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The Other Side of the Error Term: Aging and Development as Model Systems in Cognitive Neuroscience Volume 125
Contributor(s): Raz, N. (Editor)
ISBN: 0444825223     ISBN-13: 9780444825223
Publisher: North-Holland
OUR PRICE:   $193.05  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: April 1998
Qty:
Annotation: It has been said more than once in psychology that one person's effect is another person's error term. By minimising and occasionally ignoring individual and group variability cognitive psychology has yieled many fine achievements. However, when investigators are working with special populations, the subjects, and the unique nature of the sample, come into focus and become the goal in itself. For developmental psychologists, gerontologists and psychopathologists, research progresses with an eye on their target populations of study. Yet every good study in any of these domains inevitably has another dimension. Whenever a study is designed to turn a spotlight on a special population, the light is also shed on the mainstream from which the target deviates.

This book examines what we can learn about general and universal phenomena in cognition and its brain substrates from examining the odd, the rare, the transient, the exceptional and the abnormal.

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Medical | Neuroscience
- Psychology | Experimental Psychology
- Social Science
Dewey: 612.82
LCCN: 98003180
Series: Advances in Psychology
Physical Information: 1.06" H x 6.14" W x 9.21" (1.85 lbs) 457 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
It has been said more than once in psychology that one person's effect is another person's error term. By minimising and occasionally ignoring individual and group variability cognitive psychology has yieled many fine achievements. However, when investigators are working with special populations, the subjects, and the unique nature of the sample, come into focus and become the goal in itself. For developmental psychologists, gerontologists and psychopathologists, research progresses with an eye on their target populations of study. Yet every good study in any of these domains inevitably has another dimension. Whenever a study is designed to turn a spotlight on a special population, the light is also shed on the mainstream from which the target deviates.

This book examines what we can learn about general and universal phenomena in cognition and its brain substrates from examining the odd, the rare, the transient, the exceptional and the abnormal.