Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

Preface xvii

Acknowledgments xix

Walkthrough of Pedagogical Features xxi

Companion Website xxii

Section I: The Neurobiology of Thinking 1

1 Introduction and History 4

Key Themes 4

A Brief (and Selective) History 6

Construct validity in models of cognition 6

Localization of function vs. mass action 7

The first scientifically rigorous demonstrations of localization of function 9

What is a Brain and What Does It Do? 12

Looking Ahead to the Development of Cognitive Neuroscience 13

End-of-Chapter Questions 14

References 14

Other Sources Used 14

Further Reading 15

2 The Brain 16

Key Themes 16

Pep Talk 18

Gross Anatomy 18

The cerebral cortex 21

The Neuron 23

Electrical and chemical properties of the neuron 23

Oscillatory Fluctuations in the Membrane Potential 28

Neurons are never truly “at rest” 28

Oscillatory synchrony 29

Complicated, and Complex 31

End-of-Chapter Questions 32

References 32

Other Sources Used 33

Further Reading 33

3 Methods for Cognitive Neuroscience 34

Key Themes 34

Behavior, Structure, Function, and Models 36

Behavior 36

Neuropsychology, neurophysiology, and the limits of inference 36

Different kinds of neuropsychology address different kinds of questions 37

How does behavior relate to mental functions? 38

Methods for lesioning targeted areas of the brain 39

Nonlocalized trauma 39

Transcranial Neurostimulation 40

The importance of specificity (again) 41

Transcranial magnetic stimulation 43

Anatomy and Cellular Physiology 47

Techniques that exploit the cell biology of the neuron 48

Electrophysiology 51

Invasive recording with microelectrodes: action potentials and local field potentials 51

Electrocorticography 53

Electroencephalography 53

Magnetoencephalography 55

Invasive Neurostimulation 55

Electrical microstimulation 55

Optogenetics 55

Analysis of Time-Varying Signals 56

Event-related analyses 56

Magnetic Resonance Imaging 61

Physics and engineering bases 61

MRI methods for in vivo anatomical imaging 64

Functional magnetic resonance imaging 65

Functional connectivity 70

Resting state functional correlations 70

Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy 73

Tomography 73

X-ray computed tomography 73

Positron emission tomography 73

Near-Infrared Spectroscopy 76

Some Considerations For Experimental Design 76

Computational Models and Analytic Approaches 78

Neural network modeling 78

Network science and graph theory 82

End-of-Chapter Questions 84

References 85

Other Sources Used 86

Further Reading 86

Section II: Sensation, Perception, Attention, and Action 87

4 Sensation and Perception of Visual Signals 90

Key Themes 90

The Dominant Sense in Primates 92

Organization of the Visual System 92

The visual field 92

The retina and the LGN of the thalamus 92

The retinotopic organization of primary visual cortex 93

The receptive field 95

Information Processing in Primary Visual Cortex – Bottom-Up Feature Detection 96

The V1 neuron as feature detector 96

Columns, hypercolumns, and pinwheels 99

Information Processing in Primary Visual Cortex – Interactivity 100

Feedforward and feedback projections of V1 100

The relation between visual processing and the brain’s physiological state 104

Where Does Sensation End? Where Does Perception Begin? 106

End-of-Chapter Questions 106

References 107

Other Sources Used 107

Further Reading 108

5 Audition and Somatosensation 109

Key Themes 109

Apologia 111

Audition 111

Auditory sensation 111

Auditory perception 115

Adieu to audition 119

Somatosensation 119

Transduction of mechanical and thermal energy, and of pain 119

Somatotopy 122

Somatosensory plasticity 126

Phantom limbs and phantom pain 129

Proprioception 131

Adieu to sensation 131

End-of-Chapter Questions 131

References 132

Other Sources Used 132

Further Reading 132

6 The Visual System 134

Key Themes 134

Familiar Principles and Processes, Applied to Higher-Level Representations 136

Two Parallel Pathways 136

A diversity of projections from V1 136

A functional dissociation of visual perception of what an object is vs. where it is located 137

