journal
Journals Wiley Interdisciplinary Review...

Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science

https://read.qxmd.com/read/37032464/causal-inference-in-cognitive-neuroscience
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David Danks, Isaac Davis
Causal inference is a key step in many research endeavors in cognitive science and neuroscience, and particularly cognitive neuroscience. Statistical knowledge is sufficient for prediction and diagnosis, but causal knowledge is required for action and intervention. Most statistics courses and textbooks emphasize the difficulty of causal inference, focusing on the maxim that "correlation does not mean causation": there can be multiple causal possibilities, often many of them, consistent with given observed statistics...
April 9, 2023: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37012615/conscious-awareness-and-memory-systems-in-the-brain
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Deborah E Hannula, Greta N Minor, Dana Slabbekoorn
The term "memory" typically refers to conscious retrieval of events and experiences from our past, but experience can also change our behaviour without corresponding awareness of the learning process or the associated outcome. Based primarily on early neuropsychological work, theoretical perspectives have distinguished between conscious memory, said to depend critically on structures in the medial temporal lobe (MTL), and a collection of performance-based memories that do not. The most influential of these memory systems perspectives, the declarative memory theory, continues to be a mainstay of scientific work today despite mounting evidence suggesting that contributions of MTL structures go beyond the kinds or types of memory that can be explicitly reported...
April 3, 2023: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36998200/use-of-augmentative-interspecies-communication-devices-in-animal-language-studies-a-review
#23
REVIEW
Gabriella E Smith, Amalia P M Bastos, Ashley Evenson, Leo Trottier, Federico Rossano
Countless discussions have been generated by the animal language studies, specifically those utilizing mechanical interfaces, termed here Augmentative Interspecies Communication (AIC) devices (e.g., lexigrams; magnetic chips; keyboards). Overall, three concerns dominate the field: (1) claims that AIC device using animals manifest linguistic skills remain nebulous, and simpler alternative mechanisms have been proposed (e.g., associative learning); (2) such methodology may be unsuitable as some theorize AIC device interfaces are not sufficiently ecologically relevant to foster meaningful use; (3) data may be considered dubious due to potential cueing from experimenters and lack of systematicity in reporting training and performance...
March 30, 2023: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36772875/what-about-space-is-important-for-episodic-memory
#24
REVIEW
Carina L Fan, H Moriah Sokolowski, R Shayna Rosenbaum, Brian Levine
Early cognitive neuroscientific research revealed that the hippocampus is crucial for spatial navigation in rodents, and for autobiographical episodic memory in humans. Researchers quickly linked these streams to propose that the human hippocampus supports memory through its role in representing space, and research on the link between spatial cognition and episodic memory in humans has proliferated over the past several decades. Different researchers apply the term "spatial" in a variety of contexts, however, and it remains unclear what aspect of space may be critical to memory...
February 11, 2023: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36746387/the-update-of-self-identity-importance-of-assessing-autobiographical-memory-in-major-depressive-disorder
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samuel Bulteau, Roman Malo, Zoé Holland, Andrew Laurin, Anne Sauvaget
Major depressive disorder is a leading global cause of disability. There is a growing interest for memory in mood disorders since it might constitute an original tool for prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. MDD is associated with impaired autobiographical memory characterized by a tendency to overgeneral memory, rather than vivid episodic self-defining memory, which is mandatory for problem-solving and projection in the future. This memory bias is maintained by three mechanisms: ruminations, avoidance, and impaired executive control...
February 6, 2023: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36658758/understanding-preferences-in-infancy
#26
REVIEW
Youjung Choi, Yuyan Luo
A preference is defined as a dispositional state that helps explain why a person chooses one option over another. Preference understanding is a significant part of interpreting and predicting others' behavior, which can also help to guide social encounters, for instance, to initiate interactions and even form relationships based on shared preferences. Cognitive developmental research in the past several decades has revealed that infants have relatively sophisticated understandings about others' preferences, as part of investigations into how young children make sense of others' behavior in terms of mental states such as intentions, dispositions including preferences, and epistemic states...
January 19, 2023: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36635944/collective-memory-collaborative-recall-synchronizes-what-and-how-people-remember
#27
REVIEW
Garrett D Greeley, Suparna Rajaram
Memory researchers and theorists have long advanced the idea that the manner in which information is retrieved is critical. The way retrieval unfolds provides critical insights into how memories are organized and accessed-an important aspect of memory missed by focusing only on quantity. Cognitive studies of memory in social contexts, deploying the collaborative memory paradigm, have also noted the importance of such retrieval organization. Such memory studies often focus on how relative to "groups" that never collaborated, former members of collaborating groups recall more of the same material (collective memory) and they do so in a more synchronized fashion (collective retrieval organization)...
