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LEADER: 13787cam 2201009Ia 4500
001 ocm53482700
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005 20190704001913.0
008 031121s2003 maua ob 001 0 eng d
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020 $a9780262267502$q(electronic bk.)
020 $a0262267500$q(electronic bk.)
020 $a0585478791$q(electronic bk.)
020 $a9780585478791$q(electronic bk.)
020 $a0262024969
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020 $a0262523027$q(pbk.)
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037 $a2834$bMIT Press
037 $a9780262267502$bMIT Press
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060 4 $a2003 H-784
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245 00 $aEssential sources in the scientific study of consciousness /$cedited by Bernard J. Baars, William P. Banks, and James B. Newman.
260 $aCambridge, Mass. :$bMIT Press,$c℗♭2003.
264 4 $c℗♭2003
300 $a1 online resource (xiii, 1192 pages) :$billustrations
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $acomputer$bc$2rdamedia
338 $aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier
500 $a"A Bradford book."
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
588 0 $aPrint version record.
505 00 $tPreface --$tSources --$g1.$tIntroduction: Treating Consciousness as a Variable: The Fading Taboo /$rBernard J. Baars --$gI.$tOverview --$g2.$tConsciousness: Respectable, Useful, and Probably Necessary /$rGeorge Mandler --$g3.$tConsciousness and Neuroscience /$rFrancis Crick and Christof Koch --$gII.$tConsciousness in Vision --$g4.$tFeature Binding, Attention and Object Perception /$rAnne Treisman --$g5.$tEffects of Sleep and Arousal on the Processing of Visual Information in the Cat /$rMargaret S. Livingstone and David H. Hubel --$g6.$tThe Role of Temporal Cortical Areas in Perceptual Organization /$rD.L. Sheinberg and N.K. Logothetis --$g7.$tInvestigating Neural Correlates of Conscious Perception by Frequency-Tagged Neuromagnetic Responses /$rGuilio Tononi, Ramesh Srinivasan, D. Patrick Russell, and Gerald M. Edelman --$g8.$tTemporal Binding, Binocular Rivalry, and Consciousness /$rAndreas K. Engel, Pascal Fries, Pieter R. Roelfsema, Peter Konig, Michael Brecht, and Wolf Singer --$g9.$tDisconnected Awareness for Detecting, Processing, and Remembering in Neurological Patients /$rL. Weiskrantz --$g10.$tBlindsight in Monkeys /$rAlan Cowey and Petra Stoerig --$g11.$tHemisphere Deconnection and Unity in Conscious Awareness /$rR.W. Sperry --$g12.$tSeparate Visual Pathways for Perception and Action /$rM.A. Goodale and A.D. Milner --$g13.$tConsciousness and Isomorphism: Can the Color Spectrum Really Be Inverted? /$rStephen E. Palmer --$gIII.$tAttention: Selecting One Conscious Stream among Many --$g14.$tStrategies and Models of Selective Attention /$rAnne M. Treisman --$g15.$tInattentional Blindess versus Inattentional Amnesia for Fixated but Ignored Words /$rGeraint Rees, Charlotte Russell, Christopher D. Frith, and Jon Driver --$g16.$tAspects of a Theory of Comprehension, Memory, and Attention /$rDonald G. MacKay --$g17.$tTo See or Not to See: The Need for Attention to Perceive Changes in Scenes /$rRonald A. Rensink, J. Kevin O'Regan, and James J. Clark --$g18.$tFunction of the Thalamic Recticular Complex: The Searchlight Hypothesis /$rFrancis Crick --$g19.$tSelective Attention Gates Visual Processing in the Extrastriate Cortex /$rJeffrey Moran and Robert Desimone --$g20.$tAttention: The Mechanisms of Consciousness /$rMichael I. Posner --$g21.$tAttention, Awareness, and the Triangular Circuit /$rDavid LaBerge --$gIV.$tImmediate Memory: The Fleeting Conscious Present --$g22.$tThe Information Available in Brief Visual Presentations /$rGeorge Sperling --$g23.