Interconnectedness within and between the two pathways 142

The Organization and Functions of the Ventral Visual Processing Stream 144

Hand cells, face cells, and grandmother cells 144

Broader implications of visual properties of temporal cortex neurons 149

A hierarchy of stimulus representation 150

Object-based (viewpoint-independent) vs. image-based (viewpoint-dependent) representation in IT 153

A critical role for feedback in the ventral visual processing stream 153

Taking Stock 158

End-of-Chapter Questions 158

References 159

Other Sources Used 159

Further Reading 160

7 Spatial Cognition and Attention 161

Key Themes 161

Unilateral Neglect: A Fertile Source of Models of Spatial Cognition and Attention 163

Unilateral neglect: a clinicoanatomical primer 163

Hypotheses arising from clinical observations of neglect 164

The Functional Anatomy of the Dorsal Stream 166

Coordinate transformations to guide action with perception 169

From Parietal Space to Medial-Temporal Place 172

Place cells in the hippocampus 173

How does place come to be represented in the hippocampus? 175

The Neurophysiology of Sensory Attention 175

A day at the circus 176

Attending to locations vs. attending to objects 176

Mechanisms of spatial attention 180

Effects of attention on neuronal activity 181

Turning Our Attention to the Future 185

End-of-Chapter Questions 185

References 186

Other Sources Used 186

Further Reading 187

8 Skeletomotor Control 188

Key Themes 188

The Organization of the Motor System 190

The anatomy of the motor system 190

The corticospinal tract 190

The cortico-cerebellar circuit 190

The cortico-basal ganglia-thalamic circuits 192

Functional Principles of Motor Control 193

The biomechanics of motor control 193

Motor cortex 196

The neurophysiology of movement 196

Motor Control Outside of Motor Cortex 202

Parietal cortex: guiding how we move 202

A neurological dissociation between perceiving objects and acting on them 203

Cerebellum: motor learning, balance, . . . and mental representation? 204

Synaptic plasticity 205

Basal ganglia 206

Cognitive Functions of the Motor System 211

Mirror neurons 212

Holding a mirror up to nature? 213

It’s All About Action 214

End-of-Chapter Questions 214

References 215

Other Sources Used 215

Further Reading 216

9 Oculomotor Control and the Control of Attention 218

Key Themes 218

Attention and Action 220

Whys and Hows of Eye Movements 220

Three categories of eye movements 220

The Organization of the Oculomotor System 221

An overview of the circuitry 221

The superior colliculus 222

The posterior system 222

The frontal eye field 223

The supplementary eye field 223

The Control of Eye Movements, and of Attention, In Humans 224

Human oculomotor control 224

Human attentional control 226

The Control of Attention via the Oculomotor System 227

Covert attention 227

Where’s the attentional controller? 230

Are Oculomotor Control and Attentional Control Really the “Same Thing”? 233

The “method of visual inspection” 234

“Prioritized maps of space in human frontoparietal cortex” 235

Of Labels and Mechanisms 238

End-of-Chapter Questions 238

References 238

Other Sources Used 239

Further Reading 240

Section III: Mental Representation 241

10 Visual Object Recognition and Knowledge 243

Key Themes 243

Visual Agnosia 245

Apperceptive agnosia 245

Associative agnosia 245

Computational Models of Visual Object Recognition 247

Two neuropsychological traditions 247

The cognitive neuroscience revolution in visual cognition 249

Category Specificity in the Ventral Stream? 249

Are faces special? 249

Perceptual expertise 251

Evidence for a high degree of specificity for many categories in ventral occipitotemporal cortex 252

Evidence for highly distributed category representation in ventral occipitotemporal cortex 253

