ISSN 0965-8211 (Print); ISSN 1464-0686 (Online)
Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group
Functions of autobiographical memory in Taiwanese and American emerging adults pp. 423-436(14) Authors: Liao; Bluck; Alea; Cheng
When remembering the past suppresses memory for future actions pp. 437-443(7) Authors: Utsumi; Saito
Age differences in prospective memory for everyday life intentions: A diary approach pp. 444-454(11) Authors: Schnitzspahn; Scholz; Ballhausen; Hering; Ihle; Lagner; Kliegel
Visual object imagery and autobiographical memory: Object Imagers are better at remembering their personal past pp. 455-470(16) Authors: Vannucci; Pelagatti; Chiorri; Mazzoni
Consolidation of novel word learning in native English-speaking adults pp. 471-481(11) Authors: Kurdziel; Spencer
Living in history and living by the cultural life script: How older Germans date their autobiographical memories pp. 482-495(14) Authors: Bohn; Habermas
The formation of novel social category conjunctions in working memory: A possible role for the episodic buffer? pp. 496-512(17) Authors: Hutter; Allen; Wood
Remembering and telling self-consistent and self-discrepant memories pp. 513-525(13) Authors: Mutlutürk; Tekcan
Destination memory and cognitive theory of mind in normal ageing pp. 526-534(9) Authors: El Haj; Raffard; Gély-Nargeot
Recollection reduces unitised familiarity effect pp. 535-547(13) Authors: Shao; Opitz; Yang; Weng
Memory of pain induced by physical exercise pp. 548-559(12) Author: Bąbel
The impact of note taking style and note availability at retrieval on mock jurors’ recall and recognition of trial information pp. 560-574(15) Authors: Thorley; Baxter; Lorek
Corrigendum pp. 575-575(1)