Trauma and Memory
- Linda Williams - University of Massachusetts, Lowell, USA, Wellesley Colllege, USA
- Victoria L. Banyard - University of New Hampshire, Durham, USA
September 1998 | 400 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Can lost memories of abuse be found in the brain? Can cognitive neuroscience illuminate the nature of traumatic memories? How reliable are delayed memories of child sexual abuse? As the controversy regarding repressed memory continues with rhetoric and angst, Trauma and Memory takes an in-depth look at the most current research on memory for traumatic events. Carefully edited and organized by Linda Meyer Williams and Victoria L. Banyard, this book contains state-of-the-art data in this controversial area. Trauma and Memory offers a forum for researchers who review cutting-edge research and theory, integrating multidisciplinary researchfindings in coherent treatment, legal, and social policies and practice.
Trauma and Memory is a thought-provoking and outstanding addition to the extant literature and is an ideal resource for practitioners, academics, researchers, and advanced students in the fields of psychology, neurology, law, social work, medicine, public health, women's studies, and child development.
PART ONE: CLINICAL PRACTICE AND LEGAL ISSUES IN TRAUMA AND MEMORY
Lucy Berliner and John Briere
Trauma, Memory and Clinical Practice
Mary Harvey
Memory Research and Clinical Practice
Mitchell L Eisen et al
Individual Differences in Maltreated Children's Memory and Suggestibility
Pallavi Nishith et al
General Memory Functioning at Pre- and Post-Treatment in Female Rape Victims with Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
Craig C Piers
Remembering Trauma
Madelyn Miller
Ethical Considerations in the Teaching of Trauma and Dissociation
Jon R Conte
Memory Research and the Law
Joyce Sese Dorado
Remembering Incest
PART TWO: MENTAL HEALTH AND MEMORIES OF TRAUMATIC EVENTS
Victoria L Banyard and Linda M Williams
Memories for Child Sexual Abuse and Mental Health Functioning
Timothy D Brewerton et al
Bulimia Nervosa, PTSD and Forgetting
Judith Sheiman
Sexual Abuse History With and Without Self-Report of Memory Loss
Judy Martin et al
Participation in Retrospective Child Sexual Abuse Research
Susan Warner and Kathryn M Feltey
From Victim to Survivor
PART THREE: COGNITIVE AND PHYSIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON TRAUMA AND MEMORY
Ira E Hyman Jr and Erica E Kleinknecht
False Childhood Memories
Tonya Schooler and Andrew Baum
Memories of a Petrochemical Explosion
Jonathan W Schooler
Seeking the Core
J Douglas Bremner
Traumatic Memories Lost and Found
Laura Palmer et al
Neuropsychological Sequelae of Chronically Psychologically Traumatized Children
Robert C Drugan
Coping with Traumatic Stress Interferes with Memory of the Event
Daniel L Schachter, Wilma Koutstaal and Kenneth A Norman
Can Cognitive Neuroscience Illuminate the Nature of Traumatic Childhood Memories?
PART FOUR: EVIDENCE AND CONTROVERSIES IN UNDERSTANDING MEMORIES FOR TRAUMATIC EVENTS
Mary P Koss et al
Traumatic Memory Characteristics
Sarah Romans, Judy L Martin and Elanor M Morris
Defense Styles of Women Who Have Experienced Child Sexual Abuse
Anait Azarian et al
Toddlers Remember Quake Trauma
Barbara L Niles et al
Stability and Fluctuation of Veterans' Reports of Combat Exposure
Richard P Kluft
True Lies, False Truths and Naturalistic Raw Data
Connie Kristiansen et al
The Sociopolitical Context of the Delayed Memory Debate