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La cognition réparée ? : Perturbations et récupérations des fonctions cognitives / / Roland Jouvent, Georges Chapouthier
La cognition réparée ? : Perturbations et récupérations des fonctions cognitives / / Roland Jouvent, Georges Chapouthier
Autore Abry Christian
Pubbl/distr/stampa Paris, : Éditions de la Maison des sciences de l’homme, 2019
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (222 p.)
Altri autori (Persone) BaciuMonica
BaconElisabeth
BarrouilletPierre
BoucartMuriel
CamosValérie
CarnicellaSebastien
ChapouthierGeorges
DeruelleChristine
Fabre-ThorpeMichèle
GombertJean-Émile
HabibMichel
HausbergerMartine
JouventRoland
LebeauJacques
Metz-LutzMarie-Noëlle
OberlingPhilippe
PerrierPascal
SavariauxChristophe
SegebarthChristoph
SerniclaesWilly
Sprenger-CharollesLiliane
ThibautFlorence
VilainCoriandre
Soggetto topico Cognition disorders - Treatment
Cognitive neuroscience
Soggetto non controllato neuroscience cognitive
trouble de la cognition
thérapie
ISBN 2-7351-1914-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione fre
Record Nr. UNINA-9910353339903321
Abry Christian  
Paris, : Éditions de la Maison des sciences de l’homme, 2019
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The explosion of life forms : living beings and morphology / / coordinated by Georges Chapouthier, Marie-Christine Maurel
The explosion of life forms : living beings and morphology / / coordinated by Georges Chapouthier, Marie-Christine Maurel
Pubbl/distr/stampa London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE : , : Wiley, , [2021]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xiv, 240 pages) : illustrations
Disciplina 574.5
Soggetto topico Ecology
Evolution (Biology)
Life - Origin
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-119-81842-7
1-119-81843-5
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover -- Half-Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- 1 Possible Traces and Clues of Early Life Forms -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. Have "things" always been as they are today? -- 1.3. Fossil traces? -- 1.4. Geochemical elements confirming these recent results -- 1.5. Compartmentalization of resources and primary biomass -- 1.6. Rebuilding a living cell: a wide range of possibilities explored, from the mineral to the organic -- 1.7. Conclusion -- 1.8. Acknowledgements -- 1.9. References -- 2 The Nature of Life -- 2.1. Observations and assumptions -- 2.2. Descriptions and definitions -- 2.3. Exploration -- 2.4. Conclusion -- 2.5. References -- 3 From Form to Function -- 3.1. Form: a concept for knowledge -- 3.2. Basic structural elements: from the molecule to the cell -- 3.3. The weight of the physical setting -- 3.4. Mesoderm: base material for architect genes -- 3.5. Appendices and laws of mechanics -- 3.6. "Appendicular" movement on land -- 3.7. The legless -- 3.8. And the head -- 3.9. References -- 4 On Growth and Form: Context and Purpose -- 4.1. D'Arcy Thompson's program -- 4.2. Application of mathematics to morphometry -- 4.3. References -- 5 The Emergence of Form in the History of Epigenetics -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. From epigenesis to epigenetics -- 5.3. The evolution of the epigenetic landscape -- 5.4. Modernizing the epigenetic landscape -- 5.5. From epigenetic landscape to chromosome conformation -- 5.6. Conclusion: from form to function -- 5.7. Acknowledgments -- 5.8. References -- 6 The Many Shapes of Microbial Detection of Kin and Kind -- 6.1. From Darwin's social-insects-puzzle to microbes -- 6.2. Handshakes of kinship or "kindship" in bacteria -- 6.3. The ameba world of clone discrimination/recognition -- 6.4. Social microbes and multicellularity -- 6.5. Conclusion -- 6.6. References.
7 Development and Evolution of Plant Forms -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. Diversity of plant forms and associated functions -- 7.2.1. Anthropocentric view of plant forms -- 7.2.2. Plant forms perceived by pollinators -- 7.3. Origin and evolution of plant forms -- 7.3.1. Pattern formation during ontogenesis -- 7.3.2. Physical-mathematical considerations on plant morphogenesis -- 7.3.3. Implementation of forms during phylogenesis -- 7.4. Origin and evolution of plant forms -- 7.4.1. Usefulness for human societies -- 7.4.2. Usefulness for botanical classifiers -- 7.5. Conclusion -- 7.6. Acknowledgments -- 7.7. References -- 8 Forms of Memory -- 8.1. Introduction -- 8.2. The polymorphism of memory -- 8.3. Non-associative memories -- 8.3.1. Habituation and sensitization -- 8.3.2. Priming -- 8.3.3. Perceptual learning -- 8.4. Classical conditioning -- 8.4.1. Operational definition, rules and varieties of classical conditioning -- 8.4.2. Contemporary theory of classical conditioning -- 8.4.3. The importance of classical conditioning -- 8.5. Instrumental conditioning -- 8.5.1. Law of effect, stimulus-response (S-R) theory and "habits" -- 8.5.2. From S-R theory to cognitive theories -- 8.5.3. The two facets of instrumental conditioning -- 8.6. Procedural memory as a "memory system" -- 8.6.1. Habits: double functional dissociations in mammals -- 8.6.2. Human procedural memory and its cerebral supports -- 8.7. Declarative memory -- 8.7.1. Episodic and semantic memory: definitions, properties and relationships -- 8.7.2. Episodic memory in animals? -- 8.8. Short-term memory and working memory -- 8.8.1. General characteristics -- 8.8.2. Models -- 8.8.3. Short-term memory in animals -- 8.8.4. Cerebral substrates -- 8.9. Conclusion: organization and reconfiguration of the different forms of memory -- 8.10. References -- 9 The Construction of Sensory Universes.
9.1. Introduction -- 9.2. Chemoreception -- 9.2.1. Taste -- 9.2.2. Smell -- 9.3. Mechanoreception -- 9.3.1. Touch -- 9.3.2. Lateral lines -- 9.3.3. Hearing -- 9.4. Electromagnetoreception -- 9.4.1. Vision -- 9.4.2. Electroreception -- 9.4.3. Magnetoreception -- 9.4.4. Thermoreception -- 9.5. Information filtering -- 9.6. Conclusion -- 9.7. References -- 10 Emotional and Social Forms of Robots -- 10.1. Introduction -- 10.2. Communication with social and emotional robots -- 10.3. Human empathy for machines -- 10.4. Machine emotions -- 10.5. Conclusion: risks and benefits -- 10.6. References -- 11 When Medical Technology Mimics Living Forms -- 11.1. Introduction -- 11.2. Historical and epistemological perspective -- 11.2.1. A comparative history of medical technology -- 11.2.2. Epistemological perspective -- 11.2.3. A conceptual and theoretical framework: the mathematical theory of integrative physiology (MTIP) by Gilbert Chauvet -- 11.2.4. Forms of thinking or processing by machines -- 11.3. Simulation, biomimetics and bioprinting: a future for medical technology -- 11.4. References -- 12 From Living to Thinking: Mosaic Architecture -- 12.1. Introduction -- 12.2. Two main principles -- 12.3. Genes and cells -- 12.4. More complex anatomical mosaics -- 12.5. Epistemological rehabilitation of asexual reproduction -- 12.6. Social mosaics -- 12.7. Encephalic mosaics -- 12.8. Mosaics of thought -- 12.9. Man-made objects -- 12.10. Human and animal cultural traits -- 12.11. A universality of mosaics? -- 12.12. Conclusion: philosophical foundations -- 12.13. References -- 13 Converging Technologies or Paradoxes of Power -- 13.1. Introduction -- 13.2. Might, domination, power -- 13.3. Life, technique, power -- 13.4. "Technological arrogance" -- 13.5. Technological convergence and singularity -- 13.6. Innovation, research, invention -- 13.7. Conclusion.
