Cognitive Science 170
Natural and Artificial Symbol-Using Systems
Name: _________________________
SHORT PAPER #3:
Question: (3-5 pages).
- Anatomical and physiological mapping experiments in the cortex of
non-human primates and other mammals have suggested some modifications
to a very old view of brain function that we described in class as the
"Cell Doctrine". The modern version of that idea is that sense
organs project to modality-specific cortical areas that eventually all
project to a central polymodal or amodal "association cortex" that is
the site of higher level functions.
First, describe the traditional view of a central amodal cortex for higher
level functions and then summarize data that has suggested changes
in the traditional view. How might these newer data be relevant to
understanding the human brain, particularly in light of the peculiar
linguistic abilities of humans?
Be sure to mention at least one bit of evidence from each of all
three of the following kinds of studies: neurobiological
(visual, somatosensory, auditory, motor areas in animals and humans),
neuropsychological (studies of function after brain damage) and the
behavioral/linguistic (psychology experiments on humans).
due Friday, March 12