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Consciousness and Cognition: Fragments of Mind and Brain PDF

292 Pages·2007·7.942 MB·English
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Prelims-P373734.qxd 10/12/06 5:19 PM Page i CONSCIOUSNESS AND COGNITION FRAGMENTS OF MIND AND BRAIN This page intentionally left blank Prelims-P373734.qxd 10/12/06 5:19 PM Page iii Consciousness and Cognition Fragments of Mind and Brain Edited by HENRI COHEN and BRIGITTE STEMMER AMSTERDAM (cid:127) BOSTON (cid:127) HEIDELBERG (cid:127) LONDON (cid:127) NEW YORK (cid:127) OXFORD PARIS (cid:127) SAN DIEGO (cid:127) SAN FRANCISCO (cid:127) SINGAPORE (cid:127) SYDNEY (cid:127) TOKYO Academic Press is an imprint of Elsevier Prelims-P373734.qxd 10/12/06 5:19 PM Page iv Academic Press is an imprint of Elsevier 84 Theobald’s Road, London WC1X 8RR, UK 30 Corporate Drive, Suite 400, Burlington, MA01803, USA 525 B Street, Suite 1900, San Diego, California 92101-4495, USA First edition 2007 Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publisher Permissions may be sought directly from Elsevier’s Science & Technology Rights Department in Oxford, UK: phone ((cid:1)44) (0) 1865 843830; fax ((cid:1)44) (0) 1865 853333; email: [email protected]. Alternatively you can submit your request online by visiting the Elsevier web site at http://elsevier.com/locate/permissions, and selecting Obtaining permission to use Elsevier material Notice No responsibility is assumed by the publisher for any injury and/or damage to persons or property as a matter of products liability, negligence or otherwise, or from any use or operation of any methods, products, instructions or ideas contained in the material herein. Because of rapid advances in the medical sciences, in particular, independent verification of diagnoses and drug dosages should be made British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Acatalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Catalog Number: 2006935286 ISBN–13: 978-0-12-373734-2 ISBN–10: 0-12-373734-6 For information on all Academic Press publications visit our web site at http://books.elsevier.com Typeset by Charon Tec Ltd (AMacmillan Company), Chennai, India www.charontec.com Printed and bound in the USA 07 08 09 10 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 The image on the front cover is reproduced with permission from an artwork (acrylics and collage on paper) entitled Lady Picasso in Barcelonaby the Canadian artist Yves Lahey. Prelims-P373734.qxd 10/12/06 5:19 PM Page v Contents Contributors viii New version – it was in the brain all Introduction xxvi along 46 Early studies of patients with brain 1. How Did Modern Human Cognition damage 47 Evolve? 3 Alittle Latin to help sort out the puzzle 48 Ian Tattersall Information flow – making the model Our large brain: does size matter? 5 dynamic 48 Tools, decoration and art 7 The brain’s control of movement 50 Where did modern human consciousness Asummary and outline 51 come from? 12 Conclusion 17 5. Can Evolution Produce Robots? 53 Manfred Hild and Brigitte Stemmer 2. Taking Up Arms 19 Artificial intelligence 53 Michael Corballis Thinking big 19 How does artificial evolution work? 56 The question of language 20 How artificial neurons work 58 Language is a hand-me-down! 21 How to get robots to behave 58 Convincing myself 21 What artificial neural nets can do 59 Book for sale 22 Auseful application: getting rid of Objections 22 trash 61 When did autonomous speech emerge? 23 Learning and evolution 61 Not with a bang, but with a whimper 26 What is the current state of things? 62 Of what importance is evolutionary 3. Celebrating 300 Million Years of the Mind: robotics? 64 ABird’s Eye View 29 Future visions 64 Peter J. Snyder What do we mean by ‘the mind’? 30 6. The Thought-Translation Device 69 Flying without frontal lobes 31 Niels Birbaumer & What is intelligence, and how can this be Frank Appletree Rodden measured in birds? 31 Using brain-computer interfaces (BCIs)to Birds, like humans, learn from careful translate thoughts into action 70 observation 33 Communicating with slow cortical How is this possible with so little potentials 71 neocortical tissue? 34 The origin of slow cortical potentials in From stories to controlled experiments 35 the human brain 72 Talking with Alex 38 The TTD in a nutshell 72 Bird play 39 Setting up and using the TTD 74 If my bird looks happy, is she really How the language support program happy? 40 works 74 Anthropomorphism 41 The training procedure 76 Conclusion 42 The training of patient E.M. 77 TTD – visions for the future 80 4. Was Medieval Cell Doctrine More Modern Than We Thought? 45 7. Babes in Arms: Studies in Laterality 83 Harry Whitaker Lauren Julius Harris Abrief historical sketch – the standard The left side rules 83 view 45 Abias rediscovered 85 Prelims-P373734.qxd 10/12/06 5:19 PM Page vi vi CONTENTS Is the bias just a matter of handedness? 88 11. Where’s the Missing Body? APuzzle for Some things to know about handedness 89 Cognitive Science 149 What handedness could explain Raymond W. Gibbs, Jr. about the holding-side bias 90 Act I 149 Problems for a handedness explanation 91 Act II 151 Is the bias a matter of posture? 93 Act III 153 What’s the difference between babies and Act IV 157 books? 95 Types of holds and their functions 97 12. Whose Free Will is it Anyway? or, The States of ‘action-approach’ 97 Illusion of Determinism 163 The anatomy of emotion 101 Sidney J. Segalowitz Emotions, attention, and side of Is free will more than a feeling? 163 holding 102 Neuroscience, neural reductionism and Can the attention hypothesis account for determinism 164 other details of the holding-side bias? 103 The implications of reductionism An exception to the left-side rule 105 and determinism for society and Why don’t left-hand prohibitions decrease psychology 165 left-side holding? 107 Psychology and materialism of the In Sum 108 mind 166 Modern neuroscience and non-determinism: radical changes of the late twentieth 8. Why a Creative Brain? Evolutionary century 167 Setups for Off-Line Planning of Coherent The crux of the free-will debate: is brain Stages 115 activity predictable? 