PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition) David Myers
... unacceptable feelings. Manifest (apparent) content may have symbolic meanings (latent content) that express unacceptable feelings. “Royal road to the unconscious” ...
... unacceptable feelings. Manifest (apparent) content may have symbolic meanings (latent content) that express unacceptable feelings. “Royal road to the unconscious” ...
Ch. 5 Consciousness
... • Definition: An individual’s perceptions, thoughts, feelings, and memories that are active at a given moment. Or “an organism’s awareness of its own self and surroundings” • Awareness of: • Internal sensations • External events • Self as a unique being • Thoughts and experiences ...
... • Definition: An individual’s perceptions, thoughts, feelings, and memories that are active at a given moment. Or “an organism’s awareness of its own self and surroundings” • Awareness of: • Internal sensations • External events • Self as a unique being • Thoughts and experiences ...
Concept of Information as a Bridge between Mind and Brain
... to act on the content of experience (here too, including experience of self) associated with the ability to establish some goals to be achieved through the action. It seems that thus far the search for the mechanisms responsible for the mind’s functions have been biased towards the latter dimension. ...
... to act on the content of experience (here too, including experience of self) associated with the ability to establish some goals to be achieved through the action. It seems that thus far the search for the mechanisms responsible for the mind’s functions have been biased towards the latter dimension. ...
Recovery of consciousness after brain injury: a
... to MCS within the first 3 months after injuries will recover past MCS by 10 months. Two to five year outcomes can include recovery past the level of severe disability even for patients who remain in MCS for greater than 6 months or a year. Rare cases that demonstrate endpoints of very late recovery ...
... to MCS within the first 3 months after injuries will recover past MCS by 10 months. Two to five year outcomes can include recovery past the level of severe disability even for patients who remain in MCS for greater than 6 months or a year. Rare cases that demonstrate endpoints of very late recovery ...
Module 22: Hypnosis and Meditation
... • PET Scans reveal activity increased in the left and right hemisphere color areas when they were told they were seeing color. Activity decreased in the left and right hemisphere color areas when they were told to see gray rectangles regardless of what color they were. Only the right hemisphere colo ...
... • PET Scans reveal activity increased in the left and right hemisphere color areas when they were told they were seeing color. Activity decreased in the left and right hemisphere color areas when they were told to see gray rectangles regardless of what color they were. Only the right hemisphere colo ...
Recovery of consciousness after brain injury: a mesocircuit hypothesis
... to MCS within the first 3 months after injuries will recover past MCS by 10 months. Two to five year outcomes can include recovery past the level of severe disability even for patients who remain in MCS for greater than 6 months or a year. Rare cases that demonstrate endpoints of very late recovery ...
... to MCS within the first 3 months after injuries will recover past MCS by 10 months. Two to five year outcomes can include recovery past the level of severe disability even for patients who remain in MCS for greater than 6 months or a year. Rare cases that demonstrate endpoints of very late recovery ...
PDF
... object must be formed prior to categorization, at least in a tentative manner. Although this issue is debated in the philosophical literature, Prinz’s (2007, 2011a) stance is that high-level perceptual representations (such as concepts or categories, e.g., being a chair) are not part of the content ...
... object must be formed prior to categorization, at least in a tentative manner. Although this issue is debated in the philosophical literature, Prinz’s (2007, 2011a) stance is that high-level perceptual representations (such as concepts or categories, e.g., being a chair) are not part of the content ...
Title: Multimodal imagery in music: Active ingredients and
... Antonio Damasio has proposed a theory of the “self” that is important to the ensuing discussion. According to Damasio, input from all the senses but one is subject to a Jamesian stream of consciousness, which refers to the conscious flow of thought in our minds. The exception is interoception, our p ...
... Antonio Damasio has proposed a theory of the “self” that is important to the ensuing discussion. According to Damasio, input from all the senses but one is subject to a Jamesian stream of consciousness, which refers to the conscious flow of thought in our minds. The exception is interoception, our p ...
Consciousness
... and are more associated with reports of emotion (ex: “It felt like I was being chased”) • REM dreams are detailed and are associated with story lines (ex: I was walking down a ...
... and are more associated with reports of emotion (ex: “It felt like I was being chased”) • REM dreams are detailed and are associated with story lines (ex: I was walking down a ...
The Origin of Time In Conscious Agents
... by another name is called duration: relative, apparent, and common time, is some sensible and external (whether accurate or unequable) measure of duration by the means of motion, which is commonly used instead of true time; such as an hour, a day, a month, a year.” Locke (1690) in An Essay Concernin ...
... by another name is called duration: relative, apparent, and common time, is some sensible and external (whether accurate or unequable) measure of duration by the means of motion, which is commonly used instead of true time; such as an hour, a day, a month, a year.” Locke (1690) in An Essay Concernin ...
Consciousness, Whitehead and quantum computation in the brain
... exchanging signals at connections known as synapses. The development of classical silicon computers which also operate by interactions among fundamental units (e.g. “bits”) has fostered the notion that the brain functions in an essentially similar way. Indeed in the 1980’s the development of “artifi ...
... exchanging signals at connections known as synapses. The development of classical silicon computers which also operate by interactions among fundamental units (e.g. “bits”) has fostered the notion that the brain functions in an essentially similar way. Indeed in the 1980’s the development of “artifi ...
Reflexive Monism final version December 2007
... Velmans (2000) none of the arguments for or against reflexive monism require one to settle this issue. The dual-aspect monism that RM adopts is nevertheless very different to, say, emergent materialism (EM). According to EM, consciousness emerges only when physical matter gains higher level features ...
... Velmans (2000) none of the arguments for or against reflexive monism require one to settle this issue. The dual-aspect monism that RM adopts is nevertheless very different to, say, emergent materialism (EM). According to EM, consciousness emerges only when physical matter gains higher level features ...
