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Cognition and Emotion in the Brain

Selected Topics of the International Symposium on Limbic and Association Cortical Systems, Toyama, Japan 7-12 October 2002, ICS 1250

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Description
This volume contains the papers presented at the International Symposium on Limbic and Association Cortical Systems held in Japan between 7 and 12 October 2002. One of the goals of neuroscience is to understand the neural mechanisms of the human mind. Cognition and emotion are key factors to approach the problem of the mind; the limbic system and association cortices are crucial brain areas implicated in these mental processes. It is intended to fulfill the need for a broad compendium of the most recent empirical and theoretical advances in the field of cognition and emotion, especially focusing on the roles of the limbic and association cortical systems.
Product Details
47744
9780444512444
9780444512444

Data sheet

Publication date
2003
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
608
Weight (g)
1252
  • Preface.

    Part I. Association cortex: perception, recognition, and memory.

    Somatosensory association cortices (Y. Iwamura). Representation of 3D world in art and in the brain (H. Sakata, K.-I. Tsutsui, M. Taira). Processing of what and where in auditory association cortex (J.P. Rauschecker, B. Tian). Surface representation in the monkey primary viusal cortex (V1) (H. Komatsu, M. Kinoshita). Action selection based on numerical monitoring of self-action (K. Shima et al.). On the organization of face memory (S. Eifuku et al.). One approach to Understanding the Function of the Frontal Pole (K. Kubota). What information is represented by prefrontal neuronal activity? (S. Funahashi, K. Takeda). Wisconsin Card Sorting Test with Macaque monkeys (F.A. Mansouri, K. Tanaka).

    Part II. Limbic system: memory and behaviour.

    Structural organization of the efferent channels or the subiculum (N. Ishizuka). Organization of cortico-hippocampal networks in rats related to learning and memory (M.P. Witter). Synaptic plasticity in entorhinal cortex (M.W. Jung, S.H. Yun, M.Y. Cheong). Single cell contributions to network activity in the hippocampus (D.A. Henze, G. Buzsáki). Places and flavours: one-trial paired associate learning as a model of episodic-like memory in the rat (R.G.M. Morris, M. Day). Dissociating space to understand hippocampal function (A.A. Fenton, J. Bures). The role of the hippocampal complex in long-term episodic memory (L. Nadel et al.). The hippocampus, episodic memory, declarative memory, spatial memory - where does it all come together? (H. Eichenbaum). The medial temporal lobe and declarative memory (P.J. Bayley, L.R. Squire). Reference frames and cognitive strategies during navigation: is the left hippocampal formation involved in the sequential aspects of route memory? (S. Lambrey et al.). Spatial and behavioral correlates in nucleus accumbens neurons in zones receiving hippocampal or prefrontal cortical inputs (S.I. Wiener et al.).

    Part III. Limbic system: emotion and behavioral manifestation.

    Role of the monkey amygdala in social cognition (H. Nishijo et al.). Dopamine neurons encode teaching signals for learning reward-based decision strategy (T. Satoh et al.). Motivational modulation of taste. (R. Norgren). Integrative function of the amygdala in emotional memory storage (C. Tomaz, J.E. Frank, C. Conde). The contribution of the amygdala, nucleus accumbens, and prefrontal cortex to emotion and motivated behaviour (R.N. Cardinal et al.). Representation of cognitive and motivational context in the primate prefrontal cortex (M. Watanabe). Transmodal coding for reward prediction in the audiovisual thalamus (Y. Komura et al.). Cognitive function of the brainstem cholinergic system (Y. Kobayashi, Y. Inoue, T. Isa).

    Part IV. Integration and its clinical implication in humans.

    Consciousness and the thalamo-cortical loop (R. R. Llinás). The face and communication (M. Kawamura). A novel test for the investigation of prosopagnosia (C. Nagai, M. Iwata). Pathogenesis of schizophrenia: temporo-frontal two-step hypothesis (M. Kurachi et al.). Visual grouping and the the right-hemisphere interpreter P.M. Corballis

    Part V. Molecular and genetic approaches.

    Role of IP3 receptor in neural plasticity (K. Mikoshiba). Timing determines the neural substrates for eyeblink conditioning (M. Mishina). Role of synaptic integration of dopaminergic and cholinergic transmissions in basal ganglia function (S. Nakanishi et al.). Dopamine D2 receptor-knockout changed accumbens neural response to prediction of reward associated with place in mice (A.H. Tran et al.). Mesocorticolimbic dopamine: a neurochemical link between motivation and memory (A. G. Phillips).

    Part VI. Computation and theoretical models.

    Design of a brain computer using the novel principles of output-driven operation and memory-based architecure (G. Matsumoto, H. Tsujino). Vision, emotion and memory: from neurophysiology to computation (E. T. Rolls). Hierarchical MOSAIC for movement generation (M. Haruno, D.M. Wolpert, M. Kawato).

    Author index.

    Keyword index.
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