Cognitive Percept Lecture
... DEFINITION Abrupt onset of reversible disturbance of consciousness, attention, cognition, and perception that develop over a short period of time DEFINING CHARACTERISTICS ♦ Fluctuation in cognition ♦ Fluctuation in level of consciousness ♦ Fluctuation in sleep– wake cycle ♦ Fluctuation in psychomoto ...
... DEFINITION Abrupt onset of reversible disturbance of consciousness, attention, cognition, and perception that develop over a short period of time DEFINING CHARACTERISTICS ♦ Fluctuation in cognition ♦ Fluctuation in level of consciousness ♦ Fluctuation in sleep– wake cycle ♦ Fluctuation in psychomoto ...
biological conditions for the emergence of musical arts in a
... continuously sounding musical tone). A theory of harmony based on a neural model for the central pitch processor was developed by Terhardt (1974). It is important to point out, however, that the function of a central pitch processor is not unique to humans: complex tone perception works in a similar ...
... continuously sounding musical tone). A theory of harmony based on a neural model for the central pitch processor was developed by Terhardt (1974). It is important to point out, however, that the function of a central pitch processor is not unique to humans: complex tone perception works in a similar ...
Molecular basis of learning in the hippocampus and the amygdala
... 2012, Scoville et al., 1957). It has got a role not only in memorization but this is a structure where some of engrams are stored (O'Keefe et al., 1976). FIG.1. Division of long-term memory. Non-declarative memory is phylogenetically older and some of its types exist in simpler organisms like snail ...
... 2012, Scoville et al., 1957). It has got a role not only in memorization but this is a structure where some of engrams are stored (O'Keefe et al., 1976). FIG.1. Division of long-term memory. Non-declarative memory is phylogenetically older and some of its types exist in simpler organisms like snail ...
Memory, navigation and theta rhythm in the
... overlap in the brain networks supporting navigation, remembering the past and thinking about the future52,53. The key properties of episodic memory involve binding disparate and often arbitrary details together into a coherent event and the recollection of selfcentered past experiences in the contex ...
... overlap in the brain networks supporting navigation, remembering the past and thinking about the future52,53. The key properties of episodic memory involve binding disparate and often arbitrary details together into a coherent event and the recollection of selfcentered past experiences in the contex ...
Exam Concepts#2_Psy110
... _____. This would then help them recall her difficult last name. Janet was using what psychological process to help people remember her name? 9. Discuss proactive and retroactive interference with memory. Give an example of these concepts using the remembering (or forgetting) of new or past phone nu ...
... _____. This would then help them recall her difficult last name. Janet was using what psychological process to help people remember her name? 9. Discuss proactive and retroactive interference with memory. Give an example of these concepts using the remembering (or forgetting) of new or past phone nu ...
Emotion, Memory and the Brain - sdsu
... we are still far from explaining in a rigorous physiological sense this part of our mental experience. Neuroscientists have, in modern times, been especially concerned with the neural basis of such cognitive processes as perception and memory. They have for the most part ignored the brain’s role in ...
... we are still far from explaining in a rigorous physiological sense this part of our mental experience. Neuroscientists have, in modern times, been especially concerned with the neural basis of such cognitive processes as perception and memory. They have for the most part ignored the brain’s role in ...
BJ4102451460
... experiences, storing and recalling events including time and location. The hippocampus is an essential brain region in episodic memory, the storage and recall of series of events in space and time. Episodic memory is inherently related to the storage and recall of sequences of events. Episodes must ...
... experiences, storing and recalling events including time and location. The hippocampus is an essential brain region in episodic memory, the storage and recall of series of events in space and time. Episodic memory is inherently related to the storage and recall of sequences of events. Episodes must ...
Cultural aspects of Traditional Sports and Games
... hand. Furthermore, it contributes to the general discourse about the role of sport for society. After short explanations of those main concepts, which are important regarding TSG, examples that help to clarify the cultural importance of TSG will be offered. The focus lies on Finnish Baseball, pesäpa ...