13.8. References -- List of Authors -- Index -- EULA.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910554876103321
London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE : , : Wiley, , [2021]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The explosion of life forms : living beings and morphology / / coordinated by Georges Chapouthier, Marie-Christine Maurel
The explosion of life forms : living beings and morphology / / coordinated by Georges Chapouthier, Marie-Christine Maurel
Pubbl/distr/stampa London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE : , : Wiley, , [2021]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xiv, 240 pages) : illustrations
Disciplina 574.5
Soggetto topico Ecology
Evolution (Biology)
Life - Origin
ISBN 1-119-81842-7
1-119-81843-5
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover -- Half-Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- 1 Possible Traces and Clues of Early Life Forms -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. Have "things" always been as they are today? -- 1.3. Fossil traces? -- 1.4. Geochemical elements confirming these recent results -- 1.5. Compartmentalization of resources and primary biomass -- 1.6. Rebuilding a living cell: a wide range of possibilities explored, from the mineral to the organic -- 1.7. Conclusion -- 1.8. Acknowledgements -- 1.9. References -- 2 The Nature of Life -- 2.1. Observations and assumptions -- 2.2. Descriptions and definitions -- 2.3. Exploration -- 2.4. Conclusion -- 2.5. References -- 3 From Form to Function -- 3.1. Form: a concept for knowledge -- 3.2. Basic structural elements: from the molecule to the cell -- 3.3. The weight of the physical setting -- 3.4. Mesoderm: base material for architect genes -- 3.5. Appendices and laws of mechanics -- 3.6. "Appendicular" movement on land -- 3.7. The legless -- 3.8. And the head -- 3.9. References -- 4 On Growth and Form: Context and Purpose -- 4.1. D'Arcy Thompson's program -- 4.2. Application of mathematics to morphometry -- 4.3. References -- 5 The Emergence of Form in the History of Epigenetics -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. From epigenesis to epigenetics -- 5.3. The evolution of the epigenetic landscape -- 5.4. Modernizing the epigenetic landscape -- 5.5. From epigenetic landscape to chromosome conformation -- 5.6. Conclusion: from form to function -- 5.7. Acknowledgments -- 5.8. References -- 6 The Many Shapes of Microbial Detection of Kin and Kind -- 6.1. From Darwin's social-insects-puzzle to microbes -- 6.2. Handshakes of kinship or "kindship" in bacteria -- 6.3. The ameba world of clone discrimination/recognition -- 6.4. Social microbes and multicellularity -- 6.5. Conclusion -- 6.6. References.
7 Development and Evolution of Plant Forms -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. Diversity of plant forms and associated functions -- 7.2.1. Anthropocentric view of plant forms -- 7.2.2. Plant forms perceived by pollinators -- 7.3. Origin and evolution of plant forms -- 7.3.1. Pattern formation during ontogenesis -- 7.3.2. Physical-mathematical considerations on plant morphogenesis -- 7.3.3. Implementation of forms during phylogenesis -- 7.4. Origin and evolution of plant forms -- 7.4.1. Usefulness for human societies -- 7.4.2. Usefulness for botanical classifiers -- 7.5. Conclusion -- 7.6. Acknowledgments -- 7.7. References -- 8 Forms of Memory -- 8.1. Introduction -- 8.2. The polymorphism of memory -- 8.3. Non-associative memories -- 8.3.1. Habituation and sensitization -- 8.3.2. Priming -- 8.3.3. Perceptual learning -- 8.4. Classical conditioning -- 8.4.1. Operational definition, rules and varieties of classical conditioning -- 8.4.2. Contemporary theory of classical conditioning -- 8.4.3. The importance of classical conditioning -- 8.5. Instrumental conditioning -- 8.5.1. Law of effect, stimulus-response (S-R) theory and "habits" -- 8.5.2. From S-R theory to cognitive theories -- 8.5.3. The two facets of instrumental conditioning -- 8.6. Procedural memory as a "memory system" -- 8.6.1. Habits: double functional dissociations in mammals -- 8.6.2. Human procedural memory and its cerebral supports -- 8.7. Declarative memory -- 8.7.1. Episodic and semantic memory: definitions, properties and relationships -- 8.7.2. Episodic memory in animals? -- 8.8. Short-term memory and working memory -- 8.8.1. General characteristics -- 8.8.2. Models -- 8.8.3. Short-term memory in animals -- 8.8.4. Cerebral substrates -- 8.9. Conclusion: organization and reconfiguration of the different forms of memory -- 8.10. References -- 9 The Construction of Sensory Universes.
