
PsychScich04
... • Ventral stream appears to be specialized for the perception and recognition of objects • Dorsal stream seems to be specialized for spatial perception (determining where an object is) • These two processing streams are therefore known as the “what” stream and the “where” stream ...
... • Ventral stream appears to be specialized for the perception and recognition of objects • Dorsal stream seems to be specialized for spatial perception (determining where an object is) • These two processing streams are therefore known as the “what” stream and the “where” stream ...
The Biology of Trauma - BC Association of Social Workers
... Post-traumatic stress disorder is a psychological reaction that can manifest itself after a traumatic event and which has been present for at least one month. A person who develops post-traumatic stress disorder will display three types of ...
... Post-traumatic stress disorder is a psychological reaction that can manifest itself after a traumatic event and which has been present for at least one month. A person who develops post-traumatic stress disorder will display three types of ...
Marshmallow Test: Executive Functioning in Children and Teens
... to monitor their performance. This means that a successful reader pays attention to comprehension and quickly becomes aware if the material has not been understood. • In contrast, poor readers will decode large ...
... to monitor their performance. This means that a successful reader pays attention to comprehension and quickly becomes aware if the material has not been understood. • In contrast, poor readers will decode large ...
Definition of the limbic system
... and the autonomic nervous system. It is highly interconnected with the nucleus accumbens, the brain's pleasure center, which plays a role in sexual arousal and the "high" derived from certain recreational drugs. These responses are heavily modulated by dopaminergic projections from the limbic system ...
... and the autonomic nervous system. It is highly interconnected with the nucleus accumbens, the brain's pleasure center, which plays a role in sexual arousal and the "high" derived from certain recreational drugs. These responses are heavily modulated by dopaminergic projections from the limbic system ...
Paper
... neurons) showed different patterns of responses. Fast spiking cell tended to show transient responses and increased their firing rates following CS presentation, whereas a complementary pattern was observed in the regular spiking cells. Our results enhance our understanding of neural mechanism under ...
... neurons) showed different patterns of responses. Fast spiking cell tended to show transient responses and increased their firing rates following CS presentation, whereas a complementary pattern was observed in the regular spiking cells. Our results enhance our understanding of neural mechanism under ...
Attitudes and Evaluation 1 Attitudes and Evaluation
... which it is related." Allport additionally suggested that the way to achieve dynamic, flexible attitudes that may include ambivalence, was by "reducing attitudes to small enough components." Following this line of thinking, by making representations of attitudes small enough (e.g., breaking a repres ...
... which it is related." Allport additionally suggested that the way to achieve dynamic, flexible attitudes that may include ambivalence, was by "reducing attitudes to small enough components." Following this line of thinking, by making representations of attitudes small enough (e.g., breaking a repres ...
File
... The nervous system receives information from the _____________ through our senses and it controls how the body reacts to that information The nervous system maintains ________________by coordinating ______ the body systems The nervous system is the center for ______________ and _____________ The sen ...
... The nervous system receives information from the _____________ through our senses and it controls how the body reacts to that information The nervous system maintains ________________by coordinating ______ the body systems The nervous system is the center for ______________ and _____________ The sen ...
Solution 1
... processing information about how objects relate to the space they are in and to the other objects in that space, carrying out motion analysis of those objects, and influencing arm and eye motor responses to them. The ventral pathway is considered the “what” pathway and is thought to be responsible f ...
... processing information about how objects relate to the space they are in and to the other objects in that space, carrying out motion analysis of those objects, and influencing arm and eye motor responses to them. The ventral pathway is considered the “what” pathway and is thought to be responsible f ...
Background: Classical fear conditioning is a phenomenon in which
... CS to evoke a fearful reaction even in absence of the US (Pavlov, 1927). In some cases, this fear of the conditioned danger cue (CS+) can also be observed when a subject is presented a stimulus that shares similar characteristics with the CS+. This is known as fear generalization. Although some amou ...
... CS to evoke a fearful reaction even in absence of the US (Pavlov, 1927). In some cases, this fear of the conditioned danger cue (CS+) can also be observed when a subject is presented a stimulus that shares similar characteristics with the CS+. This is known as fear generalization. Although some amou ...
... already a new and fast-developing research topic [5]. The BI system is inspired by the biological disposition of animals and mimics biomechanisms. From the beginning of the 1990s, the NN technology attracted the attention of a large part of the scientific community. Since then, the technology has be ...
"The Hidden Mind" - Emotion, Memory and the Brain by
... In addition, the kinds of stimuli most commonly used in this type of conditioning are not signals that rats— or humans, for that matter— encounter in their daily lives. The novelty and irrelevance of these lights and sounds help to ensure that the animals have not already developed strong emotional ...
... In addition, the kinds of stimuli most commonly used in this type of conditioning are not signals that rats— or humans, for that matter— encounter in their daily lives. The novelty and irrelevance of these lights and sounds help to ensure that the animals have not already developed strong emotional ...
