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Wallin_Back_to_School_with_the_Thinking_Maps
Wallin_Back_to_School_with_the_Thinking_Maps

... “Our function as educators is to provide our students with the sorts of experiences that enable them to perceive patterns that connect.” Caine & Caine. (1994). Making Connections: Teaching and the Human Brain. ...
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... • In the semantic condition: Judgment is supposed to rely on single word meanings • In the syntactic condition: Judgment requires computation and comparison of two syntactic ...
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... • As humans grow we learn new skills requiring the coordinated movement of the body and its limbs. ...
Using the State-Space Paradigm to Analyze Information Representation in Neural Systems
Using the State-Space Paradigm to Analyze Information Representation in Neural Systems

... point process nature of neural encoding. The advent in the last 10 years of the capability to record with multiple electrode arrays the simultaneous spiking activity of many neurons (¿100) has made it possible to study information encoding by ensembles rather than by simply single neurons. Hence, an ...
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... cortical physiological activity acquired during training is well correlated with the behavioural performance in a discrimination task. ...
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... brain, yet specific regions of the brain seem most critical in handling particular functions. This localization of structure and function has been identified for numerous regions. I. Areas below the neocortex are called subcortical areas. A. The medulla oblongata lies immediately anterior to the spi ...
Lesson 1
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2015 Midterm Exam
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Making Waves With Your Brain!!!!
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Vision - Florida Atlantic University
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Exercise and the Bra..

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OL Chapter 2 overview

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Powerpoint on lobes of the brain and functions

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Module 2.1 Neurons: The Body`s Wiring Lecture Outline
Module 2.1 Neurons: The Body`s Wiring Lecture Outline

... Antagonists block actions of neurotransmitters by occupying their receptor sites. Antagonists influence a number of psychological processes and conditions—for example, schizophrenia and Parkinson’s disease. Agonists enhance the function of neurotransmitters by binding to their receptor sites or mimi ...
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ling411-01 - Rice University

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P312Ch04C_BeyondV1
P312Ch04C_BeyondV1

... 3) May be a separate area in the inferotemporal lobe containing neurons which respond to face-like stimuli. The fusiform face area has been identified in humans. It’s under the temporal lobe. 4) Ramachandran has suggested that there may be as many as 30 different processing modules. Each one contain ...
Pattern Vision and Natural Scenes
Pattern Vision and Natural Scenes

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A unifying view of the basis of social cognition
A unifying view of the basis of social cognition

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physiological psychology
physiological psychology

... 2. The ________________ nervous system communicates sensory information received by sense organ receptors to the central nervous system and carries messages from the central nervous system along motor nerves to the muscles. a. Somatic ...
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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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