There are two distinct views about the functions of our brains and their origins. The standard view, taught in most neuroscience texts, has incoming messages about the world sent to the cerebral cortex, with the cortex then producing an appropriate motor output. The interactive view, largely expressed by philosophers and psychologists, stresses the continuous sensorimotor interactions of the brain with the world. The Brain as a Tool focuses on thalamo-cortical interactions on the basis of the interactive view, exploring the phylogenetically new transthalamic corticocortical pathways of mammals that link a hierarchy of cortical areas to each other and back to the phylogenetically older motor centres for control of action. The book demonstrates how messages in these pathways produce an anticipation of our own actions and perceptions. In relating neural events to conscious processing and our sense of self, Guillery summarizes important evidence which links neuroscience with psychology and philosophy.This book is essential reading for neuroscientists, cognitive psychologists and philosophers. Supplemented with a helpful glossary of neural terms and numerous illustrations of the brain, it is also an important resource for graduate and postdoctoral students interested in the neural bases of a sense of self and of cognitive functions.
I HOW DO WE RELATE TO THE WORLD?; The role of the brain; The pathways for perception; The pathways for action; The subcortical motor centres; II MY ROUTE TO THE THALAMIC GATE; Starting to study the brain; The mamillothalamic pathways: My first encounter with the thalamus; Comparative studies of the hypothalamus that led to studies of thalamic synapses; III ARRIVING AT THE THALAMIC GATE; Defining the functional components of the thalamic gate; Thalamic higher order driver inputs as sensorimotor links; The hierarchy of cortical monitors; IV HIGHER CORTICAL FUNCTIONS; Relating the neural connections to actions and perceptions; Interacting with the world; The role of the thalamocortical hierarchy; The neural origins of a sense of self with a brief note on free will;
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