Complementary Learning Systems
... (Yonelinas, 2002) posit that recollection is a process that involves the explicit recall of the studied item (typically along with associated episodic context), and when this occurs, people can respond ‘‘old’’ to a probe item with a high level of confidence. In contrast, the familiarity process is d ...
... (Yonelinas, 2002) posit that recollection is a process that involves the explicit recall of the studied item (typically along with associated episodic context), and when this occurs, people can respond ‘‘old’’ to a probe item with a high level of confidence. In contrast, the familiarity process is d ...
Using Music to Tap Into a Universal Neural Grammar
... temporale, somatosensory cortex) as well as enhanced performance in nonmusical cognitive domains (e.g., reading, verbal memory, spatial reasoning). Recent research suggests that these cognitive benefits may derive from early musical training which alters the developmental patterning of neural networ ...
... temporale, somatosensory cortex) as well as enhanced performance in nonmusical cognitive domains (e.g., reading, verbal memory, spatial reasoning). Recent research suggests that these cognitive benefits may derive from early musical training which alters the developmental patterning of neural networ ...
2-2
... • The behavior of an organism is subject to a continuous circular flow of information between itself and its environment • Environmental stimuli are received and processed by sensory structures; as a result of sensory processing, actions are generated that cause certain changes in the environment, w ...
... • The behavior of an organism is subject to a continuous circular flow of information between itself and its environment • Environmental stimuli are received and processed by sensory structures; as a result of sensory processing, actions are generated that cause certain changes in the environment, w ...
Memory Cure -- through ‘brain specific nutrients’?
... into the neuron. This passage of ions changes the electrical potential between the inside and outside of the neuron and causes the neuron to "fire" an electrical signal. However, this occurs within milliseconds and does not produce a long-term change in the neuron, and thus cannot be the basis of m ...
... into the neuron. This passage of ions changes the electrical potential between the inside and outside of the neuron and causes the neuron to "fire" an electrical signal. However, this occurs within milliseconds and does not produce a long-term change in the neuron, and thus cannot be the basis of m ...
More is Better: The Effects of Multiple Repetitions on Implicit Memory
... In the Reder et al. (1998) experiments, the words were selected from the Medical Research Council psycholinguistic database (Coltheart, 1981). Half the word were selected to have high normative frequencies, and half were selected to have low frequencies. The mean normative Kucera and Francis (1967) ...
... In the Reder et al. (1998) experiments, the words were selected from the Medical Research Council psycholinguistic database (Coltheart, 1981). Half the word were selected to have high normative frequencies, and half were selected to have low frequencies. The mean normative Kucera and Francis (1967) ...
Systems memory consolidation in Drosophila
... Current Opinion in Neurobiology 2012, 23:xx–yy This review comes from a themed issue on Neurogenetics Edited by Ralph Greenspan and Christine Petit ...
... Current Opinion in Neurobiology 2012, 23:xx–yy This review comes from a themed issue on Neurogenetics Edited by Ralph Greenspan and Christine Petit ...
Eichenbaum et al., 2012a, #15 - Fortin Lab @ UCI
... and a sense of familiarity for previous experienced materials. This method uses the Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) function to generate separate indices of episodic recollection and familiarity in accordance with theories that consider these two processes as distinct and independent (Yoneli ...
... and a sense of familiarity for previous experienced materials. This method uses the Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) function to generate separate indices of episodic recollection and familiarity in accordance with theories that consider these two processes as distinct and independent (Yoneli ...
article in press - Department of Physiology, Development and
... Received 7 July 2005; revised 1 November 2005; accepted 16 January 2006 ...
... Received 7 July 2005; revised 1 November 2005; accepted 16 January 2006 ...
This article was originally published in the Encyclopedia of
... response modalities. These findings are corroborated by neuroimaging findings that reveal overlapping neural activation across many stimulus and response demands. However, response selection appears in some situations to be lateralized according to stimulus characteristics, with spatial tasks associ ...
... response modalities. These findings are corroborated by neuroimaging findings that reveal overlapping neural activation across many stimulus and response demands. However, response selection appears in some situations to be lateralized according to stimulus characteristics, with spatial tasks associ ...