Demonstrating necessity 256

The code for facial identity in the primate brain (!?!) 258

Visual Perception as Predictive Coding 261

Playing 20 Questions With the Brain 262

End-of-Chapter Questions 264

References 264

Other Sources Used 265

Further Reading 265

11 Neural Bases of Memory 267

Key Themes 267

Plasticity, Learning, and Memory 269

The Case of H.M. 269

Bilateral medial temporal lobectomy 269

Hippocampus vs. MTL? 272

Association Through Synaptic Modification 273

Long-term potentiation 273

The necessity of NMDA channels for LTM formation 277

How Might the Hippocampus Work? 277

Fast-encoding hippocampus vs. slow-encoding cortex 278

Episodic memory for sequences 279

Episodic memory as an evolutionary elaboration of navigational processing 282

What Are the Cognitive Functions of the Hippocampus? 283

Standard anatomical model 283

Challenges to the standard anatomical model 283

Consolidation 285

Reconsolidation 286

To Consolidate 286

End-of-Chapter Questions 288

References 288

Other Sources Used 289

Further Reading 290

12 Declarative Long-Term Memory 291

Key Themes 291

The Cognitive Neuroscience of LTM 293

Encoding 293

Neuroimaging the hippocampus 293

Incidental encoding into LTM during a short-term memory task 296

The Hippocampus in Spatial Memory Experts 299

Retrieval 299

Retrieval without awareness 300

Documenting contextual reinstatement in the brain 301

Familiarity vs. recollection 303

Knowledge 306

End-of-Chapter Questions 306

References 307

Other Sources Used 308

Further Reading 308

13 Semantic Long-Term Memory 310

Key Themes 310

Knowledge in the Brain 312

Definitions and Basic Facts 312

Category-Specific Deficits Following Brain Damage 313

Animacy, or function? 313

A PDP model of modality specificity 314

The domain-specific knowledge hypothesis 314

How definitive is a single case study? A double dissociation? 315

The Neuroimaging of Knowledge 316

The meaning, and processing, of words 316

An aside about the role of language in semantics and the study of semantics 316

PET scanning of object knowledge 317

Knowledge retrieval or lexical access? 318

Repetition effects and fMRI adaptation 319

The Progressive Loss of Knowledge 321

Primary Progressive Aphasia or Semantic Dementia, Nonverbal deficits in fluent primary progressive aphasia? 322

The locus of damage in fluent primary progressive aphasia? 322

Distal effects of neurodegeneration 324

Entente cordiale 324

Nuance and Challenges 326

End-of-Chapter Questions 326

References 327

Other Sources Used 328

Further Reading 329

14 Working Memory 330

Key Themes 330

“Prolonged Perception” Or “Activated LTM?” 332

Definitions 332

Working Memory and the PFC? The Roots of a Long and Fraught Association 333

Early focus on role of PFC in the control of STM 334

Single-unit delay-period activity in PFC and thalamus 335

Working Memory Capacity and Contralateral Delay Activity 342

The electrophysiology of visual working memory capacity 343

Novel Insights From Multivariate Data Analysis 349

The tradition of univariate analyses 349

MVPA of fMRI 349

Retrospective MVPA of single-unit extracellular recordings 356

Activity? Who Needs Activity? 357

Four-Score and a Handful of Years (and Counting) 360

End-of-Chapter Questions 360

References 360

Other Sources Used 362

Further Reading 362

Section IV: High-Level Cognition 363

15 Cognitive Control 365

Key Themes 365

The Lateral Frontal-Lobe Syndrome 367

Environmental-dependency syndrome 367

Perseveration 368

Electrophysiology of the frontal-lobe syndrome 370

Integration? 371

Models of Cognitive Control 371

Developmental cognitive neuroscience 371

Generalizing beyond development 374

What makes the PFC special? 375

Influence of the DA reward signal on the functions of PFC 376

Neural Activity Relating to Cognitive Control 378

Error monitoring 378

Going Meta 386

Where is the controller? 388

End-of-Chapter Questions 389

References 389

Other Sources Used 390

Further Reading 391

16 Decision Making 392

Key Themes 392

Between Perception and Action 394

Perceptual Decision Making 394

Judging the direction of motion 394

LIP 396

Modeling perceptual decision making 396

Controversy and complications 399

Perceptual decision making in humans 401

Value-Based Decision Making 402

The influence of expected value on activity in LIP 403

Common currency in the omPFC 404

Has neuroeconomics taught us anything about the economics of decision making? 409

