Cognitive Neuroscience - Lectures (Utrecht University)
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Shifts of attention are useful for many daily tasks, such as finding your keys, playing video games, learning, personality and flexibility and efficiency.
Patients with attentional deficits have damage to the frontoparietal network, causes:
Neglect
Neglect is different from hemianopia (V1 damage). Difficult to differentiate though (but hemianopia patients often know something is wrong).
Balint’s syndrome
Parietal lobe damage: deficits in attention and changing the allocation of attention
Frontal lobe damage: deficits in control & initiating the changes in attention
Frontalparietal network = attentional control
There is first activity in frontal areas, then in parietal areas.
The TPJ (temporo-parietal junction) is specifically important for bottom-up processing of attention.
During visual search you use a lot of bottom-up attention.
When searching for something, you are always driven by both pop-out and conjunction search. Reorienting during both types of visual search is coded in the intraparietal sulcus (IPS).
Default-mode network: active in rest. Decreased activity in the frontoparietal network means increased activity in the default-mode network (inverse coupling) --> Posterior cingulate cortex
EEG reflects sleep stages:
Sleep neurotransmitters:
Awake: all neuron types are active
Beginning of sleep: all less active
Before REM sleeps: noradrenaline active (to reactivate REM)
During REM: acetylcholine active
Consciousness can be seen as ‘being awake’ or as ‘being aware or being self-aware’.
Changing awareness over time:
There is a BOLD response during a change in awareness.
How do we know what they see when there is no report? Use objective signals such as pupil size.
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In this bundle you can find the lecture notes from the course 'Cognitive Neuroscience' at Utrecht University. Good luck studying!
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