Abstract Book Brain Circuits for Positive Emotions
... of happiness often seems to ignore this possibility. Perhaps the best-known example of this possibility outside philosophy is one from economics: inability to defer gratification or present happiness will make you worse off. But many other cases have been described by philosophers over the centuries ...
... of happiness often seems to ignore this possibility. Perhaps the best-known example of this possibility outside philosophy is one from economics: inability to defer gratification or present happiness will make you worse off. But many other cases have been described by philosophers over the centuries ...
Emotion Dysregulation
... psychological worlds of children develop dramatically during adolescence, evoking a variety of emotions. For example, adolescents may experience joy with their newfound autonomy and frustration with the added stress this brings. As with any time in development, emotions must be regulated in order to ...
... psychological worlds of children develop dramatically during adolescence, evoking a variety of emotions. For example, adolescents may experience joy with their newfound autonomy and frustration with the added stress this brings. As with any time in development, emotions must be regulated in order to ...
PPT - UCI Cognitive Science Experiments
... How can we tell models/theories apart? • Need converging evidence to tell theories apart ...
... How can we tell models/theories apart? • Need converging evidence to tell theories apart ...
What Are Emotional States, and Why Do We
... Selecting between available rewards with their associated costs, and avoiding punishers with their associated costs, is a process that can take place both implicitly (unconsciously) and explicitly using a language system to enable long-term plans to be made (Rolls, 2005b, 2008b). These many diffe ...
... Selecting between available rewards with their associated costs, and avoiding punishers with their associated costs, is a process that can take place both implicitly (unconsciously) and explicitly using a language system to enable long-term plans to be made (Rolls, 2005b, 2008b). These many diffe ...
Terminology and Diagnoses - Academy for Coaching Parents
... grandparent when you were a child, or a particular song reminds you of when you first fell in love. The hippocampus is also responsible for spatial awareness, which is a sense of, or ability to make a physical determination of where one is in relation to the objects around them. The hippocampus sits ...
... grandparent when you were a child, or a particular song reminds you of when you first fell in love. The hippocampus is also responsible for spatial awareness, which is a sense of, or ability to make a physical determination of where one is in relation to the objects around them. The hippocampus sits ...
Nervous System - Winston Knoll Collegiate
... The nervous system receives and then sends out information about your body. It also monitors and responds to changes in your environment. ◊ Name a few important body functions that your nervous system controls on its own without you having to think about it much? ...
... The nervous system receives and then sends out information about your body. It also monitors and responds to changes in your environment. ◊ Name a few important body functions that your nervous system controls on its own without you having to think about it much? ...
Emotion Review - The mind and Brain
... or events is such as to establish the possibility of the infant coming to differentiate how two person-anchored attitudes can be brought to bear on the same object or event in the environment. In addition, from around the end of the first year the infant begins to adopt the stance of the other towar ...
... or events is such as to establish the possibility of the infant coming to differentiate how two person-anchored attitudes can be brought to bear on the same object or event in the environment. In addition, from around the end of the first year the infant begins to adopt the stance of the other towar ...
The role of the medial frontal cortex in the
... emotional intensity of the images relative to when participants did not have to maintain their emotional states. This finding prompts an alternative, ‘active maintenance’ hypothesis that people do not maintain their emotional states via a passive maintenance of initial emotional responses, but rathe ...
... emotional intensity of the images relative to when participants did not have to maintain their emotional states. This finding prompts an alternative, ‘active maintenance’ hypothesis that people do not maintain their emotional states via a passive maintenance of initial emotional responses, but rathe ...
The Neuromodulatory Basis of Emotion
... rewarding and aversive stimuli (35). Although not formulated explicitly as follows, these theories propose that the mediation of drives and their assigned values (reward) are mediated by the same neuronal systems and pathways, but by two different transmitter systems: one mediating the drive respons ...
... rewarding and aversive stimuli (35). Although not formulated explicitly as follows, these theories propose that the mediation of drives and their assigned values (reward) are mediated by the same neuronal systems and pathways, but by two different transmitter systems: one mediating the drive respons ...
Order27639103_01Aug2015_20-02-37
... Classical conditioning refers to the psychological process in which one modifies his behavior in response to a stimuli based on previous neural stimuli. This phenomenon has been a very intriguing phenomenon because I have seen it with two important people in my life. One is my younger sister, and th ...
... Classical conditioning refers to the psychological process in which one modifies his behavior in response to a stimuli based on previous neural stimuli. This phenomenon has been a very intriguing phenomenon because I have seen it with two important people in my life. One is my younger sister, and th ...
The role of the medial frontal cortex in the maintenance of emotional
... emotional intensity of the images relative to when participants did not have to maintain their emotional states. This finding prompts an alternative, ‘active maintenance’ hypothesis that people do not maintain their emotional states via a passive maintenance of initial emotional responses, but rathe ...
... emotional intensity of the images relative to when participants did not have to maintain their emotional states. This finding prompts an alternative, ‘active maintenance’ hypothesis that people do not maintain their emotional states via a passive maintenance of initial emotional responses, but rathe ...