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Participate in Cognitive Neuroscience Experiments for extra credit! www.tatalab.ca
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Midterm 1 Wednesday this week!
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Review Session Today at 4 in this room
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Cognitive Operations What does the brain actually do? Some possible answers:
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First Principles “cognitive operations are processes that generate, elaborate upon, or manipulate representations” – As patterns of activity in one or more neurons – We often lack conscious access to these representations – Neuroscientists still know very little about how information is represented in the brain
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Mental Representations Mental representations can start with sensory input and progress to more abstract forms – Local features such as colors, line orientation, brightness, motion are represented at low levels How might a neuron “represent” the presence of this line?
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Mental Representations Mental representations can start with sensory input and progress to more abstract forms – Local features such as colors, line orientation, brightness, motion are represented at low levels A “labeled line” -Activity on this unit “means” that a line is present -Does the line actually have to be present?
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Mental Representations Mental representations can start with sensory input and progress to more abstract forms – texture defined boundaries are representations arrived at by synthesizing the local texture features
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Mental Representations Mental representations can be “embellished” - Kaniza Triangle is represented in a way that is quite different from the actual stimulus -the representation is embellished and extended
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can be transformed – Rubin Vase, Necker Cube are examples of mental representations that are dynamic
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can be transformed – Shepard & Metzlar (1971) mental rotation is an example of transforming a mental representation in a continuous process Mentally rotate the images to determine whether they are identical or mirror-reversed SAME MIRROR-REVERSED
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can be transformed – Shepard & Metzlar (1971) mental rotation is an example of transforming a mental representation in a continuous process
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can be transformed – Shepard & Metzlar (1971) mental rotation is an example of transforming a mental representation in a continuous process
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can be transformed – Shepard & Metzlar (1971) mental rotation is an example of transforming a mental representation in a continuous process – The time it takes to respond is linearly determined by the number of degrees one has to rotate – Somehow the brain must perform a set of operations on these representations - where? how?
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can be transformed into abstract information representations – Posner letter matching task – Are these letters from the same category (vowels or consonants) or are they different?
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can be transformed into abstract information representations – Posner letter matching task – Are these letters from the same category (vowels or consonants) or are they different? – Are they physically the same or are they the same in an abstract way - they are in the same category? A AaAa AUAU SCSC ASAS SAME DIFFERENT
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can be transformed into abstract information representations – Posner letter matching task – Participants are fastest when the response doesn’t require transforming the representation from a direct manifestation of the stimulus into something more abstract
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can interfere – Stroop task: name the colour in which the word is printed (I.e. don’t read the word, just say the colour
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can interfere – Stroop task: name the colour in which the word is printed (I.e. don’t read the word, just say the colour RED
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can interfere – Stroop task: name the colour in which the word is printed (I.e. don’t read the word, just say the colour BLUE
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can interfere – Stroop task: name the colour in which the word is printed (I.e. don’t read the word, just say the colour GREEN
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can interfere – Stroop task: name the colour in which the word is printed (I.e. don’t read the word, just say the colour RED
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can interfere – Stroop task: name the colour in which the word is printed (I.e. don’t read the word, just say the colour BLUE
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can interfere – Stroop task: name the colour in which the word is printed (I.e. don’t read the word, just say the colour GREEN
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Mental Representations Mental Representations can interfere – Stroop task: name the colour in which the word is printed (I.e. don’t read the word, just say the colour – The mental representation of the colour and the representation of the text are incongruent and interfere – one representation must be selected and the other suppressed – This is one conceptualization of attention
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Mental Representations Representations in neural a neural code aren’t limited to sensory information Other examples: – Place cells in hippocampus represent location of an animal in a local coordinate system
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Mental Representations Other examples: Motor Neurons represent plan for future action
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Mental Representations The cognitive neuroscientists asks: – where are these representations formed? – What is the neural mechanism? What is the code for a representation? – What is the neural process by which representations are transformed?
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