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Neal Kroll

Education

  • Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1967

Research Focus

Dr. Kroll's research is directed towards the greater understanding of human memory. His memory research has included studies on visual short-term memory, mnemonic (bizarre imagery) techniques, the effects of misleading post-event information (eyewitness) visual memory, the use of contextual information to aid in the retrieval of memories "lost" to misleading post-event information, the interrelatedness of items in semantic memory, and, more recently, the neurophysiological substrates of memory encoding and retrieval processes,  both by the examination of memory impaired individuals and by the measurement of the physiological correlates of memory processes through the use of neuroimaging techniques.

Teaching

PSC 100: Introduction to Cognitive Psychology
PSC 290: Human Memory and Attention

2007
Winter Quarter - PSC100 (1) - INTRO TO COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 
Spring Quarter - PSC100 (2) - INTRO TO COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 
Spring Quarter - PSC290 (2) - SEMINAR 

2006
Winter Quarter - PSC100 (1) - INTRO TO COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 
Winter Quarter - PSC263 - TOPICS IN COGNITIVE 
Winter Quarter - PSC290 (3) - SEMINAR 
Spring Quarter - PSC100 (2) - INTRO TO COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 

2005
Winter Quarter - PSC100 (1) - INTRO TO COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 
Winter Quarter - PSC290 (1) - SEMINAR 
Spring Quarter - PSC100 (2) - INTRO TO COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 


2004
Fall Quarter - PSC100 (1) - INTRO TO COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 
Fall Quarter - PSC290 (1) - SEMINAR 
Winter Quarter - PSC100 - INTRO TO COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 
Winter Quarter - PSC290 (1) - SEMINAR 
Spring Quarter - PSC100 (2) - INTRO TO COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 

Awards

Fellow: 

American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science 
American Psychological Society