Module 1 - Doral Academy Preparatory
... – Cognitive neuroscience: • Involves taking pictures and identifying the structures and functions of the living brain during the performance of a wide variety of mental or cognitive processes, such as thinking, planning, naming, and recognizing objects ...
... – Cognitive neuroscience: • Involves taking pictures and identifying the structures and functions of the living brain during the performance of a wide variety of mental or cognitive processes, such as thinking, planning, naming, and recognizing objects ...
Further Cognitive Science
... But a correlation is a relationship between two different things and hence is inconsistent with Crick’s eliminativism; ...
... But a correlation is a relationship between two different things and hence is inconsistent with Crick’s eliminativism; ...
A perceptual representation in the frontal eye field during covert
... monkeys were required to perform a specific sequence of behaviors requiring a degree of coordination and concentration. An alternative explanation for the monkeys’ behavioral performance is that they had not fully learned the association between the target positions and the correct lever-turn behavio ...
... monkeys were required to perform a specific sequence of behaviors requiring a degree of coordination and concentration. An alternative explanation for the monkeys’ behavioral performance is that they had not fully learned the association between the target positions and the correct lever-turn behavio ...
The Emergence of Rule-Use: A Dynamic Neural Field Model of... Aaron Buss ()
... describing children’s behavior in terms of ‘rules’ raises some critical questions about the nature of the cognitive processes at work. It is unclear, for instance, how a hierarchical rule structure could be implemented in real-time in a nervous system. Similarly, ties to known changes in neural deve ...
... describing children’s behavior in terms of ‘rules’ raises some critical questions about the nature of the cognitive processes at work. It is unclear, for instance, how a hierarchical rule structure could be implemented in real-time in a nervous system. Similarly, ties to known changes in neural deve ...
JEDNAK KSIAZKI
... Most revelatory was the dream (8/28/96) instructing the dreamer to play an old, very thin disc, like a CD in blue and yellow. She hears music from a long time ago. Heavy with an old world feeling, it was musty as though it had been kept in a closet for a long time. Interacting with a cluster of recu ...
... Most revelatory was the dream (8/28/96) instructing the dreamer to play an old, very thin disc, like a CD in blue and yellow. She hears music from a long time ago. Heavy with an old world feeling, it was musty as though it had been kept in a closet for a long time. Interacting with a cluster of recu ...
High-performance genetically targetable optical neural silencing by
... enhancing Arch membrane trafficking). Arch-mediated currents exhibited excellent kinetics of light-activation and post-light recovery. Upon illumination, Arch currents rose with a 15%– 85% onset time of 8.8 ± 1.8 ms (mean ± standard error (SE) reported throughout, unless otherwise indicated; N = 16 ...
... enhancing Arch membrane trafficking). Arch-mediated currents exhibited excellent kinetics of light-activation and post-light recovery. Upon illumination, Arch currents rose with a 15%– 85% onset time of 8.8 ± 1.8 ms (mean ± standard error (SE) reported throughout, unless otherwise indicated; N = 16 ...
Spontaneous activity and functional connectivity in the developing
... First published July 6, 2016; doi:10.1152/jn.00461.2016.—The development of the cerebellar system depends in part on the emergence of functional connectivity in its input and output pathways. Characterization of spontaneous activity within these pathways provides insight into their functional status ...
... First published July 6, 2016; doi:10.1152/jn.00461.2016.—The development of the cerebellar system depends in part on the emergence of functional connectivity in its input and output pathways. Characterization of spontaneous activity within these pathways provides insight into their functional status ...
doc Chapter 6 Notes
... are more likely to survive and pass on their genes • secondary reinforcers: events or objects that serve as reinforcers but so not satisfy biological needs • are established through classical conditioning • money is associated with power • Reinforcer Potency • Theory of Reinforcement proposed by Dav ...
... are more likely to survive and pass on their genes • secondary reinforcers: events or objects that serve as reinforcers but so not satisfy biological needs • are established through classical conditioning • money is associated with power • Reinforcer Potency • Theory of Reinforcement proposed by Dav ...
