Humans are notoriously finicky decision makers, and new research is beginning to elucidate the neural networks that are responsible. For example, we are exquisitely sensitive to framing effects regardless of whether two decisions have mathematically equivalent value - a previous post reviews how this framing effect may arise in the brain. Another famous example is delay of gratification: often we are willing to accept less of something now rather than wait for more of it later. Today's post summarizes a recent article that begins to explain why. In their 2004 article, authors McClure,…
What cognitive processes make up consciousness? One way of answering this question is to identify conscious processes as those involved in controlled but not in automatic behaviors. For example, if you see a bright dot appear in your field of vision, your eyes will automatically orient to that location in space. In contrast, if I have told you to look away from any bright dots that appear in your field of view, you will be able to do this - but only because you possess consciousness in the form of "cognitive control." So, what computations support "cognitive control"? Cognitive control is…
My favorites from the last two weeks in brain blogging: First off, a new blog: Robots Will Take Over! Neural networks in silicon, and progress in brain-computer interfaces. Lifestyle improvements, brought to you by your friends at DARPA Is machine learning really any different from statistics? (One of my pet peeves, incidentally). A critical view of simulation's role in science Thank the military for cockroaches that are even harder to kill: tomorrow's robotic insects Sequelae of Octopus Intelligence? Senescence and depression in cephalopods. Bird Grammar: Recursive center-embedding in…
To the extent that the cognitive sciences actually consider the brain, the focus is clearly on neurons. Even the name of the field "neuroscience" suggests that neurons take the center stage. However, neurons are vastly outnumbered by glia, a different type of cell that is now known to be involved in sleep, memory, the fMRI signal, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, although many neuroscientists are still resistant to the idea that glia are involved in information processing per se. In a recent review article, Watkins et al. focus on the role of these cells in the experience of chronic pain.…
Yesterday I reviewed evidence showing that set switching (e.g., your ability to suddenly switch behaviors) and rule representation (your ability to represent rules in a game, for example), may be distinct processes, at least insofar as they may show distinct developmental trajectories and rely on distinct neural substrates. Today's post will review a new study from Developmental Neuropsychology that also aims to show distinct developmental trajectories for set switching and rule maintenance, and how these claims hold up to a deeper analysis. Huizinga & van der Molen administered four…
Normal children - and adult patients with frontal damage - frequently have difficulty changing their responses to stimuli when the correct response changes. This difficulty is often considered an inability to switch between rules, but might result not so much from an inability to switch as from an inability to represent the stimuli as having two possible responses in the first place (i.e., to represent the stimuli as "bivalent"). Supporting this distinction is a new article in the Journal of Neuroscience that claims to distinguish the networks supporting "bivalent" representation from those…
If a large object were to suddenly disappear from your field of view, you might expect that you would notice its disappearance. However, change detection research has demonstrated that we have a surprisingly poor ability to detect even large changes to a visual scene (see here and here for examples). Skeptics might complain that this "change blindness" could simply result from absent-mindedness: maybe you happened not to notice the changing feature. A 2002 article by Becker and Pashler actually rules out this explanation - indicating that our internal visual representations may indeed be as…
Encephalon 15 has been posted. Check it out!
