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All the world`s a stage: Making sense of Shakespeare
... The second major reason for undertaking the study was the opportunity it afforded to focus on aspects of information behaviour that have been largely neglected in prevailing approaches to research in the field. The historical antecedents of information behaviour research lie in library and informati ...
... The second major reason for undertaking the study was the opportunity it afforded to focus on aspects of information behaviour that have been largely neglected in prevailing approaches to research in the field. The historical antecedents of information behaviour research lie in library and informati ...
"Meaning" Links Information, Changing the Web
... needs," says Associate Professor Ichise. "In countries like ...
... needs," says Associate Professor Ichise. "In countries like ...
Making Sense of Internal Logic: Theory and a Case Study
... meaningful cognitive experiment. As one candidate for such an experiment, we considered the type recently carried out by Sakagami and Niki [4] and Sakagami and Tsutsui [5]. They performed a set of experiments investigating multidimensional visual discrimination tasks with monkeys. In these experimen ...
... meaningful cognitive experiment. As one candidate for such an experiment, we considered the type recently carried out by Sakagami and Niki [4] and Sakagami and Tsutsui [5]. They performed a set of experiments investigating multidimensional visual discrimination tasks with monkeys. In these experimen ...
Note
... the neurons were fully divided between the two variables on the axes. The data points lie below the lines because not all of the response can be used, i.e. one response variable can’t be exactly split between two stimulus variables. The difference is called confounded information. Chase and Young 20 ...
... the neurons were fully divided between the two variables on the axes. The data points lie below the lines because not all of the response can be used, i.e. one response variable can’t be exactly split between two stimulus variables. The difference is called confounded information. Chase and Young 20 ...
Generic Visual Perception Processor
... signals using two or more histogram calculation units to localize one or more objects in an image signal using one or more characteristics an object such as the shape, size and orientation of the object. Such devices can be termed an electronic spatio-temporal neuron, and are particularly useful for ...
... signals using two or more histogram calculation units to localize one or more objects in an image signal using one or more characteristics an object such as the shape, size and orientation of the object. Such devices can be termed an electronic spatio-temporal neuron, and are particularly useful for ...
Commentary: Saccadic eye movements
... The intermediate layers of the SC contain neurons whose discharges are modulated by saccadic eye movements and visual fixation (see Munoz et al., 2000; Scudder et al., 2002 for review). These neurons are organized into a retinotopically coded motor map specifying saccades into the contralateral visu ...
... The intermediate layers of the SC contain neurons whose discharges are modulated by saccadic eye movements and visual fixation (see Munoz et al., 2000; Scudder et al., 2002 for review). These neurons are organized into a retinotopically coded motor map specifying saccades into the contralateral visu ...
Rods Cones
... Balint’s syndrome: a severe attentional deficit that results in an almost complete inability to see anything except a single fixated visual object patients are known to stare at inconsequential objects for extended periods of time and take very little interest in events occurring around them (ocular ...
... Balint’s syndrome: a severe attentional deficit that results in an almost complete inability to see anything except a single fixated visual object patients are known to stare at inconsequential objects for extended periods of time and take very little interest in events occurring around them (ocular ...
Neural computations that underlie decisions about sensory stimuli
... light, with some values being more likely than others when light is present (see Box 1). How do you use the value from the detector to decide if the light was present? This problem consists of deciding which hypothesis – light is present (h1) or light is absent (h2) – is most likely to be true given ...
... light, with some values being more likely than others when light is present (see Box 1). How do you use the value from the detector to decide if the light was present? This problem consists of deciding which hypothesis – light is present (h1) or light is absent (h2) – is most likely to be true given ...
cadiom… enfin!
... – And enclose the people in all the world in a virtual reality that will substitute to the real world and undermine the will to change it. Forum EKS 12.12.2003 ...
... – And enclose the people in all the world in a virtual reality that will substitute to the real world and undermine the will to change it. Forum EKS 12.12.2003 ...
Gaze effects in the cerebral cortex: reference frames for
... charge rate of a substantial proportion of PMd cells (Boussaoud et al. 1998), although we stress that the receptive fields were not studied in detail. Figure 2A shows an example of PMd cells whose discharge rate is tuned to the location of the visual cue (presented in polar coordinates) which instru ...
... charge rate of a substantial proportion of PMd cells (Boussaoud et al. 1998), although we stress that the receptive fields were not studied in detail. Figure 2A shows an example of PMd cells whose discharge rate is tuned to the location of the visual cue (presented in polar coordinates) which instru ...
Power of Music
... client to start playing or stop playing. Anytime the clients are playing their instruments, they are following the rhythmic pattern of the first facilitator,but the second facilitator could ask them to Istart or stop at any given time. In this way,the children must maintain focus on both facilitator ...
... client to start playing or stop playing. Anytime the clients are playing their instruments, they are following the rhythmic pattern of the first facilitator,but the second facilitator could ask them to Istart or stop at any given time. In this way,the children must maintain focus on both facilitator ...
Motion perception: Seeing and deciding
... its movement field would be the target of the subsequent saccade. Conversely, a decision favoring the other direction of motion, resulting in a saccade to the target outside the movement field, should decrease or exert no influence upon the neuron’s firing rate. Decision-Related Neural Activity in L ...