January 12, 2023: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37440219/moving-beyond-spoon-tasks-when-do-children-autocue-their-episodic-future-thought
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cristina M Atance, Gladys Ayson, Gema Martin-Ordas
Much developmental (and comparative) research has used Tulving's Spoon test (i.e., whether an individual will select an item needed to solve a future problem) as the basis for designing tasks to measure episodic future thinking, defined as the capacity to mentally pre-experience the future. There is, however, intense debate about whether these tasks successfully do so. Most notably, it has been argued that children may pass (i.e., select an item with future utility) by drawing on non-episodic, associative processes, rather than on the capacity to represent the future, per se...
2023: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37403661/hybrid-life-integrating-biological-artificial-and-cognitive-systems
#29
REVIEW
Manuel Baltieri, Hiroyuki Iizuka, Olaf Witkowski, Lana Sinapayen, Keisuke Suzuki
Artificial life is a research field studying what processes and properties define life, based on a multidisciplinary approach spanning the physical, natural, and computational sciences. Artificial life aims to foster a comprehensive study of life beyond "life as we know it" and toward "life as it could be," with theoretical, synthetic, and empirical models of the fundamental properties of living systems. While still a relatively young field, artificial life has flourished as an environment for researchers with different backgrounds, welcoming ideas, and contributions from a wide range of subjects...
2023: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36636942/what-is-attention
#30
Wayne Wu, Anna Fischer
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 2023: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36574728/tactile-sensory-processing-as-a-precursor-of-executive-attention-toward-early-detection-of-attention-impairments-and-neurodevelopmental-disorders
#31
REVIEW
Marie Anquetil, Nadège Roche-Labarbe, Sandrine Rossi
Recent studies in developmental neuroscience tend to show the existence of neural attention networks from birth. Their construction is based on the first sensory experiences that allow us to learn the patterns of the world surrounding us and preserve our limited attentional resources. Touch is the first sensory modality to develop, although it is still little studied in developmental psychology in contrast to distal modalities such as audition or vision. Atypical tactile sensory processing at an early age could predict later attention dysfunction, both of them being part of the symptomatology of neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD)...
December 27, 2022: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36480467/constructions-of-speech-and-thought-representation
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lieven Vandelanotte
A lot of what humans communicate about concerns cognitive contents of various kinds produced by others or themselves: speech, thought, writing, emotional states, attitudes, hopes, and the like. Languages have developed specialized ways to structure the representation of such contents, especially in various dedicated forms of speech and thought representation. Represented content can also include embodied behavior, such as gesture, whether in cospeech gesture or in sign language. What is represented need not actually have been previously produced: represented contents can be future, hypothetical or nonexistent, and forms of so-called fictive interaction can be used in which the model of face-to-face interaction is used to talk about a variety of other meaning types...
December 8, 2022: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36463576/a-hobgoblin-of-large-minds-troubles-with-consistency-in-belief
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joseph Sommer, Julien Musolino, Pernille Hemmer
Beliefs are, in many ways, central to psychology and, in turn, consistency is central to belief. Theories in philosophy and psychology assume that beliefs must be consistent with each other for people to be rational. That people fail to hold fully consistent beliefs has, therefore, been the subject of much theorizing, with numerous mechanisms proposed to explain how inconsistency is possible. Despite the widespread assumption of consistency as a default, achieving a consistent set of beliefs is computationally intractable...
December 4, 2022: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36458642/the-phenomenology-of-autobiographical-retrieval
#34
REVIEW
Chris J A Moulin, Fabien Carreras, Krystian Barzykowski
In this article we review the literature on the phenomenology of retrieval from the personal past, and propose a framework for understanding how epistemic feelings and metacognitive reflections guide the retrieval of representations of past events in the Self Memory System. Our focus is on an overlooked aspect of autobiographical memory, the phenomenology of the retrieval process, as opposed to the products of retrieval themselves. As we argue in the present paper, this is not some magical collection of phenomena, but centers on the feeling of familiarity derived from retrieval fluency during the process of retrieval...
December 2, 2022: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36437474/applying-transcranial-magnetic-stimulation-to-rehabilitation-of-poststroke-lower-extremity-function-and-an-improvement-individual-target-tms
