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Profile Documents Logout
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lecture9
lecture9

... Initially use the trunk & shoulder (proximal joints) to reach for objects; use elbow less frequently. When babies do make large movements, can’t control inter-segmental dynamics. So hand oscillates. ...
File
File

... Scientists can map which parts of the brain control various parts of the body. The mapping is done by stimulating the sensory or motor cortex with a weak electric current. The stimulation often produces tingling or movement in part of the body. Humans put great emphasis on speech and manipulation of ...
Unit Two: Biological Bases of Behavior
Unit Two: Biological Bases of Behavior

... • Endorphins: natural “opiates” released in response to pain or vigorous exercise • Why not flood the brain with artificial opiates?? – Brain will stop producing natural ones – Withdrawal symptoms ...
outline unit III
outline unit III

... 1. vital for memory and retaining new information 3. Cerebral Cortex 1. Gray wrinkled surface of the brain 1. the wrinkles are called fissures 1. increase available surface area 2. Hemispheres 1. contralateral control 1. left hemisphere- right half of body 2. right hemisphere- left half 2. brain lat ...
E4 Neurotransmitters and Synapses (and drugs!)
E4 Neurotransmitters and Synapses (and drugs!)

... them to stimuli and then observe which areas blood flow increases in. ...
PRESS RELEASE - Silent Barrage
PRESS RELEASE - Silent Barrage

... thirty-two sculptural robotic objects (the ‘robotic body’). Each of the objects amplifies and represents the electric activity that occurs in a real biological neural network (the ‘brain’) being grown and nurtured in a Petri dish in Dr. Steve Potter’s lab. The behaviour of each robotic object is dir ...
What do you want to know about the brain?
What do you want to know about the brain?

... There are small things in your body what are called neurons.  They connect when you might do a maths question of anything.  If you say “I can’t do it”, your neurons send messages to your brain that you can’t do it and it makes learning much harder.  You have about 100 billion neurons in your body ...
Neural Basis of the Ventriloquist
Neural Basis of the Ventriloquist

... Previously noticed in audio-visual interaction, but not associated with localization Latency suggests feedback from higher multisensory areas Retinotopic activity in extrastriate occipital cortex 80120ms Location-specific audio-visual interactions 140-190ms in occipito-temporal and parietal regions ...
Now!
Now!

... 2-10: What are the functions of the various cerebral cortex regions? 2-11: To what extent can a damaged brain reorganize itself, and what is neurogenesis? ...
mapping the brain - Scholastic Heads Up
mapping the brain - Scholastic Heads Up

... who have been using drugs for a long time have a smaller prefrontal cortex than people who have not been using drugs. The prefrontal cortex is the area where decision making occurs. ...
Quiz 10
Quiz 10

... c. Voluntarily move their facial muscles d. Move their facial muscles when having a natural emotional response e. Use tone of voice to communicate their emotional states 10. According to the James-Lange theory of emotion, which of the following is most important for the subjective experience of emot ...
Local Copy - Synthetic Neurobiology Group
Local Copy - Synthetic Neurobiology Group

... diseases, we need to understand how the elements of a neural circuit work together. This requires the ability to selectively perturb the activity of specific neurons within the circuit, observing the resultant impact on neural computation and behavior. Until now, the ability to test the causal role ...
Damage to the frontal lobes can lead to
Damage to the frontal lobes can lead to

... • LOCATION: Deep within brain, next to thalamus, at top of brain stem • FUNCTION? – The 4 F’s : fight, flight, food, fornication! – & memory!! ...
Medial Longitudinal Fissure
Medial Longitudinal Fissure

... Connect the Medulla to the Midbrain and Thalamus. Contains numerous tracts including the Cortico-spinal tracts and Reticular Formation ...
Nervous Systems - manorlakesscience
Nervous Systems - manorlakesscience

... the cerebrum, which has a folded surface called the cerebral cortex. ...
10b - Developmental 2 (Cognitive) Notes
10b - Developmental 2 (Cognitive) Notes

...  Unable to understand how grandmother is also mother’s mother.  Daddy/mama o Developmental task:  Ability to decenter is requisite for … ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... caused the changes to his personality. ...
Brain Powerpoint
Brain Powerpoint

... • REM sleep is most vital to brain function – Most dreams occur during REM sleep – During REM sleep, body is paralyzed • Sleepwalking occurs during NREM dreams ...
Long-term memory
Long-term memory

... What is memory? • Memory is defined as the acquisition, storage, and retrieval of information. • All animals learn things from their interaction with the environment • Human brain forms memories more effectively than others • Maximum behavioural flexibility and most efficiently adaptation to enviro ...
Adolescents Brain Development
Adolescents Brain Development

... parents and adolescents to aid their transition from dependence to independence. • These changes compel adolescents to explore the deeper end of the gene pool and acquire the skills competence and confidence necessary to survive on their own • You need to engage in high-risk behaviour to leave your ...
The Brain
The Brain

... • Commonalities: have a bigger part on the top and a smaller part on the bottom o Have ‘flaps’ and ‘grooves’ o Brains are remarkably similar in overall structure • Linear relationship between brain size and body weight o Above the line, brain is bigger than would be expected for body size (tend ...
Unit 3 "Cliff Notes" Review
Unit 3 "Cliff Notes" Review

... Split-Brain Patients With the corpus callosum severed, objects (apple) presented in the right visual field can be named. Objects (pencil) in the left visual field cannot. ...
Chapter 2 - bobcat
Chapter 2 - bobcat

... MRI is a noninvasive imaging technique that does not use xrays. The process involves passing a strong magnetic field through the head. The magnetic field used is 30,000 + times that of the earth's magnetic field. It's effect on the body, however, is harmless and temporary. The MRI scanner can detect ...
Understanding Addiction - Solace Emotional Health
Understanding Addiction - Solace Emotional Health

... will only make you sick but do not permanent harm. In contrast, a person who feasts upon filthy stories or pornographic or erotic pictures and literature , records them in this marvelous retrieval system we call a brain. The brain won’t vomit back filth. Once recorded, it will always remain subject ...
questions from - AP Psychology: 6(A)
questions from - AP Psychology: 6(A)

... 10. The lowest stimulus intensity required for detection is the __________ and the smallest noticeable difference between a standard stimulus intensity and another stimulus value is the __________. 11. Some people believe that __________ are messages that can be sent to consumers, prompting them to ...
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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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