9.1. Introduction -- 9.2. Chemoreception -- 9.2.1. Taste -- 9.2.2. Smell -- 9.3. Mechanoreception -- 9.3.1. Touch -- 9.3.2. Lateral lines -- 9.3.3. Hearing -- 9.4. Electromagnetoreception -- 9.4.1. Vision -- 9.4.2. Electroreception -- 9.4.3. Magnetoreception -- 9.4.4. Thermoreception -- 9.5. Information filtering -- 9.6. Conclusion -- 9.7. References -- 10 Emotional and Social Forms of Robots -- 10.1. Introduction -- 10.2. Communication with social and emotional robots -- 10.3. Human empathy for machines -- 10.4. Machine emotions -- 10.5. Conclusion: risks and benefits -- 10.6. References -- 11 When Medical Technology Mimics Living Forms -- 11.1. Introduction -- 11.2. Historical and epistemological perspective -- 11.2.1. A comparative history of medical technology -- 11.2.2. Epistemological perspective -- 11.2.3. A conceptual and theoretical framework: the mathematical theory of integrative physiology (MTIP) by Gilbert Chauvet -- 11.2.4. Forms of thinking or processing by machines -- 11.3. Simulation, biomimetics and bioprinting: a future for medical technology -- 11.4. References -- 12 From Living to Thinking: Mosaic Architecture -- 12.1. Introduction -- 12.2. Two main principles -- 12.3. Genes and cells -- 12.4. More complex anatomical mosaics -- 12.5. Epistemological rehabilitation of asexual reproduction -- 12.6. Social mosaics -- 12.7. Encephalic mosaics -- 12.8. Mosaics of thought -- 12.9. Man-made objects -- 12.10. Human and animal cultural traits -- 12.11. A universality of mosaics? -- 12.12. Conclusion: philosophical foundations -- 12.13. References -- 13 Converging Technologies or Paradoxes of Power -- 13.1. Introduction -- 13.2. Might, domination, power -- 13.3. Life, technique, power -- 13.4. "Technological arrogance" -- 13.5. Technological convergence and singularity -- 13.6. Innovation, research, invention -- 13.7. Conclusion.
13.8. References -- List of Authors -- Index -- EULA.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910830790703321
London, England ; ; Hoboken, New Jersey : , : ISTE : , : Wiley, , [2021]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
La question animale : Entre science, littérature et philosophie / / Georges Chapouthier, Catherine Coquio, Lucie Campos, Georges Engélibert
La question animale : Entre science, littérature et philosophie / / Georges Chapouthier, Catherine Coquio, Lucie Campos, Georges Engélibert
Autore Bailly Jean-Christophe
Pubbl/distr/stampa Rennes, : Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2016
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (308 p.)
Altri autori (Persone) BovetDalila
BurgatFlorence
CamposLucie
ChapouthierGeorges
CoquioCatherine
DesblacheLucile
EngélibertJean-Paul
GarricHenri
GrandjeatYves-Charles
HerzfeldChris
LarrèreCatherine
LarrèreRaphaël
PorcherJocelyne
PoulinIsabelle
SamoyaultTiphaine
SimonAnne
TrevisanCarine
VilmerJean-Baptiste Jèneange
EngélibertGeorges
Soggetto topico Literature (General)
animal
philosophie
relation homme-nature
littérature
Soggetto non controllato relation homme-nature
philosophie
littérature
animal
ISBN 2-7535-4727-0
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione fre
Record Nr. UNINA-9910136481803321
Bailly Jean-Christophe  
Rennes, : Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2016
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui