define cognitive neuroscience
the study of the physiological basis of cognition
levels of analysis
the idea that a topic can be studied in many different ways, with each approach contributing its dimension to our understanding
levels of analysis when studying physiological cognition
we can study it at levels ranging from the whole brain to structures within the brain, to chemicals that create electrical signals within these structures.
action potential
nerve net
neuron doctrine
cell body
the metabolic center of the neuron that contains mechanisms to keep the cell alive
dendrites
receive signals from other neurons
axon
synapse
space between the end of an axon and the cell body or dendrite and the next axon
neural circuits
group of interconnected neurons that are responsible for neural processing
resting potential
nerve impulse
microelectrodes
2 points of reference for microelectrodes
neurotransmitters
principle of neural representation
states that everything a person experiences is based on representations in the person’s nervous system
neuron firing
feature detectors - Hubel and Wiesel
what do neurons in the visual cortex respond to
neurons in the visual cortex respond to oriented bars
what do neurons in the temporal lobe respond to
hierarchal processing
processing that occurs in progression from lower to higher areas of the brain
experience-dependent plasticity
sensory coding
refers to how neural firing represents various characteristics of the environment