Chapter 5 Learning Outline
... XV. Positive and Negative Reinforcers A. A positive reinforcer is a stimulus given to an organism after a response is made that increases or maintains the rate of response. B. A negative reinforcer is a stimulus that increases or maintains the rate of a response that precedes its removal. C. Escape ...
... XV. Positive and Negative Reinforcers A. A positive reinforcer is a stimulus given to an organism after a response is made that increases or maintains the rate of response. B. A negative reinforcer is a stimulus that increases or maintains the rate of a response that precedes its removal. C. Escape ...
PDF
... adoption. Burger, Collier, and Gunning (1993) studied the effect of social learning in Kenya and they found that producers value the choices of others who are considered similar to them. Foster and Rosenzweig (1995) provided evidence of learning spillovers in the context of the adoption of high-yiel ...
... adoption. Burger, Collier, and Gunning (1993) studied the effect of social learning in Kenya and they found that producers value the choices of others who are considered similar to them. Foster and Rosenzweig (1995) provided evidence of learning spillovers in the context of the adoption of high-yiel ...
Planning and problem solving: from neuropsychology to
... is performed within one’s own representation of the problem. The total of the perceived states and operators comprise the subjective problem space. For example, in finding a way out of a maze, it is usually not possible to simply “read” the right way from an objective problem state, e. g. a map. Move ...
... is performed within one’s own representation of the problem. The total of the perceived states and operators comprise the subjective problem space. For example, in finding a way out of a maze, it is usually not possible to simply “read” the right way from an objective problem state, e. g. a map. Move ...
Power Shifts Track Serial Position and Modulate Encoding in
... of subsequent recall, a t-statistic was calculated comparing the distribution of mean Z-transformed wavelet power for all events where the word was subsequently recalled and the distribution of powers for the presentation of words that were not subsequently recalled. This “subsequent memory effect” ...
... of subsequent recall, a t-statistic was calculated comparing the distribution of mean Z-transformed wavelet power for all events where the word was subsequently recalled and the distribution of powers for the presentation of words that were not subsequently recalled. This “subsequent memory effect” ...
University of Groningen The hearing brain in males and
... The cochlea is tonotopically organized, which means that each frequency component of a sound stimulates a distinct region of the cochlea. The nerve fibers throughout the auditory system are organized in a systematic way that preserves the tonotopy (Brawer et al., 1974). Axons from the dorsal cochlea ...
... The cochlea is tonotopically organized, which means that each frequency component of a sound stimulates a distinct region of the cochlea. The nerve fibers throughout the auditory system are organized in a systematic way that preserves the tonotopy (Brawer et al., 1974). Axons from the dorsal cochlea ...
Symposium: Classical and instrumental conditioning. presented at
... measured responses ranged from skin conductance responses and eyeblinks as a component of the startle reflex to evaluative ratings and self-report data. Kirsch, Boucsein, and Baltissen investigate information processing in human Pavlovian autonomic conditioning. Using a letter reproduction task as a ...
... measured responses ranged from skin conductance responses and eyeblinks as a component of the startle reflex to evaluative ratings and self-report data. Kirsch, Boucsein, and Baltissen investigate information processing in human Pavlovian autonomic conditioning. Using a letter reproduction task as a ...
Organization of Visual Areas in Macaque and
... Figure 2. Ten partitioning schemes for macaque visual cortex registered to the atlas and displayed on flat map views. See abbreviation list for full names of areas. Data were registered to the atlas using a surface-based registration method in which geographic (gyral and sulcal) landmarks were used ...
... Figure 2. Ten partitioning schemes for macaque visual cortex registered to the atlas and displayed on flat map views. See abbreviation list for full names of areas. Data were registered to the atlas using a surface-based registration method in which geographic (gyral and sulcal) landmarks were used ...
Inactivation of Parietal and Prefrontal Cortex Reveals
... of these subpopulations were matched to a greater extent (Chafee and Goldman-Rakic 1998) than could be gleaned from independent studies of the two populations using similar, but not identical, tasks (Andersen et al. 1990b; Bruce and Goldberg 1985; Funahashi et al. 1989 –1991; Gnadt and Andersen 1988 ...
