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3. Speakers

Fifteen distinguished scholars from Japan, North America, and Europe will speak at the conference.


Dietrich Albert University of Graz, Austria

Memory, knowledge and e-learning


Elizabeth Bjork UCLA, U.S.A.

Types and consequences of forgetting, intended and unintended


Robert Bjork UCLA, U.S.A.

Optimizing treatment and training: Implications of a new theory of disuse


Martin Conway University of Durham, U.K.

Autobiographical memory and the self


Fergus Craik University of Toronto, Canada

Age-related changes in human memory: Practical consequences


Douglas Herrmann Indiana State University, U.S.A.

Why memory fails


Yukio Itsukushima Nihon University, Japan

Response conformity formation in face recognition memory


Stephen Lindsay University of Victoria, Canada

Adults' recollections of long-past autobiographical events


Robert Logie University of Aberdeen, U.K.

Working with memory in everyday cognition


Ingvar Lundberg Goteborg University, Sweden

Memory functions in reading disability


Masaru Mimura Showa University, Japan

Executive functions and prognosis of patients with memory disorders


Kathy Pezdek Claremont Graduate University. U.S.A.

Eyewitness memory: Suggestibility and cross race effects


Jonathan Schooler University of Pittsburgh, U.S.A.

Evidence for and potential mechanisms underlying discovered memories of abuse


Barbara Wilson Cambridge University, U.K

The rehabilitation of memory for everyday life


Maria Zaragoza Kent State University, U.S.A.

Suggestive interviews and false memories: Implications for eyewitness testimony


(Please note that these are still tentative titles, and actual presentations may differ)

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