collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25251487/perspectives-on-culture-and-concepts
#21
REVIEW
Bethany l ojalehto, Douglas L Medin
The well-respected tradition of research on concepts uses cross-cultural comparisons to explore which aspects of conceptual behavior are universal versus culturally variable. This work continues, but it is being supplemented by intensified efforts to study how conceptual systems and cultural systems interact to modify and support each other. For example, cultural studies within the framework of domain specificity (e.g., folkphysics, folkpsychology, folkbiology) are beginning to query the domains themselves and offer alternative organizing principles (e...
January 3, 2015: Annual Review of Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25251489/the-nucleus-accumbens-an-interface-between-cognition-emotion-and-action
#22
REVIEW
Stan B Floresco
Nearly 40 years of research on the function of the nucleus accumbens (NAc) has provided a wealth of information on its contributions to behavior but has also yielded controversies and misconceptions regarding these functions. A primary tenet of this review is that, rather than serving as a "reward" center, the NAc plays a key role in action selection, integrating cognitive and affective information processed by frontal and temporal lobe regions to augment the efficiency and vigor of appetitively or aversively motivated behaviors...
January 3, 2015: Annual Review of Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25251491/motivation-and-cognitive-control-from-behavior-to-neural-mechanism
#23
REVIEW
Matthew Botvinick, Todd Braver
Research on cognitive control and executive function has long recognized the relevance of motivational factors. Recently, however, the topic has come increasingly to center stage, with a surge of new studies examining the interface of motivation and cognitive control. In the present article we survey research situated at this interface, considering work from cognitive and social psychology and behavioral economics, but with a particular focus on neuroscience research. We organize existing findings into three core areas, considering them in the light of currently vying theoretical perspectives...
January 3, 2015: Annual Review of Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25987443/embracing-multiple-definitions-of-learning
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew B Barron, Eileen A Hebets, Thomas A Cleland, Courtney L Fitzpatrick, Mark E Hauber, Jeffrey R Stevens
Definitions of learning vary widely across disciplines, driven largely by different approaches used to assess its occurrence. These definitions can be better reconciled with each other if each is recognized as coherent with a common conceptualization of learning, while appreciating the practical utility of different learning definitions in different contexts.
July 2015: Trends in Neurosciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26160027/contrasting-network-and-modular-perspectives-on-inhibitory-control
#25
REVIEW
Adam Hampshire, David J Sharp
A prominent theory proposes that the right inferior frontal cortex of the human brain houses a dedicated region for motor response inhibition. However, there is growing evidence to support the view that this inhibitory control hypothesis is incorrect. Here, we discuss evidence in favour of our alternative hypothesis, which states that response inhibition is one example of a broader class of control processes that are supported by the same set of frontoparietal networks. These domain-general networks exert control by modulating local lateral inhibition processes, which occur ubiquitously throughout the cortex...
August 2015: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26160501/affective-cognition-exploring-lay-theories-of-emotion
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Desmond C Ong, Jamil Zaki, Noah D Goodman
Humans skillfully reason about others' emotions, a phenomenon we term affective cognition. Despite its importance, few formal, quantitative theories have described the mechanisms supporting this phenomenon. We propose that affective cognition involves applying domain-general reasoning processes to domain-specific content knowledge. Observers' knowledge about emotions is represented in rich and coherent lay theories, which comprise consistent relationships between situations, emotions, and behaviors. Observers utilize this knowledge in deciphering social agents' behavior and signals (e...
October 2015: Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26157406/what-exactly-is-universal-grammar-and-has-anyone-seen-it
#27
REVIEW
Ewa Dąbrowska
Universal Grammar (UG) is a suspect concept. There is little agreement on what exactly is in it; and the empirical evidence for it is very weak. This paper critically examines a variety of arguments that have been put forward as evidence for UG, focussing on the three most powerful ones: universality (all human languages share a number of properties), convergence (all language learners converge on the same grammar in spite of the fact that they are exposed to different input), and poverty of the stimulus (children know things about language which they could not have learned from the input available to them)...
2015: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25938726/the-brain-s-default-mode-network
#28
REVIEW
Marcus E Raichle
The brain's default mode network consists of discrete, bilateral and symmetrical cortical areas, in the medial and lateral parietal, medial prefrontal, and medial and lateral temporal cortices of the human, nonhuman primate, cat, and rodent brains. Its discovery was an unexpected consequence of brain-imaging studies first performed with positron emission tomography in which various novel, attention-demanding, and non-self-referential tasks were compared with quiet repose either with eyes closed or with simple visual fixation...
July 8, 2015: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26154978/an-integrative-model-of-the-maturation-of-cognitive-control
#29
REVIEW
Beatriz Luna, Scott Marek, Bart Larsen, Brenden Tervo-Clemmens, Rajpreet Chahal
Brains systems undergo unique and specific dynamic changes at the cellular, circuit, and systems level that underlie the transition to adult-level cognitive control. We integrate literature from these different levels of analyses to propose a novel model of the brain basis of the development of cognitive control. The ability to consistently exert cognitive control improves into adulthood as the flexible integration of component processes, including inhibitory control, performance monitoring, and working memory, increases...
July 8, 2015: Annual Review of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25976632/perceptual-inference
#30
REVIEW
Nikolaos C Aggelopoulos
Perceptual inference refers to the ability to infer sensory stimuli from predictions that result from internal neural representations built through prior experience. Methods of Bayesian statistical inference and decision theory model cognition adequately by using error sensing either in guiding action or in "generative" models that predict the sensory information. In this framework, perception can be seen as a process qualitatively distinct from sensation, a process of information evaluation using previously acquired and stored representations (memories) that is guided by sensory feedback...
August 2015: Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26116988/attention-the-claustrum
#31
REVIEW
Yael Goll, Gal Atlan, Ami Citri
The claustrum is a mysterious thin sheet of neurons lying between the insular cortex and the striatum. It is reciprocally connected with almost all cortical areas, including motor, somatosensory, visual, auditory, limbic, associative, and prefrontal cortices. In addition, it receives neuromodulatory input from subcortical structures. A decade ago, Sir Francis Crick and Christof Koch published an influential review proposing the claustrum as the 'seat of consciousness', spurring a revival of interest in the claustrum...
August 2015: Trends in Neurosciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26149511/dynamical-bridge-between-brain-and-mind
#32
REVIEW
Mikhail I Rabinovich, Alan N Simmons, Pablo Varona
The bridge between brain structures as computational devices and the content of mental processes hinges on the solution of several problems: (i) inference of the cognitive brain networks from neurophysiological and imaging data; (ii) inference of cognitive mind networks - interactions between mental processes such as attention and working memory - based on cognitive and behavioral experiments; and (iii) the discovery of general dynamical principles for cognition based on dynamical models. In this opinion article, we focus on the third problem and discuss how it provides the bridge between the solutions to the first two problems...
August 2015: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25873038/decision-making-in-the-ageing-brain-changes-in-affective-and-motivational-circuits
#33
REVIEW
Gregory R Samanez-Larkin, Brian Knutson
As the global population ages, older decision makers will be required to take greater responsibility for their own physical, psychological and financial well-being. With this in mind, researchers have begun to examine the effects of ageing on decision making and associated neural circuits. A new 'affect-integration-motivation' (AIM) framework may help to clarify how affective and motivational circuits support decision making. Recent research has shed light on whether and how ageing influences these circuits, providing an interdisciplinary account of how ageing can alter decision making...
May 2015: Nature Reviews. Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23395462/a-neurocognitive-approach-to-understanding-the-neurobiology-of-addiction
#34
REVIEW
Xavier Noël, Damien Brevers, Antoine Bechara
Recent concepts of addiction to drugs (e.g. cocaine) and non-drugs (e.g. gambling) have proposed that these behaviors are the product of an imbalance between three separate, but interacting, neural systems: an impulsive, largely amygdala-striatum dependent, neural system that promotes automatic, habitual and salient behaviors; a reflective, mainly prefrontal cortex dependent, neural system for decision-making, forecasting the future consequences of a behavior, and inhibitory control; and the insula that integrates interoception states into conscious feelings and into decision-making processes that are involved in uncertain risk and reward...
August 2013: Current Opinion in Neurobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23403747/the-inner-sense-of-time-how-the-brain-creates-a-representation-of-duration
#35
REVIEW
Marc Wittmann
A large number of competing models exist for how the brain creates a representation of time. However, several human and animal studies point to 'climbing neural activation' as a potential neural mechanism for the representation of duration. Neurophysiological recordings in animals have revealed how climbing neural activation that peaks at the end of a timed interval underlies the processing of duration, and, in humans, climbing neural activity in the insular cortex, which is associated with feeling states of the body and emotions, may be related to the cumulative representation of time...
2013: Nature Reviews. Neuroscience
1
Fetch more papers »
Fetching more papers... Fetching...
Remove bar
Read by QxMD icon Read
×

Save your favorite articles in one place with a free QxMD account.

×

Search Tips

Use Boolean operators: AND/OR

diabetic AND foot
diabetes OR diabetic

Exclude a word using the 'minus' sign

Virchow -triad

Use Parentheses

water AND (cup OR glass)

Add an asterisk (*) at end of a word to include word stems

Neuro* will search for Neurology, Neuroscientist, Neurological, and so on

Use quotes to search for an exact phrase

"primary prevention of cancer"
(heart or cardiac or cardio*) AND arrest -"American Heart Association"

We want to hear from doctors like you!

Take a second to answer a survey question.