Neuroimaging.Randy L. Buckner &Steven E. Petersen -1998 - In George Graham & William Bechtel,A Companion to Cognitive Science. Blackwell. pp. 413–424.detailsA growing number of scientists have become interested in the relation between cognitive processes and their biological basis. This growth in interest has led to the creation of a subfield within psychology called cognitive neuroscience, which has now spawned its own scientific journal, a conference, and several graduate programs around the United States. One reason for recent enthusiasm is the development of several methods that allow researchers to observe brain activity in healthy, awake subjects while they perform cognitive tasks. These (...) methods, which are referred to as neuroimaging techniques, provide a unique window into the function of the human brain. (shrink)
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Prospection and the brain.Randy L. Buckner -2007 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 30 (3):318-319.detailsSuddendorf & Corballis (S&C) propose that the capacity to flexibly forsee the future was a critical step in human evolution and is accomplished by a set of component processes that can be likened to a theater production. Understanding the brain-bases of these functions may help to clarify the hypothesized component processes, inform us of how and when they are used adaptively, and also provide empirical ways of exploring to what degree these abilities exist and are implemented similarly (or differently) across (...) species. (shrink)