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Conversations in the Cognitive Neurosciences

Part of the Conversations in the Cognitive Neurosciences series
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Conversations in the Cognitive Neurosciences is a brief, informative yet informal guide to recent developments in the cognitive neurosciences by the scientists who are in the thick of things. "Getting a fix on important questions and how to think about them from an experimental point of view is what scientists talk about, sometimes endlessly.

It is those conversations that thrill and motivate," observes Michael Gazzaniga.

Yet all too often these exciting interactions are lost to students, researchers, and others who are "doing" science.

Conversations in the Cognitive Neurosciences brings together a series of interviews with prominent individuals in neuroscience, linguistics, philosophy, and psychology that have appeared over the past few years in the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. The ten interviews are divided into five sections: basic neuroscience approaches to cognition (Floyd Bloom and Mark Raichle), attentional and perceptual processes (Michael I.

Posner and William T. Newsome), neural basis of memory (Randy Gallistel and Endel Tulving), language (Steven Pinker and Alfonso Caramazza), and imagery and consciousness (Stephen M.

Kosslyn and Daniel C. Dennett). A Bradford Book

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Product Details
MIT Press
026257117X / 9780262571173
Paperback / softback
153
31/10/1996
United States
English
202 pages
137 x 201 mm, 272 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More