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Samenvatting The Student's Guide to Cognitive Neuroscience $10.31   Add to cart

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Samenvatting The Student's Guide to Cognitive Neuroscience

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Samenvatting van het handboek voor het vak Neuropsychology and Psychopharmacology in de 2e bachelor psychologie aan de KUL.

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  • Hoofdstukken 1, 3, 4 en 5
  • April 28, 2022
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  • 2021/2022
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H1 Introducing cognitieve
neuroscience
Penfield: brain surgery for epilepsy.

 Electrical stimulation felt like mental/cognitive event.

Cognition: thinking, planning, acting…

Cognitive neuroscience:

 Cognitive science & cogn psychology
 Biology & neuroscience
 Methodological advances: able to study brain safely.

Historical perspective
Philosophical approaches to mind and brain
Mind-body problem:

 Brain = key part of body for cognition.
 Dualism
 Dual-aspect theory: ex. In physics: same entity can be described as a wave and as a particle.
 Reductionism: cognitive, mind-based concepts will be replaced by biological constructs.
o Psychology will be reduced to biology.
o Phlogiston  construct replaced by understanding of how chemicals combine with
oxygen.

Dual-aspect VS Reductionism: emotion would still feel like emotion even if we would fully understand
neural basis. The usefulness of cognitive, mind-based concepts will never be fully replaced.

Scientific approaches to mind and brain
Aristoteles: ratio of brain size to body size = greatest in humans (advances species).

 Cognition = product of the heart (<-> brain)
 Brain = coolant system: the higher the intellect, the larger the cooling system needed.

Gall & Spurzheim: phrenology

 Different regions in brain perform different functions and are associated with different
behaviours.
 Size of these regions produces distortions in the skull and correlates with individual
differences in cognition and personality.
 Notion of functional specialisation  endured into cognitive neuroscience.
o Observations of Penfield = example of this principle. (but phrenology = not based on
experiments)
o Skull shape has nothing to do with cognitive function!

Broca: 2 cases in which brain damage had caused impaired ability to speak but left other aspects of
cognition intact.



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,  Language = localised in region of brain  itself not single entity, but subdivided into speech
recognition, speech production, conceptual knowledge.
o Evidence: brain damage can lead to either poor speech comprehension and good
production OR poor speech production and good comprehension.  at least 2
speech faculties in brain that each can be independently impaired by damage.

= huge in development of thinking about mind and brain

 Empirical observations to determine building blocks of cognition.
 Developing models of cognition that did not make direct reference to the brain.
 Cognitive neuropsychology: use of patients with brain damage to inform theories of normal
cognition.  cognitive neuropsychology = subsumed in “cognitive neuroscience”.
 James & Freud: topics like consciousness, attention and personality.  new interest.

One can develop coherent and testable theories that do not make claims about the brain. Modern
foundations of cognitive psychology lie in computer metaphor of the brain: information-processing.

Broadbent: cognition consists of a sequence of processing stages.

 Perceptual processes  attentional processes  short-term memory  long-term memory.
 One could understand cognitive system in same way as one could understand series of
steps performed on computer program, and without reference to brain.

Theory of modularity: 2 classes of cogn processes

1. Central systems: domain independent  type of info processed is non-specific.
2. Modules: domain specificity  process only particular type of info.

! others argue that interactivity suggests that modules are not isolated from other cognitive
processes.

Cognitive models  element of interactivity and parallel processing.

 Interactivity: stages in processing are not completely separate. Later stages can influence
outcome of early ones. (top-down processing in contrast to bottom-up processing)
o Ex. Memory influence on perception.
 Parallel processing: different info processes simultaneously.

The birth of cognitive neuroscience
Technological advances: development of functional imaging & enabled brain lesions to be described
precisely.

Present-day neuroscience: broad diversity of methods.

 Recording VS stimulation methods:
o Direct electrical stimulation = rare
o Now: indirect  stimulation across skull rather than directly to brain.
 Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)
 Transcranial electrical stimulation (tES)
 Electrophysiological methods: EEG/ERP & single cell recordings.
 Magnetophysiological methods (MEG)
 Last 2 record the magnetic and electrical properties of neurons
themselves.


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