... of these subpopulations were matched to a greater extent (Chafee and Goldman-Rakic 1998) than could be gleaned from independent studies of the two populations using similar, but not identical, tasks (Andersen et al. 1990b; Bruce and Goldberg 1985; Funahashi et al. 1989 –1991; Gnadt and Andersen 1988 ...
Project Report: Investigating topographic neural map development
... The LGN serves as a relay center for the input from RGC to V1 and occurs in both the left and right hemispheres of the mammalian brain. In addition to receiving retinal input from their respective (ipsilateral) eyes, the left LGN receives retinal input from the right eye, and the right LGN from the ...
... The LGN serves as a relay center for the input from RGC to V1 and occurs in both the left and right hemispheres of the mammalian brain. In addition to receiving retinal input from their respective (ipsilateral) eyes, the left LGN receives retinal input from the right eye, and the right LGN from the ...
Consequences of Behavior
... Individuals learn by observing what happens to other people, being told about something, as well as by direct experiences. People use these observations to create a “model” in their own mind of what is occuring. OB_UG_2002 GSM ...
... Individuals learn by observing what happens to other people, being told about something, as well as by direct experiences. People use these observations to create a “model” in their own mind of what is occuring. OB_UG_2002 GSM ...
The Beautiful Brain - Weisman Art Museum
... discoveries was the idea that the brain is made up of individual cells called neurons. The most commonly held idea among scientists of Cajal’s time was that the brain was a continuous, interconnected network. All research on the brain and brain related diseases, such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, ...
... discoveries was the idea that the brain is made up of individual cells called neurons. The most commonly held idea among scientists of Cajal’s time was that the brain was a continuous, interconnected network. All research on the brain and brain related diseases, such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, ...
Contributions of cortical feedback to sensory processing in primary
... transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) (Zokaei et al., 2014). In a memory-color paradigm, successful cross-classification of V1 activity patterns between colored hues and gray scale objects associated with those hues, was interpreted as the result of the feedback of prior knowledge to V1 (Bannert an ...
... transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) (Zokaei et al., 2014). In a memory-color paradigm, successful cross-classification of V1 activity patterns between colored hues and gray scale objects associated with those hues, was interpreted as the result of the feedback of prior knowledge to V1 (Bannert an ...
A simultaneous ERP/fMRI investigation of the P300 aging effect
... through to senescence (Fjell and Walhovd, 2004; Polich, 1997). In addition, the aging process is reliably associated with a marked anterior shift in the topography of both components that is apparent across a range of different tasks (Fabiani et al., 1998; Friedman, 2003; Richardson et al., 2011; We ...
... through to senescence (Fjell and Walhovd, 2004; Polich, 1997). In addition, the aging process is reliably associated with a marked anterior shift in the topography of both components that is apparent across a range of different tasks (Fabiani et al., 1998; Friedman, 2003; Richardson et al., 2011; We ...
Calcium-activated chloride channels: a new target to
... characteristic of the ANO2 channels. This phenotype was also observed in the knockdown of ANO2 in CA1 hippocampal neurons, providing further evidence that Ca2+-activated Cl− conductance via ANO2 channels hyperpolarizes the membrane potential in these CNS neurons. The thalamus-specific ANO2 knockdown ...
... characteristic of the ANO2 channels. This phenotype was also observed in the knockdown of ANO2 in CA1 hippocampal neurons, providing further evidence that Ca2+-activated Cl− conductance via ANO2 channels hyperpolarizes the membrane potential in these CNS neurons. The thalamus-specific ANO2 knockdown ...
Stiahnuť prednášku - Nechodimnaprednasky.sk
... which can only be understood in the historical context of the early twentieth century. Its basic tenet, proclaimed by John B. Watson, its founder, was that psychology could only become a science if it based itself on the sort of objective observations and measurements that were made by natural scien ...
... which can only be understood in the historical context of the early twentieth century. Its basic tenet, proclaimed by John B. Watson, its founder, was that psychology could only become a science if it based itself on the sort of objective observations and measurements that were made by natural scien ...