Foraging 410

Boys being boys 411

Peer pressure 411

Next Stop 412

End-of-Chapter Questions 412

References 412

Other Sources Used 413

Further Reading 414

17 Social Behavior 415

Key Themes 415

Trustworthiness: A Preamble 417

Delaying gratification: a social influence on a “frontal” class of behaviors 417

The Role of vmPFC in the Control of Social Cognition 418

Phineas Gage 418

Contemporary behavioral neurology 420

Theory of Mind 422

The ToM network 422

The temporoparietal junction (TPJ) 423

False beliefs (?) about Rebecca Saxe’s mind 425

A final assessment of the role of RTPJ in ToM mentalization 429

Observational Learning 430

Predicting the outcome of someone else’s actions 430

Trustworthiness, Revisited 435

End-of-Chapter Questions 435

References 436

Other Sources Used 437

Further Reading 437

18 Emotion 438

Key Themes 438

What is an Emotion? 440

Approach/withdrawal 440

From “feeling words” to neural systems 440

At the nexus of perception and social cognition 440

Trustworthiness Revisited – Again 440

A role for the amygdala in the processing of trustworthiness 441

Implicit information processing by the amygdala 443

The Amygdala 444

Klüver–Bucy syndrome 444

Pavlovian fear conditioning 444

Emotional content in declarative memories 446

The amygdala’s influence on other brain systems 449

The Control of Emotions 450

Extinction 450

How Does That Make You Feel? 455

End-of-Chapter Questions 457

References 458

Other Sources Used 458

Further Reading 459

19 Language 460

Key Themes 460

A System of Remarkable Complexity 462

Wernicke–Lichtheim: The Classical Core Language Network 462

The aphasias 462

The functional relevance of the connectivity of the network 463

Speech Perception 464

Segregation of the speech signal 464

Dual routes for speech processing 468

Grammar 469

Genetics 469

Rules in the brain? 471

Broca’s area 472

The electrophysiology of grammar 475

Speech Production 477

A psycholinguistic model of production 477

Forward models for the control of production 477

Prediction 479

Integration 480

End-of-Chapter Questions 481

References 481

Other Sources Used 483

Further Reading 483

20 Consciousness 485

Key Themes 485

The Most Complex Object in the Universe 487

Different Approaches to the Problem 487

The Physiology of Consciousness 488

Neurological syndromes 488

Sleep 492

Anesthesia 494

Summary across physiological studies 495

Brain Functions Supporting Conscious Perception 495

Are we conscious of activity in early sensory cortex? 497

Manipulating extrinsic factors to study conscious vs. unconscious vision 500

Are Attention and Awareness the Same Thing? 501

Theories of Consciousness 503

Global Workspace Theory 503

Recurrent Processing Theory 505

Integrated Information Theory 506

Updating the Consciousness Graph 508

End-of-Chapter Questions 509

References 509

Other Sources Used 511

Further Reading 511

Glossary G-1

Index I-1

Essentials of Cognitive Neuroscience

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    View other formats and editions of Essentials of Cognitive Neuroscience by Postle

    Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
    Publication Date: 27/05/2020
    ISBN13: 9781119674153, 978-1119674153
    ISBN10: 1119674158

