11754oam 22005773 450 991081304200332120240926190423.01-118-46827-91-118-46826-01-118-46806-61-118-46827-9(CKB)27407444800041(MiAaPQ)EBC1919320(PPN)186192606(MiAaPQ)EBC7103695(EXLCZ)992740744480004120220831d2015 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierEssentials of Cognitive Neuroscience1st ed.Chichester, West SussexWiley Blackwell2015Hoboken :John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,2015.©2014.1 online resource (610 pages)Includes bibliographical references and index9781118468067 Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Brief Contents -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Methodology Boxes -- Walk Through of Pedagogical Features -- Companion Website -- Section I The Neurobiology of Thinking -- Introduction to Section I The Neurobiology of Thinking -- COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE? OR "HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE"? OR "NEUROSCIENCE-WITH-DIRECT IMPLICATIONS-FOR-UNDERSTANDING-HUMAN-BEHAVIOR"? -- Chapter 1 Introduction and History -- KEY THEMES -- TIMELINE: NINETEENTH- AND TWENTIETH-CENTURY ORIGINS OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE -- A BRIEF (AND SELECTIVE) HISTORY -- Localization of function vs. mass action -- The first scientifically rigorous demonstrations of localization of function -- WHAT IS A BRAIN AND WHAT DOES IT DO? -- LOOKING AHEAD TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Chapter 2 The Brain -- KEY THEMES -- PEP TALK -- GROSS ANATOMY -- The cerebral cortex -- THE NEURON -- Electrical and chemical properties of the neuron -- Neuroanatomical techniques exploit the physiology of the neuron -- OSCILLATORY FLUCTUATIONS IN THE MEMBRANE POTENTIAL -- Neurons are never truly "at rest" -- Synchronous oscillation -- COMPLICATED, AND COMPLEX -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Section II Sensation, Perception, Attention, and Action -- Introduction to Section II Sensation, Perception, Attention, and Action -- Chapter 3 Sensation and Perception of Visual Signals -- KEY THEMES -- THE DOMINANT SENSE IN PRIMATES -- ORGANIZATION OF THE VISUAL SYSTEM -- The visual field -- The retinotopic organization of primary visual cortex -- INFORMATION PROCESSING IN PRIMARY VISUAL CORTEX - BOTTOM UP FEATURE DETECTION -- The V1 neuron as feature detector -- Columns, hypercolumns, and pinwheels.INFORMATION PROCESSING IN PRIMARY VISUAL CORTEX - INTERACTIVITY -- Feedforward and feedback projections of V1 -- Circularity? It can depend on your perspective -- The relation between visual processing and the brain's physiological state -- WHERE DOES SENSATION END? WHERE DOES PERCEPTION BEGIN? -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Chapter 4 Audition and Somatosensation -- KEY THEMES -- APOLOGIA -- AUDITION -- Auditory sensation -- Auditory perception -- Adieu to audition -- SOMATOSENSATION -- Transduction of mechanical and thermal energy, and of pain -- Somatotopy -- Somatosensory plasticity -- Phantom limbs and phantom pain -- Proprioception -- Adieu to sensation -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Chapter 5 The Visual System -- KEY THEMES -- FAMILIAR PRINCIPLES AND PROCESSES, APPLIED TO HIGHER-LEVEL REPRESENTATIONS -- TWO PARALLEL PATHWAYS -- A diversity of projections from V1 -- A functional dissociation of visual perception of what an object is vs. where it is located -- Interconnectedness within and between the two pathways -- THE ORGANIZATION AND FUNCTIONS OF THE VENTRAL VISUAL PROCESSING STREAM -- Hand cells, face cells, and grandmother cells -- A hierarchy of stimulus representation -- A critical role for feedback in the ventral visual processing stream -- TAKING STOCK -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Chapter 6 Spatial Cognition and Attention -- KEY THEMES -- UNILATERAL NEGLECT: A FERTILE SOURCE OF MODELS OF SPATIAL COGNITION AND ATTENTION -- Unilateral neglect: a clinicoanatomical primer -- Hypotheses arising from clinical observations of neglect -- THE FUNCTIONAL ANATOMY OF THE DORSAL STREAM -- Mapping what vs. where in humans with positron emission tomography.Detecting spatial maps with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) -- Coordinate transformations to guide action with perception -- FROM PARIETAL SPACE TO MEDIAL-TEMPORAL PLACE -- Place cells in the hippocampus -- How does place come to be represented in the hippocampus? -- THE NEUROPHYSIOLOGY OF SENSORY ATTENTION -- A day at the circus -- Attending to locations vs. attending to objects -- Mechanisms of spatial attention -- Effects of attention on neuronal activity -- TURNING OUR ATTENTION TO THE FUTURE -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Chapter 7 Skeletomotor Control -- KEY THEMES -- THE ORGANIZATION OF THE MOTOR SYSTEM -- The anatomy of the motor system -- The corticospinal tract -- The cortico-cerebellar circuit -- The cortico-basal ganglia-thalamic circuits -- FUNCTIONAL PRINCIPLES OF MOTOR CONTROL -- The biomechanics of motor control -- Motor cortex -- The neurophysiology of movement -- MOTOR CONTROL OUTSIDE OF MOTOR CORTEX -- Parietal cortex: guiding how we move -- Cerebellum: motor learning, balance, … and mental representation? -- Basal ganglia -- COGNITIVE FUNCTIONS OF THE MOTOR SYSTEM -- IT'S ALL ABOUT ACTION -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Chapter 8 Oculomotor Control and the Control of Attention -- KEY THEMES -- ATTENTION AND ACTION -- WHYS AND HOWS OF EYE MOVEMENTS -- Three categories of eye movements -- THE ORGANIZATION OF THE OCULOMOTOR SYSTEM -- An overview of the circuitry -- The superior colliculus -- The posterior system -- The frontal eye field -- The supplementary eye field -- THE CONTROL OF EYE MOVEMENTS, AND OF ATTENTION, IN HUMANS -- Human oculomotor control -- Human attentional control -- THE CONTROL OF ATTENTION VIA THE OCULOMOTOR SYSTEM -- Covert attention -- Where's the attentional controller?.Are Oculomotor Control and Attentional Control Really the "Same Thing"? -- The "method of visual inspection" -- "Prioritized Maps of Space in Human Frontoparietal Cortex" -- OF LABELS AND MECHANISMS -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Section III Mental Representation -- Introduction to Section III Mental Representation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 9 Visual Object Recognition and Knowledge -- KEY THEMES -- VISUAL AGNOSIA -- Apperceptive agnosia -- Associative agnosia -- COMPUTATIONAL MODELS OF VISUAL OBJECT RECOGNITION -- Two neuropsychological traditions -- The cognitive neuroscience revolution in visual cognition -- CATEGORY SPECIFICITY IN THE VENTRAL STREAM? -- Are faces special? -- Perceptual expertise -- Evidence for a high degree of specificity for many categories in ventral occipitotemporal cortex -- Evidence for highly distributed category representation in ventral occipitotemporal cortex -- Demonstrating necessity -- RECONCILING THE IRRECONCILABLE -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Chapter 10 Neural Bases of Memory -- KEY THEMES -- PLASTICITY, LEARNING, AND MEMORY -- THE CASE OF H. M. -- Bilateral medial temporal lobectomy -- Hippocampus vs. MTL? -- ASSOCIATION THROUGH SYNAPTIC MODIFICATION -- The example of Pavlovian conditioning -- Hebbian plasticity -- Long-term potentiation -- The necessity of NMDA channels for long‐term memory formation -- HOW MIGHT THE HIPPOCAMPUS WORK? -- Fast-encoding hippocampus vs. slow-encoding cortex -- Episodic memory for sequences -- Episodic memory as an evolutionary elaboration of navigational processing -- WHAT ARE THE COGNITIVE FUNCTIONS OF THE HIPPOCAMPUS? -- Standard anatomical model -- Challenges to the standard anatomical model -- Consolidation -- TO CONSOLIDATE -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES.OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Chapter 11 Declarative Long-Term Memory -- KEY THEMES -- THE COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE OF LTM -- ENCODING -- Neuroimaging the hippocampus -- Incidental encoding into LTM during a short-term memory task -- THE HIPPOCAMPUS IN SPATIAL MEMORY EXPERTS -- RETRIEVAL -- Retrieval without awareness -- Documenting contextual reinstatement in the brain -- Familiarity vs. recollection -- KNOWLEDGE -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Chapter 12 Semantic Long-Term Memory -- KEY THEMES -- KNOWLEDGE IN THE BRAIN -- DEFINITIONS AND BASIC FACTS -- CATEGORY-SPECIFIC DEFICITS FOLLOWING BRAIN DAMAGE -- Animacy, or function? -- THE NEUROIMAGING OF KNOWLEDGE -- The meaning, and processing, of words -- PET scanning of object knowledge -- THE PROGRESSIVE LOSS OF KNOWLEDGE -- Primary Progressive Aphasia or Semantic Dementia, what's in a name? -- NUANCE AND CHALLENGES -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Chapter 13 Short-Term and Working Memory -- KEY THEMES -- "PROLONGED PERCEPTION" OR "ACTIVATED LTM?" -- DEFINITIONS -- ELEVATED, SUSTAINED ACTIVITY -- Early focus on role of PFC in the control of STM -- Single-unit-delay-period activity in PFC and thalamus -- Working memory -- A BRAVE NEW WORLD OF MULTIVARIATE DATA ANALYSIS -- The tradition of univariate analyses -- MVPA of fMRI -- Retrospective MVPA of single-unit extracellular recordings -- THREE-QUARTERS OF A CENTURY -- END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS -- REFERENCES -- OTHER SOURCES USED -- FURTHER READING -- Section IV High-Level Cognition -- Introductionto Section IV High-level Cognition -- Chapter 14 Cognitive Control -- KEY THEMES -- THE LATERAL FRONTAL-LOBE SYNDROME -- Environmental dependency syndrome -- Perseveration -- Electrophysiology of the frontal-lobe syndrome -- Integration?.MODELS OF COGNITIVE CONTROL.Essentials of Cognitive Neuroscience guides undergraduate and early-stage graduate students with no previous neuroscientific background through the fundamental principles and themes in a concise, organized, and engaging manner. Provides students with the foundation to understand primary literature, recognize current controversies in the field, and engage in discussions on cognitive neuroscience and its future Introduces important experimental methods and techniques integrated throughout the text Assists student comprehension through four-color images and thorough pedagogical resources throughout the text Accompanied by a robust website with multiple choice questions, experiment vidoes, fMRI data, web links and video narratives from a global group of leading scientists for students. For Instructors there are sample syllabi and exam questions.Cognitive neuroscienceTextbooksClinical neuropsychologyTextbooksCognitive neuroscienceClinical neuropsychology612.8/233491.371njb/09612.8/233njb/09MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910813042003321Essentials of cognitive neuroscience1728311UNINA