Information Technology Reference
In-Depth Information
perceptions of time, of their identity and of the quality of their narration) in the pres-
ent and in different (immediate or distant) futures. On the other hand, they imagine
themselves to be the protagonist of the narration that builds towards the future, from
their limited perception of the present, and partially sustained in the past. In other
words, they label themselves now and seek to manipulate what is to come. They do
not know, however, what the future will bring.
All narrators live inserted in natural and social narrations, in their times and cir-
cumstances. It is not possible, however, to avoid this. Fortunately?
References
Addis DR, Wrong AT, Schacter DL (2007) Remembering the past and imagining the future:
common and distinct neural substrates during event construction and elaboration.
Neuropyschologia 47(11):1363-1377
Andreasen NC (1987) Creativity and mental illness: prevalence rates in writers and their fi rst-
degree relatives. Am J Psychiatr 144:1288-1292
Arlow JA (1996) The concept of psychic reality. How useful? Int J Psychoanal 77(4):659-666
Arnold KM, McDermott KB, Szpunar KK (2011) Imagining the near and far future: the role of
location familiarity. Mem Cognit 39(6):954-967
Bandura A (1997) Self-effi cacy: the exercise of control. Freeman, New York
Bell M (1990) How primordial is narrative? In: Nash C (ed) Narrative in culture: the use of story-
telling in the sciences, philosophy, and literature. Routledge, London
Bergson H (1960) Time and free will: an essay on the immediate data of consciousness. Harper &
Row, New York. (Original work published in 1910)
Bernsten D, Boh A (2010) Remembering and forecasting: the relationship between autobiographi-
cal memory and episodic future thinking. Mem Cognit 38(3):265-278
Bischof-Koehler D (1985) On the phylogeny of human motivation. In: Eckensberger LH,
Lnatermann ED (eds) Emotion and Refl exivitaet. Urban & Schwarzenberg, Vienna, pp 3-47
Bruner J (1986) Actual minds, possible worlds. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA
Bruner J (1990) Acts of meaning. Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
Cadwell CA, Millen AE (2008) Studying cumulative cultural evolution in the laboratory. Philos
Trans R Soc B 363:3529-3539
Carr D (1991) Time, narrative and history. Indiana University Press, Indianapolis
Chatman S (1978) Story and discourse: narrative structure in fi ction and fi lm. Cornell University
Press, New York
Coveney P, Hughfi eld R (1990) The arrow of time. Fawcett Columbine, New York
Cropley DH, Kaufman JC, Cropley AJ (2008) Malevolent creativity: a functional model of creativ-
ity in terrorism and crime. Creat Res J 20(2):105-118
Csikszentmihalyi M (1990) Flow: the psychology of optimal experience. Harper & Row, New York
Davies P (1995) About time: Einstein's unfi nished revolution. Simon & Schuster, New York
D'Argembeau A, Van der Linden M (2004) Phenomenal characteristics associated with projecting
oneself back into the past and forward into the future: infl uence of valence and temporal dis-
tance. Conscious Cogn 13(4):813-823
D'Argembeau A, Mathy A (2011) Tracking the construction of episodic future thoughts. J Exp
Psychol Gen 140(2):258-271
Fireman GD, McVay TE Jr, Flanagan OW (2003) Narrative and consciousness: literature, psychol-
ogy and the brain. Oxford University Press, New York
Gamboz N, Brandimonte MA, De Vito S (2010) The role of past in the simulation of autobio-
graphical future episodes. Exp Psychol 57(6):419-428
Search WWH ::




Custom Search