PPT - 서울대 Biointelligence lab
... Monkeys are sensitive to communicative gestures such as silent facial expressions Another’s gaze direction appears to be used as an indication of salient objects or locations in the environment. ...
... Monkeys are sensitive to communicative gestures such as silent facial expressions Another’s gaze direction appears to be used as an indication of salient objects or locations in the environment. ...
The Cerebral Cortex
... 30 X greater than the number of humans on the planet. (180 billion) • A typical neuron is wired to about 10002000 of its neighbors – It is the pattern of these connections that determines what the brain does ...
... 30 X greater than the number of humans on the planet. (180 billion) • A typical neuron is wired to about 10002000 of its neighbors – It is the pattern of these connections that determines what the brain does ...
Chapter 13
... Direct transcortical connections – involved in STM, acquisition of episodic memories and of complex behaviors that involve deliberation or instruction Connections via the basal ganglia and thalamus – involved once behaviors become automatic and routine ...
... Direct transcortical connections – involved in STM, acquisition of episodic memories and of complex behaviors that involve deliberation or instruction Connections via the basal ganglia and thalamus – involved once behaviors become automatic and routine ...
Endocrine glands
... • Wernicke’s aphasia - condition resulting from damage to Wernicke’s area (usually in left temporal lobe), causing the affected person to be unable to understand or produce meaningful language. • Spatial neglect - condition produced by damage to the association areas of the right hemisphere resultin ...
... • Wernicke’s aphasia - condition resulting from damage to Wernicke’s area (usually in left temporal lobe), causing the affected person to be unable to understand or produce meaningful language. • Spatial neglect - condition produced by damage to the association areas of the right hemisphere resultin ...
Chapter 7 part two
... More about biased competition One theory that brings together all of the reviewed attention effects (top-down biases, gain modulation, enhancement and suppression) is Desimone and Duncan’s ‘biased competition’model of attention. The theory rests on three assumptions. First, given the limits on ou ...
... More about biased competition One theory that brings together all of the reviewed attention effects (top-down biases, gain modulation, enhancement and suppression) is Desimone and Duncan’s ‘biased competition’model of attention. The theory rests on three assumptions. First, given the limits on ou ...
Visual Queries
... Just-in-time & just-enough processing is provided by rapid scanning–-- eye movements within 100 milliseconds. Visual processing requires attention: “We are conscious of the field of information to which we have rapid access rather than being immediately conscious of the world.” ...
... Just-in-time & just-enough processing is provided by rapid scanning–-- eye movements within 100 milliseconds. Visual processing requires attention: “We are conscious of the field of information to which we have rapid access rather than being immediately conscious of the world.” ...
Module 1: The Brain and the Central Nervous System (CNS
... can be compared to a computer, as it makes sense of all the messages it receives from the spinal cord and the neurons. Our brain controls what we think, what we say, our emotions, memories, sensations, and body movements. It also allows us to interpret messages given by other organs in the body, suc ...
... can be compared to a computer, as it makes sense of all the messages it receives from the spinal cord and the neurons. Our brain controls what we think, what we say, our emotions, memories, sensations, and body movements. It also allows us to interpret messages given by other organs in the body, suc ...
What is Psychology? - Weber State University
... system that are similar in structure and action to opiates; they are involved in pain reduction, pleasure, and memory, and are known technically as endogenous opioid peptides. ...
... system that are similar in structure and action to opiates; they are involved in pain reduction, pleasure, and memory, and are known technically as endogenous opioid peptides. ...
Joanne Goldbort, PhD, RN - Indiana's AWHONN section
... • Situations similar to any life altering event that occurs in an ER • Occasions when joy is replaced with sadness • The entire health care team and the family can be affected by distressing events ...
... • Situations similar to any life altering event that occurs in an ER • Occasions when joy is replaced with sadness • The entire health care team and the family can be affected by distressing events ...
Engagement of brain areas implicated in processing inner speech in
... parietal, parahippocampal and cerebellar cortex. Conclusions In people with schizophrenia who are prone to auditory hallucinations, increasing the demands on the processing of inner speech is associated with attenuated engagement of the brain areas implicated in verbal selfmonitoring. Declaration of ...
... parietal, parahippocampal and cerebellar cortex. Conclusions In people with schizophrenia who are prone to auditory hallucinations, increasing the demands on the processing of inner speech is associated with attenuated engagement of the brain areas implicated in verbal selfmonitoring. Declaration of ...
drugs and the brain - Scholastic Heads Up
... act on a region of the brain that causes feelings of pleasure. Drugs alter the way the brain communicates and actually cause physical changes to brain wiring. These changes can cause cravings and other problems controlling behavior that make it hard to stop using drugs despite harmful consequences, ...
... act on a region of the brain that causes feelings of pleasure. Drugs alter the way the brain communicates and actually cause physical changes to brain wiring. These changes can cause cravings and other problems controlling behavior that make it hard to stop using drugs despite harmful consequences, ...
Cognitive Neuroscience - U
... – Somatic voluntary part (sensory and motor nerves) – Autonomic involuntary part • Sympathetic (activated under stress) • Parasympathetic (maintains body functions) ...
... – Somatic voluntary part (sensory and motor nerves) – Autonomic involuntary part • Sympathetic (activated under stress) • Parasympathetic (maintains body functions) ...
Document
... At clinical field strengths (1.5 tesla), for every million spins, there are ~5 more spins aligned with versus against field. ...
