Cognitive Processes and Spatial Orientation in Animal and Man | Volume II Neurophysiology and Developmental Aspects | ISBN 9789400935334

Cognitive Processes and Spatial Orientation in Animal and Man

Volume II Neurophysiology and Developmental Aspects

herausgegeben von P. Ellen und C. Thinus-Blanc
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonP. Ellen
Herausgegeben vonC. Thinus-Blanc
Buchcover Cognitive Processes and Spatial Orientation in Animal and Man  | EAN 9789400935334 | ISBN 94-009-3533-1 | ISBN 978-94-009-3533-4

Cognitive Processes and Spatial Orientation in Animal and Man

Volume II Neurophysiology and Developmental Aspects

herausgegeben von P. Ellen und C. Thinus-Blanc
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonP. Ellen
Herausgegeben vonC. Thinus-Blanc

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  • Section I. Basic and clinical findings..
  • Behaviorally dependent neuronal gating in the hippocampus.
  • Temporally constant and temporally changing spatial memory : single unit correlates in the hippocampus.
  • The vestibular navigation hypothesis : a progress report.
  • Coordinate representations underlying arm movements in three-dimensional space.
  • Cognitive versus sensorimotor encoding of spatial information.
  • Spatial cognition in man; The evidence from cerebral lesions.
  • Mapping operations, spatial memory and cholinergic mechanisms.
  • Effects of dentate granule cell depletion in rats : failure to recall more than one event at the same place.
  • The septal lesioned rat forever here.
  • Basal ganglia, instrumental and spatial learning.
  • Reaching in the extrapersonal space or how to catch a moving object.
  • Superior colliculus, hippocampus and spatial behaviour.
  • Changes in neuronal activity of motor cortical areas associated with the coding of spatial parameters of the movement : preliminary results.
  • Cerebral lesions and internal spatial representations.
  • The encoding and recall of spatial location after right hippocampal lesions in man.
  • A case of dissociation in topographical disorders : the selective breakdown of vector-map representation.
  • Section II. Development of spatial knowledge..
  • Early development of spatial orientation in humans.
  • Children’s understanding of maps.
  • Space, organism and objects, a Piagetian approach.
  • Human spatial reference systems.
  • Detour ability in infants and toddlers.
  • Developmental and experiential aspects of children’s spatial problem solving.
  • The relation between locomotor experience and spatial knowledge in infancy.
  • Cognitive influences on the acquisition of route knowledge in children and adults.
  • Cognitive and motor representations ofspace and their use in human visually-guided locomotion.
  • Conclusion.
  • A sense of where you are : functions of the spatial module.
  • Authors Index.