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Table of Contents

    Preface xvii

    Acknowledgments xix

    Walkthrough of Pedagogical Features xxi

    Companion Website xxii

    Section I: The Neurobiology of Thinking 1

    1 Introduction and History 4

    Key Themes 4

    A Brief (and Selective) History 6

    Construct validity in models of cognition 6

    Localization of function vs. mass action 7

    The first scientifically rigorous demonstrations of localization of function 9

    What is a Brain and What Does It Do? 12

    Looking Ahead to the Development of Cognitive Neuroscience 13

    End-of-Chapter Questions 14

    References 14

    Other Sources Used 14

    Further Reading 15

    2 The Brain 16

    Key Themes 16

    Pep Talk 18

    Gross Anatomy 18

    The cerebral cortex 21

    The Neuron 23

    Electrical and chemical properties of the neuron 23

    Oscillatory Fluctuations in the Membrane Potential 28

    Neurons are never truly “at rest” 28

    Oscillatory synchrony 29

    Complicated, and Complex 31

    End-of-Chapter Questions 32

    References 32

    Other Sources Used 33

    Further Reading 33

    3 Methods for Cognitive Neuroscience 34

    Key Themes 34

    Behavior, Structure, Function, and Models 36

    Behavior 36

    Neuropsychology, neurophysiology, and the limits of inference 36

    Different kinds of neuropsychology address different kinds of questions 37

    How does behavior relate to mental functions? 38

    Methods for lesioning targeted areas of the brain 39

    Nonlocalized trauma 39

    Transcranial Neurostimulation 40

    The importance of specificity (again) 41

    Transcranial magnetic stimulation 43

    Anatomy and Cellular Physiology 47

    Techniques that exploit the cell biology of the neuron 48

    Electrophysiology 51

    Invasive recording with microelectrodes: action potentials and local field potentials 51

    Electrocorticography 53

    Electroencephalography 53

    Magnetoencephalography 55

    Invasive Neurostimulation 55

    Electrical microstimulation 55

    Optogenetics 55

    Analysis of Time-Varying Signals 56

    Event-related analyses 56

    Magnetic Resonance Imaging 61

    Physics and engineering bases 61

    MRI methods for in vivo anatomical imaging 64

    Functional magnetic resonance imaging 65

    Functional connectivity 70

    Resting state functional correlations 70

    Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy 73

    Tomography 73

    X-ray computed tomography 73

    Positron emission tomography 73

    Near-Infrared Spectroscopy 76

    Some Considerations For Experimental Design 76

    Computational Models and Analytic Approaches 78

    Neural network modeling 78

    Network science and graph theory 82

    End-of-Chapter Questions 84

    References 85

    Other Sources Used 86

    Further Reading 86

    Section II: Sensation, Perception, Attention, and Action 87

    4 Sensation and Perception of Visual Signals 90

    Key Themes 90

    The Dominant Sense in Primates 92

    Organization of the Visual System 92

    The visual field 92

    The retina and the LGN of the thalamus 92

    The retinotopic organization of primary visual cortex 93

    The receptive field 95

    Information Processing in Primary Visual Cortex – Bottom-Up Feature Detection 96

    The V1 neuron as feature detector 96

    Columns, hypercolumns, and pinwheels 99

    Information Processing in Primary Visual Cortex – Interactivity 100

    Feedforward and feedback projections of V1 100

    The relation between visual processing and the brain’s physiological state 104

    Where Does Sensation End? Where Does Perception Begin? 106

    End-of-Chapter Questions 106

    References 107

    Other Sources Used 107

    Further Reading 108

    5 Audition and Somatosensation 109

    Key Themes 109

    Apologia 111

    Audition 111

    Auditory sensation 111

    Auditory perception 115

    Adieu to audition 119

    Somatosensation 119

    Transduction of mechanical and thermal energy, and of pain 119

    Somatotopy 122

    Somatosensory plasticity 126

    Phantom limbs and phantom pain 129

    Proprioception 131

    Adieu to sensation 131

    End-of-Chapter Questions 131

    References 132

    Other Sources Used 132

    Further Reading 132

    6 The Visual System 134

    Key Themes 134

    Familiar Principles and Processes, Applied to Higher-Level Representations 136

    Two Parallel Pathways 136

    A diversity of projections from V1 136

    A functional dissociation of visual perception of what an object is vs. where it is located 137

    Interconnectedness within and between the two pathways 142

    The Organization and Functions of the Ventral Visual Processing Stream 144

    Hand cells, face cells, and grandmother cells 144

    Broader implications of visual properties of temporal cortex neurons 149

    A hierarchy of stimulus representation 150

    Object-based (viewpoint-independent) vs. image-based (viewpoint-dependent) representation in IT 153

    A critical role for feedback in the ventral visual processing stream 153

    Taking Stock 158

    End-of-Chapter Questions 158

    References 159

    Other Sources Used 159

    Further Reading 160

    7 Spatial Cognition and Attention 161

    Key Themes 161

    Unilateral Neglect: A Fertile Source of Models of Spatial Cognition and Attention 163

    Unilateral neglect: a clinicoanatomical primer 163

    Hypotheses arising from clinical observations of neglect 164

    The Functional Anatomy of the Dorsal Stream 166

    Coordinate transformations to guide action with perception 169

    From Parietal Space to Medial-Temporal Place 172

    Place cells in the hippocampus 173

    How does place come to be represented in the hippocampus? 175

    The Neurophysiology of Sensory Attention 175

    A day at the circus 176

    Attending to locations vs. attending to objects 176

    Mechanisms of spatial attention 180

    Effects of attention on neuronal activity 181

    Turning Our Attention to the Future 185

    End-of-Chapter Questions 185

    References 186

    Other Sources Used 186

    Further Reading 187

    8 Skeletomotor Control 188

    Key Themes 188

    The Organization of the Motor System 190

    The anatomy of the motor system 190

    The corticospinal tract 190

    The cortico-cerebellar circuit 190

    The cortico-basal ganglia-thalamic circuits 192

    Functional Principles of Motor Control 193

    The biomechanics of motor control 193

    Motor cortex 196

    The neurophysiology of movement 196

    Motor Control Outside of Motor Cortex 202

    Parietal cortex: guiding how we move 202

    A neurological dissociation between perceiving objects and acting on them 203

    Cerebellum: motor learning, balance, . . . and mental representation? 204

    Synaptic plasticity 205

    Basal ganglia 206

    Cognitive Functions of the Motor System 211

    Mirror neurons 212

    Holding a mirror up to nature? 213

    It’s All About Action 214

    End-of-Chapter Questions 214

    References 215

    Other Sources Used 215

    Further Reading 216

    9 Oculomotor Control and the Control of Attention 218

    Key Themes 218

    Attention and Action 220

    Whys and Hows of Eye Movements 220

    Three categories of eye movements 220

    The Organization of the Oculomotor System 221

    An overview of the circuitry 221

    The superior colliculus 222

    The posterior system 222

    The frontal eye field 223

    The supplementary eye field 223

    The Control of Eye Movements, and of Attention, In Humans 224

    Human oculomotor control 224

    Human attentional control 226

    The Control of Attention via the Oculomotor System 227

    Covert attention 227

    Where’s the attentional controller? 230

    Are Oculomotor Control and Attentional Control Really the “Same Thing”? 233

    The “method of visual inspection” 234

    “Prioritized maps of space in human frontoparietal cortex” 235

    Of Labels and Mechanisms 238

    End-of-Chapter Questions 238

    References 238

    Other Sources Used 239

    Further Reading 240

    Section III: Mental Representation 241

    10 Visual Object Recognition and Knowledge 243

    Key Themes 243

    Visual Agnosia 245

    Apperceptive agnosia 245

    Associative agnosia 245

    Computational Models of Visual Object Recognition 247

    Two neuropsychological traditions 247

    The cognitive neuroscience revolution in visual cognition 249

    Category Specificity in the Ventral Stream? 249

    Are faces special? 249

    Perceptual expertise 251

    Evidence for a high degree of specificity for many categories in ventral occipitotemporal cortex 252

    Evidence for highly distributed category representation in ventral occipitotemporal cortex 253

