Monday, March 30, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/30/2009


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Sunday, March 29, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/29/2009

  • You wouldn't know it from the claims of companies like No Lie MRI, but we're a long way off being able to use brain scans to detect reliably whether a person is lying or not. Nonetheless, cognitive psychologists are busy beavering away in the background, testing the ways that brain activity varies when people lie compared with when they tell the truth. One such study has just been published, claiming to be the first to investigate deception in the context of face recognition.

    tags: lie-detection, neuroethics, grue, cogsci


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Saturday, March 28, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/28/2009

  • Behind all the gore there's a profound purpose: The scientists here are mapping the brain. And while conventional brain maps describe distinct anatomical areas, like the frontal lobes and the hippocampus—many of which were first outlined in the 19th century—the Allen Brain Atlas seeks to describe the cortex at the level of specific genes and individual neurons. Slices of tissue containing billions of brain cells will be analyzed to see which snippets of DNA are turned on in each cell.

    tags: brain, neuroscience, neuroethics, AZB, cogsci, grue

  • The preliminary evidence is inconsistent with the hypothesis that Adderall has an overall negative effect on creativity. Its effects on divergent creative thought cannot be inferred with confidence from this study because of the ambiguity of null results. Its effects on convergent creative thought appear to be dependent on the baseline creativity of the individual. Those in the higher range of the normal distribution may be unaffected or impaired, whereas those in the lower range of the normal distribution experience enhancement.

    tags: neuroethics, neuropharmacology, brain, grue, cogsci


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Friday, March 27, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/27/2009


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Thursday, March 26, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/26/2009


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Dynamics of Cognitive Processing and Learning: Linking Connectionist, Neuroscience, and Dynamical Systems Approaches



Abstract:
Connectionist or parallel-distributed processing models provide mechanistic accounts of cognitive processes, demonstrating how emergent dynamics of higher-order cognitive states such as percepts, decision states, and actions can arise from the micro-dynamics of the interactions of simple neuron-like processing units. These models can also address changes in representation and processing that occur as a result of experience, via adjustments in the strengths of the connections among the units that participate in processing. As such these models make several points of contact with the literature on dynamical systems in development. The models also link to many other recent models on the neural population dynamics underlying decision making in the brain. This talk will discuss recent developments related to these issues, building on a model of the dynamics of simple perceptual decision making (Usher and McClelland, 2001). http://tinyurl.com/cb2wuv

Judgement and Decision Making



Discovering Psychology (11)

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/25/2009


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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/24/2009

  • Take our brains, for example. In the brains of humans, chimps and many other mammals, the genes that are switched on in the brain change dramatically in the first few years of life. But Mehmet Somel from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology has found that a small but select squad of genes, involved in the development of nerve cells, are activated much later in our brains than in those of other primates. (Not Exactly Rocket Science)

    tags: genetics, primates, development, cogsci, neuroethics, grue

  • Learn about the frontiers of human health from seven of Stanford's most innovative faculty members. Inspired by a format used at the TED Conference (http://www.ted.com), each speaker delivers a highly engaging talk in just 10-20 minutes about his or her research. Learn about Stanford's newest and most exciting discoveries in neuroscience, bioengineering, brain imaging, psychology, and more.

    tags: brains, video, aapt, cogsci, grue, neuroethics

  • video talk

    tags: decision-making, Lehrer, appt, cogsci, neuroethics

  • A popular account for how we empathise with other people's physical pain involves the idea that we perform a mental simulation of their suffering, using the pain pathways of our own brain. Support for this comes from research showing that when I see you in pain, the pain areas of my own brain are pricked into activity.

    Now an intriguing study by Nicolas Danziger and colleagues has tested this simulation account with the help of patients with congenital insensitivity to pain - that is, they've grown up with abnormal pain fibres, thus rendering them unable to feel physical pain. The findings may require us to rethink the way we characterise some brain areas associated with pain processing. (BPS RESEARCH DIGEST)

    tags: emotion, empathy, cogsci, neuroethics, aapt


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Monday, March 23, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/23/2009


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Thursday, March 19, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/19/2009


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Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/17/2009

  • Jargon or no, what has evolved to suit the requirements of grown-ups in an information-rich world is Occam's-razoresque: short sentences, simple vocabulary, logical progression. Parents who want their infants to learn language need a lot more than this. They need "motherese," that high-pitched sing-song dialect that puts everything in the third person and diminutizes it.

    tags: language, evolution, cogsci, grue

  • Forget the memory-boosting pills: In the future, powers of recall could be boosted with programs on a handheld PDA.

    tags: brain, memory, neuroethics, cogsci, grue

  • Defense attorneys are for the first time submitting a controversial next-generation lie-detection test as evidence in U.S. court.

    tags: fmri, lie-detection, neuroethics, cogsci, grue

  • Benjamin Libet’s experimental finding that decisions had in effect already been made before the conscious mind became aware of making them is both famous and controversial; now new research (published in a ‘Brief Communication’ in Nature Neuroscience by Chun Siong Soon, Marcel Brass, Hans-Jochen Heinze and John-Dylan Haynes) goes beyond it. Whereas the delay between decision and awareness detected by Libet lasted 500 milliseconds, the new research seems to show that decisions can be predicted up to ten seconds before the deciders are aware of having made up their minds. (Conscious Entities)

    tags: freewill, Libet, consciousness, neuroethics, cogsci

  • The experiments carried out by Benjamin Libet into the timing of conscious awareness (briefly described here ) have provoked, and go on provoking, a vast amount of discussion. His own theory of consciousness as a kind of field has received somewhat less attention; and the strange brain-cutting experiment he proposed to test it seems likely to remain unperformed for the foreseeable future. A large number of papers and discussions have been published: in 2004, Libet finally summarised his own account in the book 'Mind Time'. (consciousentities.com)

    tags: freewill, Libet, consciousness, mind, neuroethics, cogsci


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Monday, March 16, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/16/2009


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Sunday, March 15, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/15/2009

  • People who believe that the mind can be replicated on a computer tend to explain the mind in terms of a computer. When theorizing about the mind, especially to outsiders but also to one another, defenders of artificial intelligence (AI) often rely on computational concepts. They regularly describe the mind and brain as the “software and hardware” of thinking, the mind as a “pattern” and the brain as a “substrate,” senses as “inputs” and behaviors as “outputs,” neurons as “processing units” and synapses as “circuitry,” to give just a few common examples. (The New Atlantis)

    tags: AI, computers, minds, cogsci, 150, grue


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Saturday, March 14, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/14/2009

  • In this interview we talked about neurophilosophy, which is an approach to philosophy of mind that gives high priority to incorporating the empiric findings of neuroscience. We also talk about the evolving relationship between philosophy and neuroscience. Churchland shares her enthusiasm for how the discoveries of neuroscience are changing the way we see ourselves as human beings. We also talked a little about the issues of reductionism that I first brought up in Episode 53.

    tags: neurophilosophy, Churchland, cogsci, grue


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Thursday, March 12, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/12/2009

  • Given only a small dose of oxytocin, individuals in a recent study found that their memory significantly improved. Not for historical dates, strings of digits, or bars of music, but for something much more significant: each other. (Seed)

    tags: oxytocin, memory, cogsci, neuroethics


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Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/11/2009


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Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/10/2009


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Monday, March 09, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/09/2009


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Sunday, March 08, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/08/2009


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Friday, March 06, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/06/2009


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Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/04/2009

  • What interests me is the question of how humans learn to live with uncertainty. Before the scientific revolution determinism was a strong ideal. Religion brought about a denial of uncertainty, and many people knew that their kin or their race was exactly the one that God had favored. They also thought they were entitled to get rid of competing ideas and the people that propagated them. How does a society change from this condition into one in which we understand that there is this fundamental uncertainty? How do we avoid the illusion of certainty to produce the understanding that everything, whether it be a medical test or deciding on the best cure for a particular kind of cancer, has a fundamental element of uncertainty?

    tags: heuristics, decision-making, cogsci


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Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/03/2009


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Monday, March 02, 2009

Cognitive Neuroscience Links 03/02/2009


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Jonah Lehrer on FORA.tv