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video slide - Welcome to HCC Southeast Commons
video slide - Welcome to HCC Southeast Commons

... convoluted surface called the neocortex, which was previously thought to be required for cognition • Cognition is the perception and reasoning that form knowledge ...
Correlation between auditory threshold and the auditory brainstem
Correlation between auditory threshold and the auditory brainstem

... impairment results in fewer neurons contributing to ABR wave amplitudes and/or smaller contribution from each neuron (neural asynchrony) and a decrease in the membrane potential of neurons. The persistent amplitude reduction during the first month of life after perinatal asphyxia suggests that HI in ...
Biological Bases of Bx Test
Biological Bases of Bx Test

... e. Broca's area ____ 32. An area at the rear of the frontal lobes that controls voluntary movements is called the a. angular gyrus. b. hypothalamus. c. motor cortex. d. reticular formation. e. frontal association area. ____ 33. Our lips are more sensitive than our knees to sensations of touch due to ...
Nuclear receptor coactivators: Regulators of steroid action in brain
Nuclear receptor coactivators: Regulators of steroid action in brain

... support, SRC-1 knockout mice, while fertile, have decreased responsiveness in progestin target tissues (91) and partial resistance to thyroid hormone (92). It is important to note that in these mice SRC-2 is up-regulated in steroid sensitive tissues, including brain and testes, suggesting that incre ...
Predicting voluntary movements from motor cortical activity with
Predicting voluntary movements from motor cortical activity with

... skull) using invasive approaches [1]–[6]. Previous studies have shown that decoding this information efficiently allows for the real-time control of a computer screen cursor or technical devices with several degrees of freedom in humans [7], [8] and non-human primates [9]–[12]. Some of the possible ...
Module 3 and 4 Practice Test
Module 3 and 4 Practice Test

... a. reticular formation. b. cerebellum. c. medulla. d. amygdala. e. thalamus. ____ 28. Addictive drug cravings are likely to be associated with reward centers in the a. thalamus. b. cerebellum. c. reticular formation. d. limbic system. e. angular gyrus. ____ 29. The thin surface layer of interconnect ...
The Human Mirror Neuron System and Embodied
The Human Mirror Neuron System and Embodied

... These studies revealed two distinct classes of neurons: canonical neurons and mirror neurons. Canonical neurons are primarily found along the posterior bank of the arcuate sulcus (F5ab) and are associated with the execution of motor actions. They also respond when the animal is presented with graspa ...
Morphological Analysis of Dendritic Spine Development in Primary
Morphological Analysis of Dendritic Spine Development in Primary

... NA, oil-immersion objective was used to visualize individual cells and dendrites. Optical serial sections of 0.3-0.6 Frn were taken through the cells and reconstructed to yield complete “three-dimensional” images of individual cells in focus. Those DiI-filled cells considered to have “spiny” dendrit ...
Do Changes in Brain Organization Reflect Shifts in Symbolic
Do Changes in Brain Organization Reflect Shifts in Symbolic

... birth. In turn, these findings have been interpreted as support for an innate language acquisition device residing in the left hemisphere. Very few of the studies showing an early left hemisphere asymmetry to language have examined devel-opmental stability or changes in the organization of brain act ...
Document
Document

... In Section 2 we show that whereas recognition of objects learned previously against a blank background is hardly affected by the presence of background noise, the ability to learn position invariant responses to new objects when presented against cluttered backgrounds is greatly reduced. This sugges ...
weiten6_PPT04
weiten6_PPT04

... Form perception - top-down processing Subjective contours Gestalt psychologists: the whole is more than the sum of its parts – Reversible figures and perceptual sets demonstrate that the same visual stimulus can result in very different perceptions Table of Contents ...
diencephalon - Loyola University Medical Education Network
diencephalon - Loyola University Medical Education Network

... d.) Be able to identify the thalamus and its relationships to the internal capsule, basal ganglia and third ventricle 2. After attending lecture and studying the assigned material you will be able to: a.) Identify the specific (or relay) nuclei of the thalamus, source of their afferents and which on ...
A Thesis Entitled The Effects of Depth of Processing and
A Thesis Entitled The Effects of Depth of Processing and

... complexity of mental operations carried out on it during encoding. They further theorized that short and long term memory were virtually identical processes, with the only difference between them being the strength of their respective traces. Short-term memories are only briefly accessible because t ...
NervousSystemchapt28
NervousSystemchapt28

... such as reasoning and language, make up most of the cerebrum • The right and left cerebral hemispheres – Tend to specialize in different mental ...
Linear Numerical Magnitude Representations Aid Memory for Single Numbers
Linear Numerical Magnitude Representations Aid Memory for Single Numbers

... immediately followed the counting task. After explaining the counting task to the subject, the experimenter continued, “Then, I’m going to tell you a password.” The experimenter pointed out a second experimenter, who was seated less than halfway across the room, and instructed the child that, in a q ...
What is the other 85% of V1 doing?
What is the other 85% of V1 doing?

Computing auditory perception - Machine Learning Group, TU Berlin
Computing auditory perception - Machine Learning Group, TU Berlin

... computational models. By combining formalised neurons, artificial neural networks and cognitive models, we can implement a model of auditory perception. Can we make use of such a model, e.g. in hearing aids, compression, automated music analysis, or music composition? We can, to some extent. But ofte ...
Précis of The Brain and Emotion
Précis of The Brain and Emotion

... appear to have been reconnected (compared to rodents) to place much more emphasis on cortical processing, taking place in areas such as the orbitofrontal cortex (see Chapter 2). The principle of the stage of sensory processing at which reward value is extracted and made explicit in the representatio ...
- Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour
- Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour

... magnetoencephalography (Nishitani and Hari, 2000). What specific aspects of an action are encoded by the mirror system? Single-unit studies in the monkey suggest that cortical representations of an action are organized around the goal or target of that action. Many F5 neurons become active during ac ...
Ch. 49
Ch. 49

... convoluted surface called the neocortex, which was previously thought to be required for cognition • Cognition is the perception and reasoning that form knowledge ...
Category-specific Conceptual Processing of
Category-specific Conceptual Processing of

... words (Preissl et al., 1995; Martin et al., 1996; Pulvermüller et al., 1999). Among the action words, those related to movements of the face, arm or leg activated fronto-central cortex in a somatotopic fashion (Hauk et al., 2004; Shtyrov et al., 2004), consistent with the claim that sensorimotor co ...
Age-associated hyper-methylated regions in the human brain
Age-associated hyper-methylated regions in the human brain

... associated with both cell differentiation and carcinogenesis [11]. Given the relationship between cancer and aging, the finding that age-associated hyper-methylation has been shown to preferentially occur within bivalent domains is intriguing and warrants further study [3], and also suggests that th ...
BRAIN Response inhibition and serotonin in autism: depletion
BRAIN Response inhibition and serotonin in autism: depletion

Age-dependent effect of cholinergic lesion on dendritic morphology
Age-dependent effect of cholinergic lesion on dendritic morphology

... to young adults [46]. Similarly, the axonal sprouting typically seen in hippocampal neurons following partial deafferentation via lesions of entorhinal cortex is reduced in aged rats [52]. Finally, lesions of the nucleus basalis magnocellularis (NBM) attenuate benzodiazepine-induced potentiation of ...
Stop-Signal Task - Gemstone Honors Program
Stop-Signal Task - Gemstone Honors Program

... behavior. The stop-signal task, a popular method used in neuroscience and psychology to measure impulsivity, has shown that those with ADHD tend to have slower inhibition response times (Eagle & Baunez, 2010). Poor performance on these tasks is observed after pharmacological manipulation of prefront ...
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Holonomic brain theory

The holonomic brain theory, developed by neuroscientist Karl Pribram initially in collaboration with physicist David Bohm, is a model of human cognition that describes the brain as a holographic storage network. Pribram suggests these processes involve electric oscillations in the brain's fine-fibered dendritic webs, which are different from the more commonly known action potentials involving axons and synapses. These oscillations are waves and create wave interference patterns in which memory is encoded naturally, and the waves may be analyzed by a Fourier transform. Gabor, Pribram and others noted the similarities between these brain processes and the storage of information in a hologram, which can also be analyzed with a Fourier transform. In a hologram, any part of the hologram with sufficient size contains the whole of the stored information. In this theory, a piece of a long-term memory is similarly distributed over a dendritic arbor so that each part of the dendritic network contains all the information stored over the entire network. This model allows for important aspects of human consciousness, including the fast associative memory that allows for connections between different pieces of stored information and the non-locality of memory storage (a specific memory is not stored in a specific location, i.e. a certain neuron).
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