$tThe Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing Information /$rGeorge A. Miller --$g24.$tThe Control of Short-Term Memory /$rRichard C. Atkinson and Richard M. Shiffrin --$g25.$tVerbal and Visual Subsystems of Working Memory /$rAlan D. Baddeley --$g26.$tThe Prefrontal Landscape: Implications of Functional Architecture for Understanding Human Mentation and the Central Excecutive /$rP.S. Goldman-Rakic --$g27.$tStorage and Executive Processes in the Frontal Lobes /$rEdward E. Smith and John Jonides --$g28.$tConsciousness and Cognition May Be Mediated by Multiple Independent Coherent Ensembles /$rE. Roy John, Paul Easton, and Robert Isenhart --$gV.$tInternal Sources: Visual Images and Inner Speech --$g29.$tAspects of a Cognitive Neuroscience of Mental Imagery /$rS.M. Kosslyn --$g30.$tThe Neural Basis of Mental Imagery /$rMartha J. Farah --$g31.$tExperimental Studies of Ongoing Conscious Experience /$rJerome L. Singer --$g32.$tVerbal Reports on Thinking /$rK. Anders Ericcson and Herbert A. Simon --$gVI.$tBelow the Threshold of Sensory Consciousness --$g33.$tDistinguishing Conscious from Unconscious Perceptual Processes /$rJim Cheesman and Philip M. Merikle --$g34.$tThe Psychological Unconscious: A Necessary Assumption for All Psychological Theory? /$rHoward Shevrin and Scott Dickman --$g35.$tBrain Stimulation in the Study of Neuronal Functions for Conscious Sensory Experiences /$rB. Libet --$gVII.$tConsciousness and Memory --$g36./$tMemory and Consciousness /$rEndel Tulving --$g37.$tConscious Recollection and the Human Hippocampal Formation: Evidence from Positron Emission Tomography /$rDaniel L. Schachter, Nathaniel M. Alpert, Cary R. Savage, Scott L. Rauch, and Marilyn S. Albert --$g38.$tImplicit Learning and Tacit Knowledge /$rArthur S. Reber --$g39.$tAttention, Automatism, and Consciousness /$rRichard M. Shiffrin --$g40.$tWhen Practice Makes Imperfect: Debilitating Effects of Overlearning /$rEllen J. Langer and Lois G. Imber --$g41.$tThe Neural Correlates of Consciousness: An Analysis of Cognitive Skill Learning /$rMarcus E. Raichle --$g42.$tAvailability: A Heuristic for Judging Frequency and Probability /$rAmos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman --$g43.$tExperiences of Remembering, Knowing, and Guessing /$rJohn M. Gardiner, Cristina Ramponi, and Alan Richardson-Klavehn --$g44.$tMeasuring Recollection: Strategic versus Automatic Influences of Associative Context /$rLarry L. Jacoby --$gVIII.$tUnconcious and "Fringe" Processes --$g45.$tThe Conscious "Fringe": Bringing William James up to Date /$rBruce Mangan --$g46.$tThe Fundamental Role of Context: Unconscious Shaping of Conscious Information /$rBernard J. Baars --$g47.$tThe Cognitive Unconscious /$rJohn F. Kihlstrom --$g48.$tPain and Dissociation in the Cold Pressor Test: A Study of Hypnotic Analgesia with "Hidden Reports" through Automatic Key Pressing and Automatic Talking /$rErnest R. Hilgard, Arlene H. Morgan, and Hugh Macdonald --$g49.$tAnosognosia in Parietal Lobe Syndrome /$rV.S. Ramachandran --$g50.$tImplications for Psychiatry of Left and Right Cerebral Specialization: A Neurophysiological Context for Unconscious Processes /$rDavid Galin --$gIX.$tConciousness as a State: Waking, Deep Sleep, Coma, Anesthesia, and Dreaming --$g51.$tBrain Stem Reticular Formation and Activation of the EEG /$rG. Moruzzi and H.W. Magoun --$g52.$tAnatomical and Physiological Substrates of Arousal /$rArnold B. Scheibel --$g53.$tOn the Neurophysiology of Consciousness: An Overview /$rJoseph E. Bogen --$g54.$tAn Information Processing Theory of Anaesthesia /$rH. Flohr --$g55.$tToward a Unified Theory of Narcosis: Brain Imaging Evidence for a Thalamocortical Switch as the Neurophysiologic Basis of Anesthetic-Induced Unconsciousness /$rM.T. Alkire, R.J. Haier, and J.H. Fallon --$g56.