Hippocampal Amnesia - Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience
... hemispheric patients to suffer combined non-verbal and verbal problems than right hemispheric patients (Ott and Saver, 1993). Consistent with a dominant role for the left hippocampus in memory for personally experienced events (‘episodic memory’, see below), the majority of amnesic patients with uni ...
... hemispheric patients to suffer combined non-verbal and verbal problems than right hemispheric patients (Ott and Saver, 1993). Consistent with a dominant role for the left hippocampus in memory for personally experienced events (‘episodic memory’, see below), the majority of amnesic patients with uni ...
Brain and effort: brain activation and effort-related working
... working memory dysfunction between episodes and sometimes even after the hypersomnia has receded (Landtblom et al., 2002, 2003; Engström et al., 2009). These problems involving working memory and attention take place in the context of preserved general cognitive capacity and—which is of particular i ...
... working memory dysfunction between episodes and sometimes even after the hypersomnia has receded (Landtblom et al., 2002, 2003; Engström et al., 2009). These problems involving working memory and attention take place in the context of preserved general cognitive capacity and—which is of particular i ...
Bachelor of Music Major Composition, Music and Studio productions
... Students have the opportunity to improve their qualification level by choosing one or more specialisations (instrumental composition, song writing, applied composition for the media and production), working towards competences in a wide range of musical environments; they also gain a lot of experien ...
... Students have the opportunity to improve their qualification level by choosing one or more specialisations (instrumental composition, song writing, applied composition for the media and production), working towards competences in a wide range of musical environments; they also gain a lot of experien ...
Impaired associative learning in schizophrenia: behavioral and
... memories before the lesion is preserved but the formation of new long term memories is impaired. It also is consistent with experimental work in animals: Lesions that are applied to the hippocampus early during learning devastate trace conditioning preventing eventual consolidation of traces in long ...
... memories before the lesion is preserved but the formation of new long term memories is impaired. It also is consistent with experimental work in animals: Lesions that are applied to the hippocampus early during learning devastate trace conditioning preventing eventual consolidation of traces in long ...
The Cognitive Neuroscience of Human Memory Since H.M.
... 46%, n = 1 (Mayes et al. 2002)]. Neurohistological data from two of these patients (L.M. and W.H.) suggest an explanation for this striking consistency. As described above, these two patients had extensive cell loss in the hippocampus as well as in the dentate gyrus. Accordingly, a reduction in hipp ...
... 46%, n = 1 (Mayes et al. 2002)]. Neurohistological data from two of these patients (L.M. and W.H.) suggest an explanation for this striking consistency. As described above, these two patients had extensive cell loss in the hippocampus as well as in the dentate gyrus. Accordingly, a reduction in hipp ...
Name: Class:___________ Music Workbook Semester 2 Pitch
... Tie - a curved line connecting two notes of the same pitch. Tied notes are held for the length of both notes. Canon – A piece of music where one voice repeats the part of another, throughout the whole piece. It is singing the same song starting at different times. Partner Songs - Two different ...
... Tie - a curved line connecting two notes of the same pitch. Tied notes are held for the length of both notes. Canon – A piece of music where one voice repeats the part of another, throughout the whole piece. It is singing the same song starting at different times. Partner Songs - Two different ...
Selective cognitive dysfunction in acetylcholine M
... suggests an important role for M1 receptors in memory and cognition. M1 receptors are colocalized with NMDA receptors in hippocampal pyramidal neurons, and coactivation with NMDA receptors results in amplified NMDA currents6. Moreover, M1 receptors are required for muscarinic activation of mitogenac ...
... suggests an important role for M1 receptors in memory and cognition. M1 receptors are colocalized with NMDA receptors in hippocampal pyramidal neurons, and coactivation with NMDA receptors results in amplified NMDA currents6. Moreover, M1 receptors are required for muscarinic activation of mitogenac ...
The Cognitive Neuroscience of Human Memory Since H.M.
