Bucharest: Bucharest University Press (
2012)
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BIBTEX
Abstract
CONTENT
Introduction .................................................................................. 9
1. The unexpected: “Epistemologically Different Worlds” .......... 15
1.1 Introduction ........................................................................ 15
1.2 Definitions .......................................................................... 16
1.3 Propositions for its
.............................................................. 18
1.4 Propositions for Its
and being ............................................ 24
1.5 The hyperverse ................................................................... 30
2. A general view on cognitive neuroscience................................ 37
3. Optimism for localization and the “mind reading”................... 58
3.1 Bechtel’s optimism ............................................................. 58
3.2 Gallant’s laboratory work................................................... 67
3.3 Other optimistic works ....................................................... 75
4. Skepticism in cognitive neuroscience....................................... 81
4.1 Hardcastle’s skepticism ...................................................... 81
4.2 Uttal’s skepticism ............................................................... 88
5. Blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) of fMRI and local
field potentials (LFPs)............................................................. 107
6. The localization problem (segmentation vs. integration) ......... 126
7. The binding problem ................................................................ 138
7.1 Introduction ....................................................................... 138
7.2 The “Feature-Integration Theory” (FIT)............................. 146
7.3 The synchrony or temporal coding theory (temporal binding). 153
7.3.1 Oscillations – a general framework ....................... 153
7.3.2 More details about frequency bands, activated
neural areas and cognitive functions ........................ 160
8
7.3.3 Gamma range in visual cognition ............................. 168
7.3.4 Communication among neural areas through
synchronized oscillations.......................................... 177
7.3.5 The main critics for temporal coding hypothesis... 187
8. Perception and object recognition ........................................... 194
8.1 Perception and object recognition.................................... 194
8.2 A few words about other notions in cognitive
neuroscience .................................................................... 210
9. Space and the mind................................................................... 218
10. Crossmodal interactions ......................................................... 244
11. Holism in cognitive neuroscience........................................... 254
11.1 The parts-whole relationship ........................................... 254
11.2 Raichle’s default network............................................... 269
11.3 Conscious and unconscious mental states...................... 278
12. Fingelkurts’ approach or the status of cognitive
neuroscience........................................................................... 293
Conclusion: The status of cognitive neuroscience:
“No ontology landscape”..................................... 317