    Demonstrating necessity 256

    The code for facial identity in the primate brain (!?!) 258

    Visual Perception as Predictive Coding 261

    Playing 20 Questions With the Brain 262

    End-of-Chapter Questions 264

    References 264

    Other Sources Used 265

    Further Reading 265

    11 Neural Bases of Memory 267

    Key Themes 267

    Plasticity, Learning, and Memory 269

    The Case of H.M. 269

    Bilateral medial temporal lobectomy 269

    Hippocampus vs. MTL? 272

    Association Through Synaptic Modification 273

    Long-term potentiation 273

    The necessity of NMDA channels for LTM formation 277

    How Might the Hippocampus Work? 277

    Fast-encoding hippocampus vs. slow-encoding cortex 278

    Episodic memory for sequences 279

    Episodic memory as an evolutionary elaboration of navigational processing 282

    What Are the Cognitive Functions of the Hippocampus? 283

    Standard anatomical model 283

    Challenges to the standard anatomical model 283

    Consolidation 285

    Reconsolidation 286

    To Consolidate 286

    End-of-Chapter Questions 288

    References 288

    Other Sources Used 289

    Further Reading 290

    12 Declarative Long-Term Memory 291

    Key Themes 291

    The Cognitive Neuroscience of LTM 293

    Encoding 293

    Neuroimaging the hippocampus 293

    Incidental encoding into LTM during a short-term memory task 296

    The Hippocampus in Spatial Memory Experts 299

    Retrieval 299

    Retrieval without awareness 300

    Documenting contextual reinstatement in the brain 301

    Familiarity vs. recollection 303

    Knowledge 306

    End-of-Chapter Questions 306

    References 307

    Other Sources Used 308

    Further Reading 308

    13 Semantic Long-Term Memory 310

    Key Themes 310

    Knowledge in the Brain 312

    Definitions and Basic Facts 312

    Category-Specific Deficits Following Brain Damage 313

    Animacy, or function? 313

    A PDP model of modality specificity 314

    The domain-specific knowledge hypothesis 314

    How definitive is a single case study? A double dissociation? 315

    The Neuroimaging of Knowledge 316

    The meaning, and processing, of words 316

    An aside about the role of language in semantics and the study of semantics 316

    PET scanning of object knowledge 317

    Knowledge retrieval or lexical access? 318

    Repetition effects and fMRI adaptation 319

    The Progressive Loss of Knowledge 321

    Primary Progressive Aphasia or Semantic Dementia, Nonverbal deficits in fluent primary progressive aphasia? 322