... 46%, n = 1 (Mayes et al. 2002)]. Neurohistological data from two of these patients (L.M. and W.H.) suggest an explanation for this striking consistency. As described above, these two patients had extensive cell loss in the hippocampus as well as in the dentate gyrus. Accordingly, a reduction in hipp ...
... 46%, n = 1 (Mayes et al. 2002)]. Neurohistological data from two of these patients (L.M. and W.H.) suggest an explanation for this striking consistency. As described above, these two patients had extensive cell loss in the hippocampus as well as in the dentate gyrus. Accordingly, a reduction in hipp ...
Studying musical imagery: Context and intentionality
... that music through exposure to it. In a study that deliberately probed participants’ ability to recognize melody, a strong relationship was again demonstrated between the subjective measurement of familiarity, and the speed with which participants were able to mentally generate an image for that mel ...
... that music through exposure to it. In a study that deliberately probed participants’ ability to recognize melody, a strong relationship was again demonstrated between the subjective measurement of familiarity, and the speed with which participants were able to mentally generate an image for that mel ...
The Cave Of Sounds: An Interactive Installation Exploring
... and sound relate. Therefore, as well as a challenge of engineering [8], the instrument can itself be an artistic medium expressing its creator’s musical ideas [11]. Instruments designed through personal artistic practice may be created not for their take up by others, but as part of the composition ...
... and sound relate. Therefore, as well as a challenge of engineering [8], the instrument can itself be an artistic medium expressing its creator’s musical ideas [11]. Instruments designed through personal artistic practice may be created not for their take up by others, but as part of the composition ...
recognition memory: what are the roles of the perirhinal cortex and
... occurs in the delay before an animal must make a familiarity discrimination about that stimulus22,34,41,46. Second, if an animal has been trained to expect rewards for repetitions of a target stimulus but not of non-target stimuli, responses to the target stimulus can be enhanced rather than reduced ...
... occurs in the delay before an animal must make a familiarity discrimination about that stimulus22,34,41,46. Second, if an animal has been trained to expect rewards for repetitions of a target stimulus but not of non-target stimuli, responses to the target stimulus can be enhanced rather than reduced ...
Veigar Margeirsson Bio Veigar Margeirsson is an acclaimed film
... creative experience that enabled him to pull ahead of the competition, both as a composer and budding entrepreneur. In 2012, Veigar joined Brasher and founded Pitch Hammer Music with the objective of providing the industry a very selective library of only specialized, high-end music compositions wit ...
... creative experience that enabled him to pull ahead of the competition, both as a composer and budding entrepreneur. In 2012, Veigar joined Brasher and founded Pitch Hammer Music with the objective of providing the industry a very selective library of only specialized, high-end music compositions wit ...
How the hippocampus preserves order: the role of
... effect has been shown to increase with the degree of spatiotemporal discontinuity between the studied representations [18]. Interestingly, the role of the hippocampus in bridging representations across time does not appear to be limited to episodic memories. It has been shown that patients with hipp ...
... effect has been shown to increase with the degree of spatiotemporal discontinuity between the studied representations [18]. Interestingly, the role of the hippocampus in bridging representations across time does not appear to be limited to episodic memories. It has been shown that patients with hipp ...
STUFF TO ADD:
... autobiographical memories, but rather coordinate the storage of these data in posterior cortical modules. All major theories agree that the medial temporal and frontal lobes do not themselves provide long-term storage of most sensory data (though they may store connections among modules). These regi ...
... autobiographical memories, but rather coordinate the storage of these data in posterior cortical modules. All major theories agree that the medial temporal and frontal lobes do not themselves provide long-term storage of most sensory data (though they may store connections among modules). These regi ...
Final PDF Backstrom - Critical Studies in Improvisation
... Improvisers are always improvising on something—whether that includes a pre-known formal structure or simply their own past musical experiences. There is, in other words, something unavoidably mimetic about improvisation. Therefore, contrary to Philip Alperson, one is indeed interpreting when one im ...
... Improvisers are always improvising on something—whether that includes a pre-known formal structure or simply their own past musical experiences. There is, in other words, something unavoidably mimetic about improvisation. Therefore, contrary to Philip Alperson, one is indeed interpreting when one im ...