... hand. Furthermore, it contributes to the general discourse about the role of sport for society. After short explanations of those main concepts, which are important regarding TSG, examples that help to clarify the cultural importance of TSG will be offered. The focus lies on Finnish Baseball, pesäpa ...
Slides - Indiana University Bloomington
... the amplitude of EPSPs in the target neurons. The increase lasts for days or weeks and requires activation of several afferent axons together. This property has been termed cooperativity, and it results from the requirement of NMDA receptors that glutamate bind them and that the cell be hypopolarize ...
... the amplitude of EPSPs in the target neurons. The increase lasts for days or weeks and requires activation of several afferent axons together. This property has been termed cooperativity, and it results from the requirement of NMDA receptors that glutamate bind them and that the cell be hypopolarize ...
Heightened Interference on Implicit, but Not Explicit, Tests of
... of heightened interference previously observed in amnesic patients and institutionalized old people. It is important to emphasize that the results do not rule out the possibility that other brain regions, notably the frontal lobes, may also be implicated in controlling interference (Luria, 1971; Shi ...
... of heightened interference previously observed in amnesic patients and institutionalized old people. It is important to emphasize that the results do not rule out the possibility that other brain regions, notably the frontal lobes, may also be implicated in controlling interference (Luria, 1971; Shi ...
clinical assessment of dementia
... should combine basic clinical evaluation skills with other disease-specific assessments to provide accurate high-quality dementia assessments. The symptoms of dementia re divided into cognitive, functional, and psychiatric. Cognitive symptoms include intellectual deficits such as amnesia or aphasia. ...
... should combine basic clinical evaluation skills with other disease-specific assessments to provide accurate high-quality dementia assessments. The symptoms of dementia re divided into cognitive, functional, and psychiatric. Cognitive symptoms include intellectual deficits such as amnesia or aphasia. ...
Questions - Ms. Paras
... Defense Mechanism: Redirecting a forbidden desire into a socially acceptable desire. SUBLIMATION Defense Mechanism: Not accepting the truth or the reality of a situation. ...
... Defense Mechanism: Redirecting a forbidden desire into a socially acceptable desire. SUBLIMATION Defense Mechanism: Not accepting the truth or the reality of a situation. ...
Understanding the neurobiological mechanisms of
... based on the use of protein synthesis inhibitors, such as puromicin or cycloheximide, and although these substances are highly toxic in animals, their employment was useful to clarify that protein synthesis inhibition prevents memory formation after training (Barondes, 1970). However, when alternat ...
... based on the use of protein synthesis inhibitors, such as puromicin or cycloheximide, and although these substances are highly toxic in animals, their employment was useful to clarify that protein synthesis inhibition prevents memory formation after training (Barondes, 1970). However, when alternat ...
AP Psych Review Jeopardy 2010
... Perceptual processes in which information from an individual's past experience, expectations, motivations, etc. influence the way an object is perceived ...
... Perceptual processes in which information from an individual's past experience, expectations, motivations, etc. influence the way an object is perceived ...
Service Learning
... Evaluation The database was checked for accuracy, interpretation and relevance to the types and the level of questions being asked 50 inputs and answers per evaluator / each evaluator spent 30 minutes on average chatting with Marvin Two perspectives: competent information scientist / pretend ...
... Evaluation The database was checked for accuracy, interpretation and relevance to the types and the level of questions being asked 50 inputs and answers per evaluator / each evaluator spent 30 minutes on average chatting with Marvin Two perspectives: competent information scientist / pretend ...
Declarative Memory
... Declarative Memory Declarative or episodic memory is for arbitrary and non-repeated associations. For example, when birds or squirrels store seeds for the winter they must remember the arbitrary locations and their contents (episode) even if they have just been to the particular places just once and ...
... Declarative Memory Declarative or episodic memory is for arbitrary and non-repeated associations. For example, when birds or squirrels store seeds for the winter they must remember the arbitrary locations and their contents (episode) even if they have just been to the particular places just once and ...