... At clinical field strengths (1.5 tesla), for every million spins, there are ~5 more spins aligned with versus against field. ...
Mind from brain: physics & neuroscience
... The underconnectivity theory of autism is based on the following: • Excess of low-level (sensory) processes. • Underfunctioning of high-level neural connections and synchronization, • fMRI and EEG study suggests that adults with ASD have local overconnectivity in the cortex and weak functional conne ...
... The underconnectivity theory of autism is based on the following: • Excess of low-level (sensory) processes. • Underfunctioning of high-level neural connections and synchronization, • fMRI and EEG study suggests that adults with ASD have local overconnectivity in the cortex and weak functional conne ...
Sheep Brain Dissection Instructions
... pituitary gland. Use your fingers or a teasing needle to gently probe the parts and see how they are connected to each other. What does that opening inside the corpus callosum lead to? How many different kinds of tissue can you see and feel? The corpus callosum is a bundle of white fibers See a larg ...
... pituitary gland. Use your fingers or a teasing needle to gently probe the parts and see how they are connected to each other. What does that opening inside the corpus callosum lead to? How many different kinds of tissue can you see and feel? The corpus callosum is a bundle of white fibers See a larg ...
Chapter 4 Answers to Before You Go On Questions Describe how
... information from our bodies and sending it to our brains, as well as for enabling the brain to control body movement. So the spinal cord gathers information, which it passes along to the brain; the brain responds to that information and passes commands back down through the spinal cord to initiate m ...
... information from our bodies and sending it to our brains, as well as for enabling the brain to control body movement. So the spinal cord gathers information, which it passes along to the brain; the brain responds to that information and passes commands back down through the spinal cord to initiate m ...
The effect of visual experience on the development of the mirror
... paradigm. Both congenitally blind and sighted individuals during the listening (and the observation for sighted only) of actions performed by others activated a left lateralized network including the superior and middle temporal gyri, the inferior parietal lobule and the inferior frontal premotor co ...
... paradigm. Both congenitally blind and sighted individuals during the listening (and the observation for sighted only) of actions performed by others activated a left lateralized network including the superior and middle temporal gyri, the inferior parietal lobule and the inferior frontal premotor co ...
Modern neuroscience is based on ideas derived
... Reliable maps are needed, now more than ever, to localize activity and interpret functional imaging studies in humans. However, the value of maps transcends the need to localize because structure affects the pattern of connections. Thus, systematic variations in architecture underlie the graded lami ...
... Reliable maps are needed, now more than ever, to localize activity and interpret functional imaging studies in humans. However, the value of maps transcends the need to localize because structure affects the pattern of connections. Thus, systematic variations in architecture underlie the graded lami ...
The Feeling of Meaning
... In this respect, the science of emotion has presented a particular challenge. Given the problems that academic psychologists have had in dealing with subjective experience, emotion has long been a squishy topic, derided by behaviorism and cognitive science alike. Many have questioned whether human e ...
... In this respect, the science of emotion has presented a particular challenge. Given the problems that academic psychologists have had in dealing with subjective experience, emotion has long been a squishy topic, derided by behaviorism and cognitive science alike. Many have questioned whether human e ...
Nurture Is Nature: Integrating Brain Development, Systems Theory
... The etiology of emotional development follows a progression. According to Berger (2005), distress and contentment are expressed at birth. Izard (1982) reported that infants progressively learn to distinguish between pleasant and unpleasant feelings before experiencing more distinct emotions, such as ...
... The etiology of emotional development follows a progression. According to Berger (2005), distress and contentment are expressed at birth. Izard (1982) reported that infants progressively learn to distinguish between pleasant and unpleasant feelings before experiencing more distinct emotions, such as ...
Exploring Our Senses
... scene (kittens or a romantic couple) or a negative scene (werewolf or dead body) an instant before showing a picture of a person. Participants perceived the kitten or werewolf as a flash of light. The participants gave a more positive rating for the photos associated with the kitten or romantic coup ...
... scene (kittens or a romantic couple) or a negative scene (werewolf or dead body) an instant before showing a picture of a person. Participants perceived the kitten or werewolf as a flash of light. The participants gave a more positive rating for the photos associated with the kitten or romantic coup ...
Difficulty (part of the hypothesis)
... We would like to know how FEF and IPS play functionally distinct roles. ...
... We would like to know how FEF and IPS play functionally distinct roles. ...
Exploring Our Senses
... scene (kittens or a romantic couple) or a negative scene (werewolf or dead body) an instant before showing a picture of a person. Participants perceived the kitten or werewolf as a flash of light. The participants gave a more positive rating for the photos associated with the kitten or romantic coup ...
... scene (kittens or a romantic couple) or a negative scene (werewolf or dead body) an instant before showing a picture of a person. Participants perceived the kitten or werewolf as a flash of light. The participants gave a more positive rating for the photos associated with the kitten or romantic coup ...
Biosc_48_Chapter_8_lecture_part_1
... a. Studies of people with amnesia reveal that areas of the temporal lobe, hippocampus, caudate nucleus, and dorsomedial thalamus are involved in memory. b. The amygdala is important in learning fear responses. c. The prefrontal cortex may be involved in complex problem solving and working memory– ve ...
... a. Studies of people with amnesia reveal that areas of the temporal lobe, hippocampus, caudate nucleus, and dorsomedial thalamus are involved in memory. b. The amygdala is important in learning fear responses. c. The prefrontal cortex may be involved in complex problem solving and working memory– ve ...