Not exact matches
Cognitive neuroscientists have studied this distinction
with brain imaging techniques and the findings — unsurprisingly — tell us a lot about our increasingly polarised world today and the ways our brains process the distinction between us and «others».
In recent years, psychologists and
cognitive neuroscientists have revealed the distinct parts of our brain that allow us to interact, collaborate and communicate
with each other.
Cognitive neuroscientist Frederique Liegeois of University College London is using fMRI scans to compare the brain activity of members of the KE family who have a mutated copy of FOXP2
with those who have a normal version.
Faraneh Vargha - Khadem, a
cognitive neuroscientist at University College London who was not involved
with the work, also applauds the study but is not sure how relevant the findings are to speech in particular.
In The 5 Essentials: Using Your Inborn Resources to Create a Fulfilling Life (Penguin Group / Hudson Street Press, 2013),
cognitive neuroscientist Bob Deutsch,
with writer Lou Aronica, contends that we can overcome this impediment by developing certain innate abilities, such as curiosity and openness.
For this experiment Kapogiannis is working
with cognitive neuroscientist Jordan Grafman.
At this point, a genetic test for these variants won't be much help in the clinic, says Faraneh Vargha - Khadem, a developmental
cognitive neuroscientist at University College London who was not involved
with the work.
«It's really impressive to work
with children this young, who are not often looked at,» says Aniruddh Patel, a
cognitive neuroscientist at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, who was not involved
with the research.
Cognitive neuroscientist Giorgio Vallortigara of the University of Trento in Italy, who has studied performance of chicks on the seed - pecking test, says, «The idea of a link between lateralization strength and cognitive abilities has been around... for many years, but little comparative and experimental work has been done with animal
Cognitive neuroscientist Giorgio Vallortigara of the University of Trento in Italy, who has studied performance of chicks on the seed - pecking test, says, «The idea of a link between lateralization strength and
cognitive abilities has been around... for many years, but little comparative and experimental work has been done with animal
cognitive abilities has been around... for many years, but little comparative and experimental work has been done
with animals.»
Wanting to learn more about how the brain copes
with donor hands,
cognitive neuroscientist Angela Sirigu of the French National Research Agency in Lyon and colleagues looked at two right - handed men, one age 20 and the other 42, who recently had left and right hand transplants to replace hands amputated following work injuries 3 to 4 years ago.
The way to do so occurred to Olaf Blanke — a neurologist and
cognitive neuroscientist at the Brain - Mind Institute, part of the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in Switzerland — a decade ago while he worked
with an epilepsy patient, a 43 - year - old woman
with drug - resistant seizures who had to be treated
with surgery.
Luna, the developmental
cognitive neuroscientist, compares it to an artist who begins
with a block of granite and carves away any unneeded stone to create a sculpture.
The genes in BGEM were selected in part by groups of
neuroscientists with expertise in neurodevelopment, neurodegeneration, receptors and channels, and
cognitive neuroscience.
Teachers work
with a
cognitive neuroscientist and Flinders University staff who help translate the theory into effective classroom practice in mathematics.
According to the interview, «I worry that the superficial way we read during the day is affecting us when we have to read
with more in - depth processing,» said Maryanne Wolf, a Tufts University
cognitive neuroscientist and the author of Proust and the Squid: The Story and Science of the Reading Brain.
Recent projects include a parafictional video collaboration
with the artist Lisa Young, «Free Fall: The Life and Times of Bud «Crosshairs» MacGinitie,» and an ongoing fMRI - based experiment
with neuroscientist Franco Pestilli on the
cognitive representation of touch in the visual cortex.