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to the ms word version of these notes.
to the ms word version of these notes.

... Our understanding of the corpus collusum and hemispheric lateralization was enhanced by patients who had their corpus collusom removed. These “split-brain” patients are able to perform most tasks with no noticeable defects. However, if an object is placed so that its visual perjection is only to the ...
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception

... u Exercise/Lecture Break: The Role of Experience in Visual Perception (p. 315) ...
`What` and `where` in the human brain
`What` and `where` in the human brain

... Area V4 in the monkey contains neurons selective for many different features relevant for object recognition, including color and shape [14,15,68,69’1. In Old World monkeys, the area is located dorsally in the hemisphere (mainly on the prelunate gyrus), where the lower visual field is represented, a ...
Human Anatomy, First Edition McKinley&O'Loughlin
Human Anatomy, First Edition McKinley&O'Loughlin

... Cerebrum, the diencephalon, the brainstem, and the cerebellum. The cerebrum is divided into two halves, called the left and right cerebral hemispheres. Each hemisphere is subdivided into five functional areas called lobes. Outer surface of an adult brain exhibits folds called gyri (gyrus) and shallo ...
Consciousness and Creativity in Brain
Consciousness and Creativity in Brain

... desired in machines? • How reliable may machines with phenomenal C be? • First, can we build them? How to build a robot that feels, J.Kevin O'Regan at CogSys 2010 at ETH Zurich on 27/1/2010 • Sensorimotor account of action/perception shows that “hard problem” of consciousness is not such a problem a ...
Griggs Chapter 2: Neuroscience
Griggs Chapter 2: Neuroscience

... physiological arousal is a response to a stimulus, and that such a physiological response is subsequently interpreted as the emotion  For example, if you are crossing the street and see a car speeding ...
BRAIN COMPUTER INTERFACE
BRAIN COMPUTER INTERFACE

... Our brains are filled with neurons, individual nerve cells connected to one another by dendrites and axons. Every time we think, move, feel or remember something, our neurons are at work. Thework is carried out by small electric signals that zip from neuron to neuron as fast as 250 mph, sometimes th ...
to-BBB and Lundbeck to join forces on brain delivery of
to-BBB and Lundbeck to join forces on brain delivery of

... Thanks to the advances of biotechnology, therapeutic antibodies have become well-established treatment modalities to address many systemic diseases. The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is unfortunately a significant obstacle in the treatment of CNS disorders, since it prevents delivery of many drug candid ...
Cognitive neuroscience lecture
Cognitive neuroscience lecture

... found greater frontal activity on ‘correct’ trials, less on ‘error’ trials suggesting frontal areas important for filtering distractions. Similar findings for words and pseudo words. • Other evidence suggesting that phonological deficits are found in patients with perisylvian damage, thus this area ...
The Nervous System
The Nervous System

... Impulses that go to the brain are? Ascending or Descending The gaps between the myelin in a neuron are called? ________________ The gaps that exist between two neurons are called _____________________ The part of the neuron where the nucleus is found is the __________________ What is “fight or fligh ...
The Primary Visual C..
The Primary Visual C..

... • Note that the central region is oblong and not circular as was the case for the center-surround receptive field of the retinal ganglion cells. • Also, the surround region is now located only on the sides. In this particular cell, the inhibitory region is located in the center, not on the sides ...
face-specific responses from the human inferior occipito
face-specific responses from the human inferior occipito

... pointillized faces (lower part of the inset) suggested very weak activity over the occipital cortex. Responses to the two stimulus categories also differed at the posterior channels (Fig. 2). It is suggested that this difference reflects the differential processing of simple visual features. Respons ...
Biological Determinants of Behaviour
Biological Determinants of Behaviour

... of the brain stem, that forms the core of the brainstem running through the mid-brain, pons and medulla; centered roughly in the pons.  The ascending reticular activating system connects to areas in the thalamus, hypothalamus, and cortex,  The descending reticular activating system connects to the ...
File
File

... might “see the world in a grain of sand | And heaven in a wild flower” (William Blake); we might see the oppression of the working classes “written” into the uniformity of industrial landscapes 2) Marx - “life is not determined by consciousness but consciousness by life.” Our aesthetics lives, at th ...
Neural Networks.Chap..
Neural Networks.Chap..

... (1) Using Euclidian distance, d(xi, xj) (2) Using Inner Product, (xi, xj) ...
1. What two communication systems run through the body
1. What two communication systems run through the body

... What is the term for the body’s response to a potentially dangerous or stressful situation? ...
brain and cranial nerves
brain and cranial nerves

... --they are concerned with the reception and interpretation of sensory impulses. --Sensory areas are: Primary somatosensory area. Primary visual area. Primary auditory area. Primary gustatory area. ii. Motor areas: --control and govern muscular movements --areas are: primary motor area. Broca’s speec ...
This week`s lab will focus on the central nervous
This week`s lab will focus on the central nervous

... The CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord. The brain consists of the cerebrum, cerebellum, and brain stem. The cerebrum is divided into left and right hemispheres with frontal, parietal, temporal and occipital lobes within each hemisphere. The brain stem consists of the midbrain, pons, and medul ...
Making Waves With Your Brain!!!!
Making Waves With Your Brain!!!!

... • The neurons use chemicals and electricity to communicate with each other • It takes a lot of energy – The Brain takes 20% of the total body energy. – 2/3 of that brain energy is used to help Neurons send electrical signals ...
Nervous System Test Review
Nervous System Test Review

... running, walking, or playing the piano. It also helps control your balance and maintain posture. ...
Brain Facts
Brain Facts

... • If all neurons were stretched end to end, would reach to moon and back • Every second, brain receives 100 million messages from the senses • ¾ of body’s neurons are in brain • On day you are born, all brain cells are in place – They’re just immature – still developing • Explains why don’t have mem ...
Neuroanatomy 6-12
Neuroanatomy 6-12

... brain. The sheet of paper represents all the surface of our brain, but it has to fit into our heads so it gets crumpled up and “stuffed” into our skull, creating bumps and creases. Crumple up the sheet of paper to fit it inside your hand, which is representing the head. o Compare the sulci and gyri ...
Brain Facts
Brain Facts

... would reach to moon and back • Every second, brain receives 100 million messages from the senses • ¾ of body’s neurons are in brain • On day you’re born, all brain cells in place – They’re just immature – still developing • Explains why don’t have memories until ~3-4 y.o. ...
text of chapter 2
text of chapter 2

... When artists and academic psychologists look at René Magritte's The Lovers, they probably notice different aspects of the canvas (Figure 2.1). Artists may observe the overall composition with its intersecting diagonals, and the skillful shading that helps give perspective to the shrouded figures. Pe ...
Attending to Contrast
Attending to Contrast

... basis of the psychological phenomena of visual attention. Desimone and colleagues have suggested that attention may increase the efficiency with which attended stimuli are encoded, while Maunsell and colleagues have argued that attention boosts the overall strength of neural signals without altering ...
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Neuroesthetics



Neuroesthetics (or neuroaesthetics) is a relatively recent sub-discipline of empirical aesthetics. Empirical aesthetics takes a scientific approach to the study of aesthetic perceptions of art and music. Neuroesthetics received its formal definition in 2002 as the scientific study of the neural bases for the contemplation and creation of a work of art. Neuroesthetics uses neuroscience to explain and understand the aesthetic experiences at the neurological level. The topic attracts scholars from many disciplines including neuroscientists, art historians, artists, and psychologists.
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