168 William H. Calvin Future perspectives 170 Creativity is an evolutionary newcomer 115 13. Affective Neuroscience and the Ancestral Creativity for language instead? 116 Sources of Human Feelings 173 When an advance plan is needed 117 Jaak Panksepp Innovation during get-set 118 The Darwinian process 119 Some personal lessons and LESSNS about Speeding up the Darwinian process 120 the evolved nature of emotions 173 New uses for old things 121 Archaeology of mind: the affective sources Long sentences and coherence 122 of consciousness 175 Creating new levels of organization 123 Five distinctions between affective con- sciousness and cognitive consciousness 177 The emotional underpinnings of human nature – toward a neuroevolutionary psy- 9. Creativity: Method or Magic? 127 chobiology 179 Stevan Harnad Learning in emotional systems and more What is not creative? 128 on the pervasive emotion-cognition Creative trait or creative state? 131 interactions 182 Underlying mechanisms 131 Development of new psychiatric Conclusions 137 medications 183 Mind views: emotional states and cognitive information processing 184 10. The Cross-Cultural Brain 139 In sum 185 Eran Zaidel and Jonas Kaplan Alexithymia 140 The laterality hypothesis of alexithymia 14. The Funny Meat Behind Our Eyes 191 141 Frank Appletree Rodden A‘flashy’ way to do experiments 141 Humor and laughter for fun and (maybe) The experiments 143 health 193 An invitation to participate in our online Humor and laughter from a biological experiments 146 perspective 194 Prelims-P373734.qxd 10/12/06 5:19 PM Page vii CONTENTS vii The functional cognitive anatomy of a 16. Petrol Sniffing, the Brain, and Aboriginal joke 200 culture: Between Sorcery and Where do we go from here? 202 Neuroscience 225 Sheree Cairney and Paul Maruff Petrol sniffing 225 15. Practicing Safe Stress: ASelective Overview Aboriginal culture 228 of the Neuroscience Research 205 Neuroscience 231 Cheryl M. McCormick Both ways 238 Stress and stressors 205 Conclusion 242 Acute stress and memory 210 Chronic stress, brain structure, and 17. Chatting with Noam Chomsky 245 function 213 Noam Chomsky Stress and mental health 215 How stress sculpts the developing Index 255 brain 218 Gender, stress, and the brain 220 Coping with stress 221 Prelims-P373734.qxd 10/12/06 5:19 PM Page viii Contributors Niels Birbaumer (PhD) Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Neurobiology University of Tübingen Germany and Center for Cognitive Neuroscience University of Trento Italy After being baptized three times in exchange for food during the last days of World War II, Niels started a career as a street criminal in Vienna and later changed into a radical member of left-wing political movements. Returning to normality at the age of 18, Niels studied experimental psychology, statistics, and art history at the University of Vienna, Tübingen, Germany. Combining brain physi- Austria. After obtaining his PhD (‘The EEG in ology with behavioral principles, Niels blind borns’) and getting fired from Austrian developed new psychophysiological treat- universities in 1969 during the students’ rev- ments for intractable epilepsy, chronic pain, olution, he became a behavior therapist in attention deficit disorders, and Parkinson’s Middlesex Hospital, London, andlater at the disease and a Thought TranslationDevice for University of Munich, Departmentof Clinical completely paralyzed, locked-in populations. Psychology, Germany. Despite his sinister Niels has received many awards for his biography, the University of Tübingen made basic science and applied neuroscience con- him Full Professor of Clinical and Biological tributions, particularly in the field of brain Psychology and later he held a chair in psy- plasticity, among them the Leibniz Award of chology at Pennsylvania State University, the German Research Foundation (DFG) and USA. His Italian friends and his interest in the Einstein World Award of Science for sci- wine and sausages and Italian poetry later entific contributions relevant to the develop- brought him to a joint professorship for ing nations. He is currently president of the Cognitive Neuroscience in Trento, Italy, and Society for Psychophysiological Research. Prelims-P373734.qxd 10/12/06 5:19 PM Page ix CONTRIBUTORS ix Sheree Cairney (PhD) Research Fellow Menzies School of Health Research Charles Darwin University Northern Territory Australia With a background in medical biophysics and instrumentation, Sheree gradually migrated to neurophysiological research at the Mental Health Research Institute of Victoria. Here she investigated the ocular motor and cogni- tive functions associated with neurodegen- erative and neuropsychiatric disorders. On an extended backpacking journey through Latin America, she followed her nose to the Amazon regions and found herself attend- ing shamanic ceremonies where indigenous shamans in Amazon regions to use medici- spiritual and medicinal plants were used. This nal and spiritual plant hallucinogens. Her began her fascination with the interaction lifetime passions include painting, hiking, between drugs, culture, and the brain that led mountain climbing, swimming, 4WD-ing, to her next migration, to northern Australia. pure time in the bush, and precious time Here she completed her doctoral studies with her mates and family. Currently, she workingamong Aboriginal Australians living is based in northern Australia, where her in remote regions, investigating the brain– research focuses on understanding brain– behavioral relationships associated with sniff- behavioral relationships associated with men- ing petrol or drinking the plant medicine tal illness and drug use among Aboriginal kava. Later she worked on an amateur docu- people and the development of creative and mentary that investigated the process of appropriate means of communicating these Western foreigners visiting local indigenous concepts with Aboriginal people.

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