... its movement field would be the target of the subsequent saccade. Conversely, a decision favoring the other direction of motion, resulting in a saccade to the target outside the movement field, should decrease or exert no influence upon the neuron’s firing rate. Decision-Related Neural Activity in L ...
Methods S1.
... to reconstruct the temporal structure of the presynaptic spike-train, by the sole observation of the PSCs (i.e., the mutual information would be zero in our framework). In our work instead, we aimed at (information) theoretically exploring the performance of any presynaptic spike times inference, fr ...
... to reconstruct the temporal structure of the presynaptic spike-train, by the sole observation of the PSCs (i.e., the mutual information would be zero in our framework). In our work instead, we aimed at (information) theoretically exploring the performance of any presynaptic spike times inference, fr ...
Creating Visual Thinking Tools - National Science Teachers
... As researchers continue to learn about the brain and how it works, our use and creation of visuals in the classroom becomes ever more important. Recent research (see, for example, pp. 5–7) indicates that the brain, mostly through its visual receptors, is constantly processing incoming bits of inform ...
... As researchers continue to learn about the brain and how it works, our use and creation of visuals in the classroom becomes ever more important. Recent research (see, for example, pp. 5–7) indicates that the brain, mostly through its visual receptors, is constantly processing incoming bits of inform ...
free
... to select rigorous criteria for effectiveness. The closest one could come to understanding effectiveness would be to define key questions, which, if answered, would make it possible to evaluate effectiveness. Effective action is more a succession of comparisons between actions and feedback from the ...
... to select rigorous criteria for effectiveness. The closest one could come to understanding effectiveness would be to define key questions, which, if answered, would make it possible to evaluate effectiveness. Effective action is more a succession of comparisons between actions and feedback from the ...
Optional extra slides on the Binding Problem
... Neurons within the loci of attention may selectively gate signals depending upon whether input cells are synchronized. ...
... Neurons within the loci of attention may selectively gate signals depending upon whether input cells are synchronized. ...
This publication is available in alternative media on request
... Product or process development can be conducted at a company site, within a university laboratory, or at some other suitable site within Pennsylvania. In some cases, conduct of the technical work at two or more sites may be appropriate. The BFTP/CNP can assist applicants in developing relationships ...
... Product or process development can be conducted at a company site, within a university laboratory, or at some other suitable site within Pennsylvania. In some cases, conduct of the technical work at two or more sites may be appropriate. The BFTP/CNP can assist applicants in developing relationships ...
The Dorsal Visual System Predicts Future and Remembers Past Eye
... tonic eye-position-related activity during fixation. In addition, they showed a variety of transient changes in activity around the time of saccades, including relative suppression, enhancement, and pre-saccadic bursts for one saccade direction over another. We show that a hypothetical neuron that p ...
... tonic eye-position-related activity during fixation. In addition, they showed a variety of transient changes in activity around the time of saccades, including relative suppression, enhancement, and pre-saccadic bursts for one saccade direction over another. We show that a hypothetical neuron that p ...
Inhibition
... • Automatic memory retrieval – If there is disagreement between the task at hand and a recent memory, this will take longer because you need to resolve the conflict ...
... • Automatic memory retrieval – If there is disagreement between the task at hand and a recent memory, this will take longer because you need to resolve the conflict ...
Presentation Title Line 1 Presentation Title Line 2
... This material was prepared by IPRO, the Medicare Quality Improvement Organization for New York State, under contract with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The contents do not ...
... This material was prepared by IPRO, the Medicare Quality Improvement Organization for New York State, under contract with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The contents do not ...
Role of motor cortex in voluntary movements Eye
... Histology of the Motor Cortex • the cerebral cortex typically has six layers • two layers of granule cells (an external and internal), which receive information mainly from the thalamus and other regions of the cortex. • two layers of pyramidal cells (an external and internal), which serve as the o ...
... Histology of the Motor Cortex • the cerebral cortex typically has six layers • two layers of granule cells (an external and internal), which receive information mainly from the thalamus and other regions of the cortex. • two layers of pyramidal cells (an external and internal), which serve as the o ...
The Visual Perception System
... Absolute: for vision refers to the minimum amount of light energy that is necessary in order for a visual stimulus to be perceived. The weakest stimulus can be perceived has the light energy equivalent to a candle at about 50 kms viewed under ideal conditions ( a clear, pitch-black night) This is on ...
... Absolute: for vision refers to the minimum amount of light energy that is necessary in order for a visual stimulus to be perceived. The weakest stimulus can be perceived has the light energy equivalent to a candle at about 50 kms viewed under ideal conditions ( a clear, pitch-black night) This is on ...
Decision Support Systems
... Expert systems are based on the thinking and behavior patterns of an expert in a specialized area which s/he performs over and over; For typical DSS problems, there are no experts and the tasks are ad-hoc A knowledge-based information system that uses its knowledge about a specific, complex appl ...
... Expert systems are based on the thinking and behavior patterns of an expert in a specialized area which s/he performs over and over; For typical DSS problems, there are no experts and the tasks are ad-hoc A knowledge-based information system that uses its knowledge about a specific, complex appl ...