If presented with a novel and a familiar object, infants strongly prefer to touch and look at novel objects. However, if these objects are then obscured - in the dark, or by an occluding screen - infants tend to reach more in the direction of the familiar objects. Some argue that the familiar objects are represented more strongly by neural networks, whereas the relatively weaker representations of novel objects are more likely to decay in the absence of sensory input, and thus less likely to motivate an infant's reach. Similar mechanisms may exist in adults. A review of the literature…
Yesterday I reviewed several detailed architectural asymmetries between the right and left hemispheres, but presented little information on asymmetries in long-range connectivity. Recent advances in a form of magnetic resonance imaging called "diffusion tensor MRI" have made possible whole-brain imaging of white matter tracts, which are important for long-range connectivity in the brain. So, how has this technology refined the study of hemispheric structural asymmetry? First, the basics: dtMRI analyzes the "fractional anisotropy" of water in tissue: in other words, it demonstrates the…
In their 2003 Trends in Neurosciences article, Hutsler & Galuske refer to the well-known history of hemispheric asymmetry research as too focused on large-scale morphological differences, at the expense of microanatomical and connectivity differences. An understanding of these more detailed structural differences might translate into a more detailed understanding of hemispheric differences in computation and function. Hutsler & Galuske identify three levels of structural analysis in cerebral cortex: the microcolumn, the macrocolumn, and the functional column. Microcolumns contain…
"Imagine that the U.S. is preparing for the outbreak of an unusual Asian disease, which is expected to kill 600 people. Two alternative programs to combat the disease have been proposed." The first program will save 200 people. The second program has a 33% probability of saving all 600 people, but a 67% chance that no one will be saved. Which program would you choose? If you're like most people, you'll pick the first program. However, if these choices had been framed in terms of losses (i.e., 400 people will die in the first program, where the second program has a 33% chance that no one…
Although grammar is usually considered the "uniquely human" aspect of language, and the capacity to use primitive symbols is thought to be common among primates, high-level cognition is nonetheless strongly impacted by the use of symbols. For example, symbols can help in putative inhibition tasks; labeling a stimulus-response relationship can result in increased proactive interference when the correct response changes; and providing infants with unique object labels allows them to demonstrate knowledge they wouldn't otherwise demonstrate for several months. One hypothesis about the role of…
Gyorgy Buzsaki, author of "Rhythms of the Brain," agreed to answer 10 questions posed by me and amnestic at GNXP. Covers computational modeling, 1/f noise, cortical homogeneity, and much more. A steeper forgetting curve among those with a college education? Imaging the neural representation of number. (Also at Neuromarketing.) Goal representation in hippocampus!?! Can anybody explain this one? PsychCentral covers recent reports that video games may be good for "mental well-being." Microsoft researcher presents on Brain Computer Interfaces. Progress on Brain Computer Interface technology…
Although even the youngest infants have some ability to remember the past, this ability increases in both its reliability and its "temporal extent" with age. Such differences could result from changes in any of memory's constituent processes, including encoding, consolidation, or retrieval. Although this week's posts have focused on the idea that source monitoring difficulties underlie the apparent loss of early memories (i.e., a difficulty in retrieval), Bauer's 2006 TICS review emphasizes emerging evidence that encoding and storage or consolidation are also to blame. Bauer has argued that…
The media is currently blowing up with reports that a 27-year-old woman who disappeared in the forests of Cambodia has now been found, 18-20 years later (reports vary). She was spotted on January 13th by a villager who saw a "jungle person, sneaking in to steal his rice," and was subsequentely identified as Rochom P'ngieng by a scar on her arm. Reports suggest that she does not speak the local language, although she does communicate with gestures: she pats her stomach to indicate she is hungry. Her father said that she initially resisted the wearing of clothes and use of chopsticks, and…
Yesterday I outlined a few reasons to think that we may not actually forget all of our earliest memories; instead, they may merely be mislabeled due to a failure of source monitoring. According to a 2002 article by Drummey and Newcombe, a similar problem may underlie childhood amnesia - the fragmentary nature of autobiographical memory prior to age 6. Failures of source monitoring are more frequent in patients with brain damage to the frontal cortex (and may be especially reliant on the right frontal lobe). Just like these frontal patients, preschool-aged children have a prefrontal cortex…
Freud famously suggested that infantile amnesia is an active suppression of early traumatic memories. However, a review of the modern cognitive literature suggests that at least in some ways, infantile amnesia may actually be a myth. Perhaps the most intuitive explanation of infantile amnesia is simply that the infant's brain is not sufficiently developed to support episodic memory. However, substantial evidence argues against this view. For example, the same factors that affect episodic memory in adults also affect infant memory, including age, retention interval, context change,…
Suppose that "memory task A" shows marked improvement at 5 months, but "memory task B" doesn't show marked improvement until 9 months. Before we can make inferences about the development of memory, we need to understand how tasks A and B differentially strain the developing cognitive system. Along these lines, Gross et al.'s 2002 Developmental Psychobiology article investigates the relationship of three different memory tasks in 6-month-old infants. The tasks are pretty representative of current behavioral work with human infants: 1) In the mobile conjugate reinforcement paradigm, infants…
Enjoy the holiday with some nice reading from Encephalon 14: Mixing Memory has posted the new issue.