CH 3 - Basic Concepts in Cognitive Science Flashcards

1
Q

What is phrenology?

A

phren (mind) and logos (knowledge) was a predecessor of cognitive science. It tried to describe the mind based on the anatomical structure of the brain

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2
Q

Are the assumptions of Phrenology right?

A

Not all. It is not a science.

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3
Q

Which hypothesis of Phrenology are true?

A
  • brain as the center of thought
  • modular or organization of the brain into anatomical regions
  • functional specialization of individual brain regions
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4
Q

What can’t you derive from Histological Brain Sections?

A

It is a static representation of the brain. You don’t know how a specific cell contributes to the functioning of the brain.

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5
Q

MRI

A

magnetic resonance imaging for imaging the anatomical structure of tissue in vivo.
- active sensing based on magnetic properties of hydrogen atoms

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6
Q

DTI

A

Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI)

- extension of MRI that measures the diffusion movement of water molecules and can detect nerve fibers

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7
Q

What are MRI and DTI based on?

A

nuclear magnetic resonance

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8
Q

Two types of Structural Neuroimaging

A
  1. MRI

2. DTI

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9
Q

Types of Functional Neuroimaging

A
  1. EEG & MEG
  2. PET & SPECT
  3. fMRI
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10
Q

EEG & MEG

A

Electroencephalography (EEG) and Magnetoencephalography (MEG)

  • non-invasive monitoring of brain activity and high temporal resolution. EEG measures are based on electric potentials resulting from neural activity via electrodes on the skull.
  • MEG detects the corresponding magnetic field
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11
Q

PET & SPECT

A

Positron Emission Tomography (PET) and Single-Photon Emission Computer Tomography (SPECT)
- nuclear imaging techniques that require medication with radiotracers. Brain activity is monitored implicitly by observing the regional cerebral blood flow.

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12
Q

fMRI

A

Functional MRI
- extension of MRI that visualizes changes of the blood oxygen level caused by brain activity elicited through external stimuli or cognitive processing at high spatial resolution.

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13
Q

What is haptic fMRI?

A

Augments fMRI with haptic input device:

  • test person in the MRI scanner looks at virtual object that are projected on a screen
  • the haptic input device enables interaction with the virtual objects
  • brain activity s monitored via fMRI
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14
Q

Can brain regions change their functionality?

A

Yes for example when there is an accident

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15
Q

Prefrontal cortex

A

social behavior

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16
Q

Broca’s area

A

production of speech

17
Q

Movement of arms legs etc

A

Primary motor cortex

18
Q

sensory information is processed in

A

postcentral gyrus

19
Q

Wernicke’s area

A

understand speech

20
Q

Draw sketch on slide 14

A

draw

21
Q

Which fields of research does cognitive science build up on?

A

Engineering (AI, ML, CS, Robotics)
Natural Sciences (Neuroscience,etc.)
Humanities (Cognitive Psychology, Philosophy)

22
Q

Cognitive systems and functions can be modeled at different degrees of biological realism

A
  • Computational Models
  • Bio-inspired models
  • Hybrid Models
23
Q

What are computational models about?

A
  • implement a cognitive functions solely based on a functional view of the system without any reference to biology (e.g. how an apple is picked –> we don’t care what happens in the brain)
24
Q

Bio-inspired models

A
  • implement cognitive functions by replicating known or hypothesized mechanisms of cognitive processing from biological organisms
25
Q

Hybrid models

A

combine computational and bio-inspired modeling