PPT
... During the shift the stimulus changes its location, and because the conscious perception depends on the stimulus being attended, a later position is consciously perceived as being the first position. ...
... During the shift the stimulus changes its location, and because the conscious perception depends on the stimulus being attended, a later position is consciously perceived as being the first position. ...
Psychology Divided Review of Mind and Brain Sciences in the 21st
... evolution, where the various psychological adaptations accrue one on top of others. Second, psychological systems are capable of learning, as a result of which the output at any given point in time is a function of a very complex past. Neal E. Miller's paper is also short on predictions. Rather he c ...
... evolution, where the various psychological adaptations accrue one on top of others. Second, psychological systems are capable of learning, as a result of which the output at any given point in time is a function of a very complex past. Neal E. Miller's paper is also short on predictions. Rather he c ...
The emergence of a shared action ontology: Building blocks for a
... multimodal representations of organism-object-relations. Under a representationalist analysis, this process can be conceived of as an internal, dynamic representation of the intentionality-relation itself. We will show how such a complex form of representational content, once it is in place, can lat ...
... multimodal representations of organism-object-relations. Under a representationalist analysis, this process can be conceived of as an internal, dynamic representation of the intentionality-relation itself. We will show how such a complex form of representational content, once it is in place, can lat ...
The fish: What potential for awareness?
... there are no areas of the fish brain of sufficient complexity, to replace the neocortex, that are not already committed to other functions (Rose 2002). In addition, the neocortical argument contends that avoidance learning, or fear conditioning, is an example of implicit learning (or procedural re ...
... there are no areas of the fish brain of sufficient complexity, to replace the neocortex, that are not already committed to other functions (Rose 2002). In addition, the neocortical argument contends that avoidance learning, or fear conditioning, is an example of implicit learning (or procedural re ...
Essay Review Wigner`s View of Physical Reality Michael Esfeld1
... the content of consciousness could be the same if the physical world were totally different from the way it actually is or even if there were no physical world at all. Both these premises are strongly challenged in current epistemology: • Many of today’s philosophers maintain that things in the phys ...
... the content of consciousness could be the same if the physical world were totally different from the way it actually is or even if there were no physical world at all. Both these premises are strongly challenged in current epistemology: • Many of today’s philosophers maintain that things in the phys ...
The Fate of the Meat World - The Biointelligence Explosion
... What Is It Like To Be A Super-Intelligent Bat? To understand the world - both its formal/mathematical and its subjective properties - sentient organic life must bootstrap our way to Full-Spectrum Superintelligence. We need to find ways to navigate all possible state-spaces of qualia and map them - i ...
... What Is It Like To Be A Super-Intelligent Bat? To understand the world - both its formal/mathematical and its subjective properties - sentient organic life must bootstrap our way to Full-Spectrum Superintelligence. We need to find ways to navigate all possible state-spaces of qualia and map them - i ...
Arousal Systems
... • This concept of fractional loss of consciousness is critical because it explains confusional states caused by focal cortical lesions. ...
... • This concept of fractional loss of consciousness is critical because it explains confusional states caused by focal cortical lesions. ...
Conscious Perceptual Experience as Representational Self-Prompting John Dilworth
... executive system itself may become conscious under these conditions). But monitoring approaches as here defined are not metacognitive, because a monitoring executive module is just one more module within a complete cognitive system, rather than its being a thought or introspective cognitive state th ...
... executive system itself may become conscious under these conditions). But monitoring approaches as here defined are not metacognitive, because a monitoring executive module is just one more module within a complete cognitive system, rather than its being a thought or introspective cognitive state th ...
consciousness: buddhist and neuroscientific perspectives
... that are best, if not exclusively, transmitted through in-person contact. Basically, there is more to learning than memorizing facts, even if memorizing some facts is important. Attendance will be monitored with periodic quizzes during lecture. Any quizzes will be short, consisting of a very small n ...
... that are best, if not exclusively, transmitted through in-person contact. Basically, there is more to learning than memorizing facts, even if memorizing some facts is important. Attendance will be monitored with periodic quizzes during lecture. Any quizzes will be short, consisting of a very small n ...
Word`s - Semiosis Evolution Energy
... anthropomorphizes, in a very minded fashion, us. As the research I will be reviewing in this article amply illustrates, the explanatory power of traditional reductionist and mechanistic hypotheses ‘breaks down’ in cognitive neuroscientific endeavours earlier and more critically than in, say, classic ...
... anthropomorphizes, in a very minded fashion, us. As the research I will be reviewing in this article amply illustrates, the explanatory power of traditional reductionist and mechanistic hypotheses ‘breaks down’ in cognitive neuroscientific endeavours earlier and more critically than in, say, classic ...
Bio Chap 15 - mlfarrispsych
... – Damage to frontal-temporal areas that impairs episodic memory can produce a detachment from the self. – People with damage to the ACC and the insula may treat their mirror image as a companion, intruder, or stalker. – The insula and inferior parietal cortex appear to distinguish between self as ag ...
... – Damage to frontal-temporal areas that impairs episodic memory can produce a detachment from the self. – People with damage to the ACC and the insula may treat their mirror image as a companion, intruder, or stalker. – The insula and inferior parietal cortex appear to distinguish between self as ag ...
class consciousness
... Nevertheless, there remains much in Marx’s writings that provides a basis for a mechanistic interpretation of social change. In the context of this chapter, it involves Wolpe’s notion that consciousness “must be seen as a simple, direct expression of the econo ...
... Nevertheless, there remains much in Marx’s writings that provides a basis for a mechanistic interpretation of social change. In the context of this chapter, it involves Wolpe’s notion that consciousness “must be seen as a simple, direct expression of the econo ...