“Professor Sotgiu, an active autobiographical memory researcher, provides in a scholarly, clear fashion what his title implies. As an up-to-date monograph for general readers, more specialized researchers, and upper-level students, his book has no equal. Heated controversies are fairly presented. A broad range of historical figures share pages with more recent researchers to produce a unique and welcomed review.”
— David Rubin, Duke University, USA
“This book is refreshing in contextualizing this contemporary field in its 140-year history. Readers are guided down a fascinating path to explore the intellectual evolution of humans’ obsession with their personal pasts. By presenting a comprehensive overview of both pioneering and current research, Sotgiu provides a carefully reasoned exploration of the intricacies of recalling and sharing the early, happy, meaningful and difficult events that make up a life.”
— Susan Bluck, University of Florida, USA
"Rigorous, clear and pleasant to read, this book offers us a model of effective communication of science."
— Bernard Rimé, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium
Igor Sotgiu is Associate Professor of General Psychology at the University of Bergamo, Italy. His research interests focus on autobiographical memory, emotion and well-being.
Igor Sotgiu
memory and emotion memory and the law autobiographical narrative Francis Galton Involuntary autobiographical memories Victor and Catherine Henri Sigmund Freud Ulric Neisser Eyewitness memory Self-Memory System model autobiographical memory network Flashbulb memories Ontogenetic Neural correlates neurological disorders
“Professor Sotgiu, an active autobiographical memory researcher, provides in a scholarly, clear fashion what his title implies. As an up-to-date monograph for general readers, more specialized researchers, and upper-level students, his book has no equal. Heated controversies are fairly presented. A broad range of historical figures, including Bruner, Freud, Henri and Henri, Luria, and Neisser, share pages with more recent researchers to produce a unique and welcomed review.”
— David Rubin, Duke University, USA
“This book is refreshing in contextualizing this contemporary field in its 140-year history. Readers are guided down a fascinating path to explore the intellectual evolution of humans’ obsession with their personal pasts. By presenting a comprehensive overview of both pioneering and current research, Sotgiu provides a carefully reasoned exploration of the intricacies of recalling and sharing the early, happy, meaningfuland difficult events that make up a life.”
— Susan Bluck, University of Florida, USA
"We all have an autobiographical memory which is like a spine to our subjective life. And yet, we ignore how it develops, how it works and what it does. This book tells us what scientific research has discovered about it. Rigorous, clear and pleasant to read, the volume also offers us a model of effective communication of science."
— Bernard Rimé, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium