author: nicole m gage

Cognition, Brain, and Consciousness: Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience

... cognitive neuroscience may be seen from more than one point of view. It is important to stay open until the evidence is beyond dispute. Table 2.3 suggests some possible brain regions for the cognitive framework ... definition. So does mental ...

Fundamentals of Cognitive Neuroscience: A Beginner's Guide

... our busy lives. Like a strategic plan or a schema, rules help us increase our efficiency. The Wisconsin Card Sorting test (shown in Figure 12.18) is a good example of the mental flexibility humans have in acquiring rules and ...

Fundamentals of Cognitive Neuroscience: A Beginner's Guide

... brain. The word cortex means “bark,” like the bark of a tree. The gray ... Label each part in Figure 4.15 from the top to the bottom. 2. Label the ... drawing exercises 5.1. Study questions 5.2. Drawing exercises.

Cognition, Brain, and Consciousness: Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience

... well with learning. While details of this broad picture continue to be ... such as our ability to 'learn to hear' music and art, also involve conscious, explicit kinds of memories ... learned unconsciously, as we will see later. In general ...

Fundamentals of Cognitive Neuroscience: A Beginner's Guide

... anesthesia or coma (Laureys, 2005, Fig. 13.2). There is a normal progression at the end of SWS stages upward to lighter sleep stages, on to rapid eye movement (REM) stages, and ultimately to awakening. 2.2 Reversible Unconsciousness e ...

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