationism: A Historical Review

chapter 3|25 pages

Rationalist Countertraditions

chapter 4|33 pages

Computer Simulation Models of Memory

chapter 5|33 pages

Current Developments in Linguistics

chapter 6|16 pages

An Overview of HAM

chapter 7|48 pages

The Structure of Knowledge

chapter 8|37 pages

The Encoding Problem

chapter 9|46 pages

The Recognition Process

chapter 10|47 pages

Model for Sentence Learning

chapter 11|23 pages

Properties of the Memory Structure

chapter 12|34 pages

Fact Retrieval

chapter 13|27 pages

Question Answering

chapter 14|48 pages

Verbal Learning

chapter 15|42 pages

Interference and Forgetting

chapter 16|5 pages

An Epitaph