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shun Qi, Meng Tian, Yang Rao, Chuanzhu Sun, Xiang Li, Jin Qiao, Zi-Gang Huang
Stroke is the leading cause of disability globally in need of novel and effective methods of rehabilitation. Intermittent theta burst stimulation (iTBS) has been adopted as a Level B recommendation for lower limb spasticity in guidelines on the therapeutic use of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS). Nonetheless, the methodological differences and deficits of existing work bring about heterogenous results and therefore limit the universal clinical use of rTMS in lower extremity (LE) rehabilitation...
November 27, 2022: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36428237/collective-memory-and-autobiographical-memory-perspectives-from-the-humanities-and-cognitive-sciences
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lucrèce Heux, Clare Rathbone, Sarah Gensburger, Rebecca Clifford, Céline Souchay
The current overview provides an interdisciplinary synthesis of autobiographical and collective memory studies, focusing on history and cognitive psychology, to help other scholars bridge the disciplinary gap. We describe the various interpretative frameworks used to build theoretical knowledge on how autobiographical memory and collective memory are intertwined. We expose how research exploring self, social and directive functions of autobiographical memory echoes three main functions that can be identified for collective memory, that is, social identity, social schemata, and means for actions, or a political decision tool of research in these fields...
November 25, 2022: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36377962/children-s-multimodal-language-development-from-an-interactional-usage-based-and-cognitive-perspective
#37
REVIEW
Aliyah Morgenstern
Through daily exposure to the surrounding input structured in conversations, children's language gradually develops into rich linguistic constructions that contain multiple cross-modal elements subtly used together for rich communicative functions. Children demonstrate their skills to resort to multiple semiotic resources in their daily interactions and expertly use them according to their expressive needs and communicative intents. Usage-based (Tomasello, 2003) and cognitive linguistics (Langacker, 1988) as well as construction grammar (Goldberg, 2006) have enriched our comprehension of the processes at work...
November 15, 2022: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36093634/animal-models-for-epileptic-foci-localization-seizure-detection-and-prediction-by-electrical-impedance-tomography
#38
REVIEW
Rong Wang, Wenjing Zhu, Guohua Liang, Jiaming Xu, Jie Guo, Lei Wang
Surgical resection of lesions and closed-loop suppression are the two main treatment options for patients with refractory epilepsy whose symptoms cannot be managed with medicines. Unfortunately, failures in foci localization and seizure prediction are constraining these treatments. Electrical impedance tomography (EIT), sensitive to impedance changes caused by blood flow or cell swelling, is a potential new way to locate epileptic foci and predict seizures. Animal validation is a necessary research process before EIT can be used in clinical practice, but it is unclear which among the many animal epilepsy models is most suited to this task...
November 2022: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36017792/thinking-about-thinking-about-thinking-%C3%A2-feeling-a-model-for-metacognitive-and-meta-affective-processes-in-task-engagement
#39
REVIEW
Ayanna K Thomas, Alia N Wulff, Dominique Landinez, John B Bulevich
Metacognition, or thinking about thinking, is a phenomenon that has received much attention across the numerous fields of Psychological Science. The overarching goal has centered on understanding how humans monitor their internal mental processes and exert control over these processes. However, discipline-focused approaches with little generalized discussion across the field have yielded an incomplete understanding of the construct of metacognition. Consider, for example, the cognitive approach: from this perspective, researchers have developed predictive models and useful frameworks...
November 2022: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36317275/attention-as-a-multi-level-system-of-weights-and-balances
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
William Narhi-Martinez, Blaire Dube, Julie D Golomb
This opinion piece is part of a collection on the topic: "What is attention?" Despite the word's place in the common vernacular, a satisfying definition for "attention" remains elusive. Part of the challenge is there exist many different types of attention, which may or may not share common mechanisms. Here we review this literature and offer an intuitive definition that draws from aspects of prior theories and models of attention but is broad enough to recognize the various types of attention and modalities it acts upon: attention as a multi-level system of weights and balances...
October 31, 2022: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews. Cognitive Science
journal
journal
42864
2
3
Fetch more papers »
Fetching more papers... Fetching...
Remove bar
Read by QxMD icon Read
×

Save your favorite articles in one place with a free QxMD account.

×

Search Tips

Use Boolean operators: AND/OR

diabetic AND foot
diabetes OR diabetic

Exclude a word using the 'minus' sign

Virchow -triad

Use Parentheses

water AND (cup OR glass)

Add an asterisk (*) at end of a word to include word stems

Neuro* will search for Neurology, Neuroscientist, Neurological, and so on

Use quotes to search for an exact phrase

"primary prevention of cancer"
(heart or cardiac or cardio*) AND arrest -"American Heart Association"

We want to hear from doctors like you!

Take a second to answer a survey question.