Cognitive Electrophysiology of Attention
- 类型:
- 英文原版
- ISBN:
- 9780123984517
- eISBN:
- 9780123984968
- 出版社:
- Academic Press
- 出版日期:
- 2013-10-23
- 页码:
- 304
- 装帧:
- 电子版
- 价格:
- EUR 71.95
- 购买渠道:
- Elsevier书店
- 中文标题:
- 注意力的认知电生理
- 作 者:
- George Mangun
- 中文简介:
-
《注意力的认知电生理》从神经科学的角度探讨了注意力和相关认知功能的基础机制。注意力是一项重要的认知能力,使人类能够在处理并依照相关信息行事的同时忽略分心的信息,集中注意力的能力是精神功能的核心。理解人类注意力的神经基础仍是神经科学家和心理学家的关键挑战,对于治疗多种神经学和心理学障碍中注意力缺陷的转化努力也很重要。在包含心理学家、神经学家、神经心理学家、精神病学家和神经病学家的多学科方法治疗模式中,我们发现大脑基本机制并形成改善精神健康的转化方法,而认知电生理学在这一切中处于核心地位。本卷修订版有领域内顶级研究者撰写,重点讨论了人体电生理记录,包括脑电图(EEG)和事件相关电位(ERP)方法,并且整合了功能性核磁共振(fMRI)的相关证据。《注意力的认知电生理学》阐明了人体中视觉、听觉、多感官整合、记忆和语意处理的注意力机制的特定模式。
- 英文简介:
-
Cognitive Electrophysiology of Attention explores the fundamental mechanisms of attention and related cognitive functions from cognitive neuroscience perspectives. Attention is an essential cognitive ability that enables humans to process and act upon relevant information while ignoring distracting information, and the capacity to focus attention is at the core of mental functioning. Understanding the neural bases of human attention remains a key challenge for neuroscientists and psychologists, and is essential for translational efforts to treat attentional deficits in a variety of neurological and psychiatric disorders. Cognitive electrophysiology is at the center of a multidisciplinary approach that involves the efforts of psychologists, neuroscientists, neuropsychologists, psychiatrists, and neurologists to identify basic brain mechanisms and develop translational approaches to improve mental health. This edited volume is authored by leading investigators in the field and discusses methods focused on electrophysiological recordings in humans, including electroencephalography (EEG) and event-related potential (ERP) methods, and also incorporates evidence from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Cognitive Electrophysiology of Attention illuminates specific models about attentional mechanisms in vision, audition, multisensory integration, memory, and semantic processing in humans.