ISSN 0965-8211 (Print); ISSN 1464-0686 (Online)
Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group
What kind of memory has evolution wrought? pp. 1-8(8) Authors: Otgaar; Howe
False memories from survival processing make better primes for problem-solving pp. 9-18(10) Authors: Garner; Howe
The longevity of adaptive memory: Evidence for mnemonic advantages of survival processing 24 and 48 hours later pp. 19-25(7) Authors: Raymaekers; Otgaar; Smeets
The role of perceived threat in the survival processing memory advantage pp. 26-35(10) Authors: Olds; Lanska; Westerman
Dying to remember, remembering to survive: Mortality salience and survival processing pp. 36-50(15) Authors: Burns; Hart; Kramer; Burns
Dying scenarios improve recall as much as survival scenarios pp. 51-64(14) Authors: Burns; Hart; Kramer
The effects of thoughts of survival and thoughts of death on recall in the adaptive memory paradigm pp. 65-75(11) Author: Klein
Confidence and memory: Assessing positive and negative correlations pp. 76-91(16) Authors: Roediger; DeSoto
Working memory load eliminates the survival processing effect pp. 92-102(11) Authors: Kroneisen; Rummel; Erdfelder
Developmental trends in adaptive memory pp. 103-117(15) Authors: Otgaar; Howe; Smeets; Garner
Assessing the role of memory in preschoolers' performance on episodic foresight tasks pp. 118-128(11) Authors: Atance; Sommerville
Remembering in tool-use tasks in children and apes: The role of the information at encoding pp. 129-144(16) Authors: Martin-Ordas; Atance; Call
Adaptive constructive processes and memory accuracy: Consequences of counterfactual simulations in young and older adults pp. 145-162(18) Authors: Gerlach; Dornblaser; Schacter