Language and cognition Flashcards
what does cognition mean
acquisition, retention, use of information that allows successful behaviour in our complex and changing environment
make sense of surroundings and do behaviours best for you
what concepts does cognition involve
-perception (understand what is going on)
-attention
-memory and learning
-emotion and social cognition (maintain good relations)
-symbolic representations (writing/language)
-reasoning and problem solving
discuss cognition with a sensory modality
primary areas receive unprocessed modality date
association areas determine PERCEPTUAL QUALITIES of modality
modal qualities from association cortexes are integrated with both themselves and info from other sensory modalities.
eg. pitch, volume, timbre, harmonics (sound) integrated with vision.
process level around at higher level- realise its a football and behave in appropriate manner
avoid walking into people
integration of the outside world is v important!!
what is multiple sensory integration
combination of processed sensory perceptions (vision, temperature, sound) are used to determine what is happening and where
how does multi-sensory integration work
eg. fire
looks like fire,
sounds like fire,
burns you
three sensory modalities arrive in the cortex at 3 primary locations
then SUB-CORTICAL and ASSOCIATION CORTICES move info
association cortices talk together and produce a synthesis of all info
to become cognisant of what you are experiencing
describe multi-sensory integration for motor output
-eg. david beckham
- sensory info about environment project to primary cortical areas (visual, somatosensory, auditory)
- info passed to sensory association in parietal and temporal lobe for integration
- integrated info is shared with supplementary motor cortex and and then to pre and motor cortex to allow incorporation of sensory input into planned integrated motor events
what is the McGurk effect
visual sensory info is interpreted and is DOMINANT over auditory processed information
dominant sensation
changes perception of sound
auditory-visual illusion
visual input they get changes they sound they perceive
sensory with non-sensory
different outcome with different inputs
vision
auditory
emotion/memory
if change memory– different outcome (happier feeling)
eg. forest example
overlay different things to understand world around you
what is synaesthesia
what is a commonly studied type
conflation of sensory experiences from one sensory domain with those from another
or the mixing of two modalities of the same sensory domain
COLOUR-GRAPHEMIC SYNAESTHESIA
- specific black and white shapes are perceived in colour
what does brocas area do
where is brocas area located
controlling motor cortex
element of comprehension and understanding sentence construction
anterior to primary cortex area
in frontal lobe
what does wernickes area do
where is found
understanding words that are being spoken/ comprehension of speech
temporal lobe anterior to auditory cortex
in an fmri which part lights up when words are being spoken
brocas
motor cortex
in an fmri which part lights up when hearing words
wernickes area
auditory cortex
what happens when you READ words
visual info from primary visual cortex is passed to wernicke’s (understand what you are reading)
via the ANGULAR GYRUS
then passed to broca’s area
this assesses for content and SNYTAX
control primary motor output
to speak words
what area connects wernicke s and brocas
ARCUATE FACICULUS