    The locus of damage in fluent primary progressive aphasia? 322

    Distal effects of neurodegeneration 324

    Entente cordiale 324

    Nuance and Challenges 326

    End-of-Chapter Questions 326

    References 327

    Other Sources Used 328

    Further Reading 329

    14 Working Memory 330

    Key Themes 330

    “Prolonged Perception” Or “Activated LTM?” 332

    Definitions 332

    Working Memory and the PFC? The Roots of a Long and Fraught Association 333

    Early focus on role of PFC in the control of STM 334

    Single-unit delay-period activity in PFC and thalamus 335

    Working Memory Capacity and Contralateral Delay Activity 342

    The electrophysiology of visual working memory capacity 343

    Novel Insights From Multivariate Data Analysis 349

    The tradition of univariate analyses 349

    MVPA of fMRI 349

    Retrospective MVPA of single-unit extracellular recordings 356

    Activity? Who Needs Activity? 357

    Four-Score and a Handful of Years (and Counting) 360

    End-of-Chapter Questions 360

    References 360

    Other Sources Used 362

    Further Reading 362

    Section IV: High-Level Cognition 363

    15 Cognitive Control 365

    Key Themes 365

    The Lateral Frontal-Lobe Syndrome 367

    Environmental-dependency syndrome 367

    Perseveration 368

    Electrophysiology of the frontal-lobe syndrome 370

    Integration? 371

    Models of Cognitive Control 371

    Developmental cognitive neuroscience 371

    Generalizing beyond development 374

    What makes the PFC special? 375

    Influence of the DA reward signal on the functions of PFC 376

    Neural Activity Relating to Cognitive Control 378

    Error monitoring 378

    Going Meta 386

    Where is the controller? 388

    End-of-Chapter Questions 389

    References 389

    Other Sources Used 390

    Further Reading 391

    16 Decision Making 392

    Key Themes 392

    Between Perception and Action 394

    Perceptual Decision Making 394

    Judging the direction of motion 394

    LIP 396

    Modeling perceptual decision making 396

    Controversy and complications 399

    Perceptual decision making in humans 401

    Value-Based Decision Making 402

    The influence of expected value on activity in LIP 403

    Common currency in the omPFC 404

    Has neuroeconomics taught us anything about the economics of decision making? 409

    Foraging 410

    Boys being boys 411

    Peer pressure 411

    Next Stop 412

    End-of-Chapter Questions 412

    References 412

    Other Sources Used 413

    Further Reading 414

    17 Social Behavior 415

    Key Themes 415

    Trustworthiness: A Preamble 417

    Delaying gratification: a social influence on a “frontal” class of behaviors 417

    The Role of vmPFC in the Control of Social Cognition 418

    Phineas Gage 418

    Contemporary behavioral neurology 420

    Theory of Mind 422

    The ToM network 422

    The temporoparietal junction (TPJ) 423

    False beliefs (?) about Rebecca Saxe’s mind 425

    A final assessment of the role of RTPJ in ToM mentalization 429

    Observational Learning 430

    Predicting the outcome of someone else’s actions 430

    Trustworthiness, Revisited 435

    End-of-Chapter Questions 435

    References 436

    Other Sources Used 437

    Further Reading 437

    18 Emotion 438

    Key Themes 438

    What is an Emotion? 440

    Approach/withdrawal 440

    From “feeling words” to neural systems 440

    At the nexus of perception and social cognition 440

    Trustworthiness Revisited – Again 440

    A role for the amygdala in the processing of trustworthiness 441

    Implicit information processing by the amygdala 443

    The Amygdala 444

    Klüver–Bucy syndrome 444

    Pavlovian fear conditioning 444

    Emotional content in declarative memories 446

    The amygdala’s influence on other brain systems 449

    The Control of Emotions 450

    Extinction 450

    How Does That Make You Feel? 455

    End-of-Chapter Questions 457

    References 458

    Other Sources Used 458

    Further Reading 459

    19 Language 460

    Key Themes 460

    A System of Remarkable Complexity 462

    Wernicke–Lichtheim: The Classical Core Language Network 462

    The aphasias 462

    The functional relevance of the connectivity of the network 463

    Speech Perception 464

    Segregation of the speech signal 464

    Dual routes for speech processing 468

    Grammar 469

    Genetics 469

    Rules in the brain? 471

    Broca’s area 472

    The electrophysiology of grammar 475

    Speech Production 477

    A psycholinguistic model of production 477

    Forward models for the control of production 477

    Prediction 479

    Integration 480

    End-of-Chapter Questions 481

    References 481

    Other Sources Used 483

    Further Reading 483

    20 Consciousness 485

    Key Themes 485

    The Most Complex Object in the Universe 487

    Different Approaches to the Problem 487

    The Physiology of Consciousness 488

    Neurological syndromes 488

    Sleep 492

    Anesthesia 494

    Summary across physiological studies 495

    Brain Functions Supporting Conscious Perception 495

    Are we conscious of activity in early sensory cortex? 497

    Manipulating extrinsic factors to study conscious vs. unconscious vision 500

    Are Attention and Awareness the Same Thing? 501

    Theories of Consciousness 503

    Global Workspace Theory 503

    Recurrent Processing Theory 505

    Integrated Information Theory 506

    Updating the Consciousness Graph 508

    End-of-Chapter Questions 509

    References 509

    Other Sources Used 511

    Further Reading 511

    Glossary G-1

    Index I-1

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