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Towards a Theoretical Neuroscience: from Cell Chemistry to Cognition

  • Book
  • © 2013

Overview

  • Reviews of current knowledge in major areas of psychology, neuroanatomy, neurophysiology and neurochemistry
  • Review of theoretical constraints on brain architecture imposed by natural selection
  • Understanding of memory, attention and complex cognitive phenomena in terms of neuroanatomy, neurophysiology and neurochemistry
  • Additional Free Web lecture course based on this book available at www.understandinghighercognition.com.
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Part of the book series: Springer Series in Cognitive and Neural Systems (SSCNS, volume 8)

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Table of contents (12 chapters)

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About this book

The book explains how to understand cognition in terms of brain anatomy, physiology and chemistry, using an approach adapted from techniques for understanding complex electronic systems. These techniques create hierarchies of information process based descriptions on different levels of detail, where higher levels contain less information and can therefore describe complete cognitive phenomena, but are more approximate. The nature of the approximations are well understood, and more approximate higher level descriptions can therefore be mapped to more precise detailed descriptions of any part of a phenomenon as required. Cognitive phenomena, the anatomy and connectivity of major brain structures, neuron physiology, and cellular chemistry are reviewed. Various cognitive tasks are described in terms of information processes performed by different major anatomical structures. These higher level descriptions are selectively mapped to more detailed physiological and chemical levels.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Australian National University Research School of Computer Science, Canberra, Australia

    L Andrew Coward

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