410 final (incl. consciousness) Flashcards
(444 cards)
phrenology
observing bumps on the skull to infer something about the person
cognitive neuroscience
- field of study seeking to uncover links between cognitions and the brain using interdisciplinary methodologies
- looking at images of the brain to understand the person
- inference and assumption that the brain underlies behaviour and mental state (same assumption as phrenology)
- new understanding that cognitions may shift based on individuals, their group memberships, interests, etc.
convergent methodology
- using different methods to give evidence for the links between brain and behaviour to ‘confirm’ them with more certainty
- but connecting a brain region with a function theoretically or experimentally doesn’t mean that link will always hold OR that this region drives a behaviour
brain injuries as a method
- they result in some abnormal behaviour, so give insight into how regions are functionally related to behaviour
- but there are still atypical populations (comorbid problems, older people, more extensive damage) so may not be generalizable
- using neuropsychological syndromes to illustrate brain-behaviour links (how do we generalize from a patient group to a non-patient group?)
inferences about how the mind works
- inputs into the mind (genes, environment, stimuli), then something happens in the black box, then there’s an output (thoughts, feelings, behaviour)
- what happens in the black box?
- neuropsychological syndromes lead to broken links between input and output due to missing parts of the brain (brain injuries are one of the only ways to achieve these causal links)
what allowed for cognitive neuroscience to become a field
- rise of neuroimaging methods (1990s) allowing for imaging of live brains (fMRI and PET)
key principles of cognitive neuroscience
- cognitions arise from the brain
- application of interdisciplinary investigations
assumptions of cognitive neuroscience
- neural activity underlies behaviour
- cognitive functions can be localized in the brain
- mental representations and the system (the brain) are stable over time
assumption: neural activity underlies behaviour
- how do mind and body connect?
- if this assumption were untrue, there would be no neural activity while a behaviour was occurring
- dualism and monism + four perspectives
- cog neurosci takes a monism perspective (cognitions arise from neural activity), but this view is perhaps challenged by certain syndromes (phantom limb)
dualism and monism
- dualism: mind and body are separate
- monism: mind and brain (body) are linked, either one and the same, or mutually interactive
perspectives on linking mind and body
- parallelism: two aspects of the same reality
- isomorphism: cognitions and brain share a ‘pattern’
- epiphenomenalism: mind is a byproduct of the brain
- emergent interactionism: cognitions are emergent properties of the brain (both exist on their own and modify the functional organization of the brain)
parallelism
- mind and body are two aspects of the same reality (one-to-one correspondence between reality and brain states)
- whatever is ‘out there’ is also in the brain
- maybe computationally impossible
isomorphism
- cognitions and the brain share a ‘pattern’ rather than being connected in one-to-one correspondence
- mental representations: brain representations of the external world (understandings of the external world)
- reality can be represented in multiple ways in the brain (unlike in parallelism) so the exact same stimulus is represented in many ways
- bistable representations that can flip sometimes spontaneously
epiphenomenalism
- mind is a byproduct of the brain
- mental states are caused by physical states, but mental states do not influence physical states
- steam train metaphor: mind is like steam coming of the train (caused by the engine, but doesn’t affect anything)
emergent interactionism
- cognitions are emergent properties of the brain, which both exist on their own and modify the underlying functional organization of the brain
- Roger Sperry and split-brain patients
- mental events are functional derivates from brain circuits and their connections (emergent)–we don’t know their shape or form, they are self-forming and emerging from the machinery (brain)
- something arises from the brain, exists on its own and exerts its own effect
- our representation of a bistable figure affects how we perceive this figure in the future
- thoughts arise from the brain and changes how the brain works (prior knowledge and expectations changing how the brain works)
assumption: cognitive functions can be localized in the brain
- modularity: enough specialization in the system to allow for modularity and functional specialization (different areas are specialized, but collaborate to function as a whole)
- we need some assumption of modularity to start to look for brain-behaviour links (a function sits somewhere, and we can find it and connect it to behaviour)
- certain areas performing multiple contextually related functions (not necessarily one area per function)
assumption: mental representations and the system are stable over time
- the way we represent the external world stays the same (our brain will invoke a similar representation of the bistable cube over time)
- similar functions making similar representations over time (i.e. functional specialization stays similar over time)
- the way we experience the world and ourselves in stable (except maybe in babies or neuropsychological patients)
forward inference
- general way in which science is conducted
- modify the stimulus = changes the operations in the black box = different behaviour
- stimulus A activates process A and we see it in brain area A (face = face detection = FFA activity)
reverse inference
- there could be many inputs that lead to the same behaviour
- brain area A leads to process A (FFA activation = we infer that they are thinking about faces)
- but this activation could be caused by many processes/stimuli
- default mode network (activated regions while at rest) = difficult to make reverse inferences by just looking at the brain (what are people thinking about when told to ‘do nothing’)
brain fingerprinting
- reverse inference
- deciding if a person is innocent or guilty based on EEG waveform
- recognition waveform (P300) when presented with correct details about a crime
- P300 used for lack of novelty, something contradicting expectations
- but this can be elicited by many different things, so needs additional evidence to be credible
why study methods
- we need to understand the methods to understand the validity of scientific articles
- we need to use the right methods to address certain questions
- understanding strengths and weaknesses of particular methods to ask certain questions and get certain conclusions
- methods are diverse and often complementary (different methods to answer the same questions, giving different insights)
how can we use subjective reports
- since cognitions may differ based on individuals, use subjective reports to understand individual differences in cognitions and the brain
- we used to dislike subjective reports (not anymore)
neuropsychology
- field of study concerned with understanding the structure and function of the brain and how they relate to cognitions and behaviour
- also concerned with understanding and describing neurological conditions, developing diagnostic, assessment, and rehabilitation methods
- it’s clinical practice and research (linking brain-behaviour links with clinical practice)
- includes single-case patient studies, lesion studies in humans and animals, recording of brain activity
method: neuroanatomy
- postmortem analysis of the nervous system
- gross neuroanatomy (general structural divisions) like white matter v. grey matter, lobes and hemispheres
- fine neuroanatomy (cell structure and connections) like pyramidal cells in different areas v. granule cells so what are their functions and where do you find them