$tThe Relation of Eye Movements during Sleep to Dream Activity: An Objective Method for the Study of Dreaming /$rWilliam Dement and Nathaniel Kleitman --$g57.$tThe Brain as a Dream State Generator: An Activation-Synthesis Hypothesis of the Dream Process /$rJ. Allan Hobson and Robert W. McCarley --$g58.$tLucid Dreaming Verified by Volitional Communication during REM Sleep /$rStephen P. LaBerge, Lynn E. Nagel, William C. Dement, and Vincent P. Zarcone, Jr. --$g59.$tCommentary: Of Dreaming and Wakefulness /$rR.R. Llinas and D. Pare --$gX.$tTheory --$g60.$tConsciousness and Complexity /$rGiulio Tononi and Gerald M. Edelman --$g61.$tBrain Learning, Attention, and Consciousness /$rStephen Grossberg --$g62.$tA Global Competitive Network for Attention /$rJ.G. Taylor and F.N. Alavi --$g63.$tTime-Locked Multiregional Retroactivation: A Systems-Level Proposal for the Neural Substrates of Recall and Recognition /$rAntonio R. Damasio --$g64.$tVisual Feature Integration and the Temporal Correlation Hypothesis /$rWolf Singer and Charles M. Gray --$g65.$tMetaphors of Consciousness and Attention in the Brain /$rBernard J. Baars --$g66.$tHow Does a Serial, Integrated, and Very Limited Stream of Consciousness Emerge from a Nervous System That Is Mostly Unconscious, Distributed, Parallel, and of Enormous Capacity? /$rBernard J. Baars --$g67.$tA Neural Global Workspace Model for Conscious Attention /$rJames Newman, Bernard J. Baars, and Sung-Bae Cho --$g68.$tA Software Agent Model of Consciousness /$rStan Franklin and Art Graesser --$tIndex.
546 $aEnglish.
520 $aConsciousness is at the very core of the human condition. Yet only in recent decades has it become a major focus in the brain and behavioral sciences. Scientists now know that consciousness involves many levels of brain functioning, from brainstem to cortex. The almost seventy articles in this book reflect the breadth and depth of this burgeoning field. The many topics covered include consciousness in vision and inner speech, immediate memory and attention, waking, dreaming, coma, the effects of brain damage, fringe consciousness, hypnosis, and dissociation. Underlying all the selections are the questions, What difference does consciousness make? What are its properties? What role does it play in the nervous system? How do conscious brain functions differ from unconscious ones? The focus of the book is on scientific evidence and theory. The editors have also chosen introductory articles by leading scientists to allow a wide variety of new readers to gain insight into the field.
650 0 $aConsciousness$xPhysiological aspects.
650 0 $aCognitive neuroscience.
650 6 $aConscience$xAspect physiologique.
650 6 $aNeurosciences cognitives.
650 7 $aSCIENCE$xCognitive Science.$2bisacsh
650 7 $aPSYCHOLOGY$xCognitive Psychology.$2bisacsh
650 7 $aCognitive neuroscience.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00866540
650 7 $aConsciousness$xPhysiological aspects.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00875444
650 17 $aBewustzijn.$2gtt
650 17 $aNeurowetenschappen.$2gtt
650 17 $aCognitie.$2gtt
650 12 $aConsciousness$xphysiology.
650 22 $aCognitive Science.
650 22 $aNeuropsychology.
653 $aNEUROSCIENCE/General
653 $aCOGNITIVE SCIENCES/General
655 4 $aElectronic books.
700 1 $aBaars, Bernard J.
700 1 $aBanks, William P.
700 1 $aNewman, James B.
776 08 $iPrint version:$tEssential sources in the scientific study of consciousness.$dCambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ℗♭2003$z0262024969$z0262523027$w(DLC) 2002029376$w(OCoLC)50155496
830 0 $aBradford book.
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