How cognitive theory guides neuroscience
... memories separate, so as to not mistake yesterday’s parking spot for today’s, whereas the latter question requires an integration of many previous parking experiences into a coherent representation linked to its average value (McClelland, McNaughton & O’Reilly, 1995; Norman & O’Reilly, 2003; O’Reill ...
... memories separate, so as to not mistake yesterday’s parking spot for today’s, whereas the latter question requires an integration of many previous parking experiences into a coherent representation linked to its average value (McClelland, McNaughton & O’Reilly, 1995; Norman & O’Reilly, 2003; O’Reill ...
CHI2004
... pictures can’t be captured by external inspection – they are inside your head, and, at present, we don’t even know where to look. Images are stored with little conscious awareness of what was learned, and are hard to describe. You will not be able to give another person such a stored certificate, ev ...
... pictures can’t be captured by external inspection – they are inside your head, and, at present, we don’t even know where to look. Images are stored with little conscious awareness of what was learned, and are hard to describe. You will not be able to give another person such a stored certificate, ev ...
Passwords you`ll never forget, but can`t recall
... pictures can’t be captured by external inspection – they are inside your head, and, at present, we don’t even know where to look. Images are stored with little conscious awareness of what was learned, and are hard to describe. You will not be able to give another person such a stored certificate, ev ...
... pictures can’t be captured by external inspection – they are inside your head, and, at present, we don’t even know where to look. Images are stored with little conscious awareness of what was learned, and are hard to describe. You will not be able to give another person such a stored certificate, ev ...
module - HCC Learning Web
... 12.4 How can poor retrieval cues (retrieval failure) lead to forgetting, and how can one fonn effective retrieval cues? (p. 267) repression; motivated forgetting· (see Addendum); amnesia; interference; retrieval cues; tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon. ...
... 12.4 How can poor retrieval cues (retrieval failure) lead to forgetting, and how can one fonn effective retrieval cues? (p. 267) repression; motivated forgetting· (see Addendum); amnesia; interference; retrieval cues; tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon. ...
psyc 2301 core learning objectives and key terms
... Do you use the words sex and gender interchangeably? Most people do, but the words have different meanings. Generally speaking, sex is a biological term. It typically refers to the physiological status of being male or female. As you learned in Chapter 2, the sex chromosomes, XX in females and XY in ...
... Do you use the words sex and gender interchangeably? Most people do, but the words have different meanings. Generally speaking, sex is a biological term. It typically refers to the physiological status of being male or female. As you learned in Chapter 2, the sex chromosomes, XX in females and XY in ...
Introduction to Psychology PSYC 1101
... How Neurons Communicate • Synapse: Site where a nerve impulse is transmitted from one neuron to another; includes the axon terminal, synaptic cleft, and receptor sites on receiving cell. • Neurotransmitter: Chemical substance that is released by transmitting neuron at the synapse and alters the act ...
... How Neurons Communicate • Synapse: Site where a nerve impulse is transmitted from one neuron to another; includes the axon terminal, synaptic cleft, and receptor sites on receiving cell. • Neurotransmitter: Chemical substance that is released by transmitting neuron at the synapse and alters the act ...
Ch 25 - Molecular Mechanisms of Learning and Memory
... Sensitization of the Gill-Withdrawal Reflex ...
... Sensitization of the Gill-Withdrawal Reflex ...
Reconstructive memory
Reconstructive memory is a theory of elaborate memory recall proposed within the field of Cognitive Psychology, in which the act of remembering is influenced by various other cognitive processes including Perception Imagination, Semantic memory and Beliefs, amongst others. People view their memories as being a coherent and truthful account of Episodic memory and believe that their perspective is free from error during recall. However the reconstructive process of memory recall is subject to distortion by other intervening cognitive functions such as individual perceptions, social influences, and world knowledge, all of which can lead to errors during reconstruction.