Ohio State nav bar

Simona Ghetti Colloquium

Simona Ghetti
October 12, 2015
1:30PM - 3:00PM
Psychology Bldg. 035

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2015-10-12 13:30:00 2015-10-12 15:00:00 Simona Ghetti Colloquium The Psychology Department Development Area and The Center for Cognitive and Brain Sciences presents a talk by Dr. Simona Ghetti of the University of California - Davis entitled "Recollection During Childhood."  The capacity to remember in vivid detail develops considerably during childhood and emerges from the contribution of several psychological processes. Dr. Ghetti will highlight the contribution of two classes of these, relational binding processes and metacognitive processes. Relational binding processes support the integration of the various features of an event (e.g., what, when, where) into a memory representation that captures the most important aspects of an experience. Metacognitive processes confer the ability to reflect on memory quality, which might support decision making (e.g., decisions to act on the basis of the content of one’s memory). Behavioral and neuroimaging evidence will be discussed. The event will take place in room 035 of the Psychology Building from 1:30-3:00pm.  Psychology Bldg. 035 Center for Cognitive and Brain Sciences ccbs@osu.edu America/New_York public

The Psychology Department Development Area and The Center for Cognitive and Brain Sciences presents a talk by Dr. Simona Ghetti of the University of California - Davis entitled "Recollection During Childhood." 

 

The capacity to remember in vivid detail develops considerably during childhood and emerges from the contribution of several psychological processes. Dr. Ghetti will highlight the contribution of two classes of these, relational binding processes and metacognitive processes. Relational binding processes support the integration of the various features of an event (e.g., what, when, where) into a memory representation that captures the most important aspects of an experience. Metacognitive processes confer the ability to reflect on memory quality, which might support decision making (e.g., decisions to act on the basis of the content of one’s memory). Behavioral and neuroimaging evidence will be discussed.
 
The event will take place in room 035 of the Psychology Building from 1:30-3:00pm.