In neurophysiology, the emphasis has been on single-unit studies for a quarter century, since the sensory work by Lettwin and coworkers and by Hubel and Wiesel, the cen tral work by Mountcastle, the motor work by the late Evarts, and so on. In recent years, however, field potentials - and a more global approach general ly - have been receiving renewed and increasing attention. This is a result of new findings made possible by technical and conceptual advances and by the confirma tion and augmentation of earlier findings that were widely ignored for being contro versial or inexplicable. To…mehr
In neurophysiology, the emphasis has been on single-unit studies for a quarter century, since the sensory work by Lettwin and coworkers and by Hubel and Wiesel, the cen tral work by Mountcastle, the motor work by the late Evarts, and so on. In recent years, however, field potentials - and a more global approach general ly - have been receiving renewed and increasing attention. This is a result of new findings made possible by technical and conceptual advances and by the confirma tion and augmentation of earlier findings that were widely ignored for being contro versial or inexplicable. To survey the state of this active field, a conference was held in West Berlin in August 1985 that attempted to cover all of the new approaches to the study of brain function. The approaches and emphases were very varied: basic and applied, electric and magnetic, EEG and EP/ERP, connectionistic and field, global and local fields, surface and multielectrode, low frequencies and high frequencies, linear and non linear. The conference comprised sessions of invited lectures, a panel session of seven speakers on "How brains may work," and a concluding survey of relevant methodologies. The conference showed that the combination of concepts, methods, and results could open up new important vistas in brain research. Included here are the proceedings of the conference, updated and revised by the authors. Several attendees who did not present papers at the conference later ac cepted my invitation to write chapters for the book.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
I. Compound Potentials of the Brain: From the Invertebrate Ganglion to the Human Brain.- Compound Potentials of the Brain, Ongoing and Evoked: Perspectives from Comparative Neurology.- Nonlinear Neural Dynamics in Olfaction as a Model for Cognition.- EEG - Dynamics and Evoked Potentials in Sensory and Cognitive Processing by the Brain.- Electrophysiological and Radiographic Evidence for the Mediation of Memory by an Anatomically Distributed System.- Recent Advances in Neurocognitive Pattern Analysis.- Dynamic Changes in Steady-State Responses.- Cortical Structure and Electrogenesis.- Evoked Potentials and Their Physiological Causes: An Access to Delocalized Cortical Activity.- II. Field Potentials and Nonlinear Dynamics. Do New Models Emerge?.- Electromagnetic Field Interactions in the Brain.- Global Contributions to Cortical Dynamics: Theoretical and Experimental Evidence for Standing Wave Phenomena.- Gross Electrocortical Activity as a Linear Wave Phenomenon, with Variable Temporal Damping.- Chaotic Dynamics in Brain Activity.- The EEG is Not a Simple Noise: Strange Attractors in Intracranial Structures.- III. New Scopes at the Cellular Level.- Assessment of Cooperative Firing in Groups of Neurons: Special Concepts for Multiunit Recordings from the Visual System.- Generation of Fast and Slow Field Potentials of the Central Nervous System - Studied in Model Epilepsies.- IV. Cognitive Potentials.- The Many Faces of Neuroreductionism.- The Endogenous Evoked Potentials.- Cognitive Processing in the EEG.- An Analysis of Preparation and Response Activity in P300 Experiments in Humans.- The CNV Potentials and Adaptive Preparatory Behaviour.- V. Magnetic Fields of the Brain.- Magnetic Fields from the Human Auditory Cortex.- Interpretation of Cerebral Magnetic FieldsElicited by Somatosensory Stimuli.- Auditory Evoked Magnetic Fields.- VI. Clinical Applications.- Iterative Estimation of Single-Trial Evoked Potentials.- Auditory Evoked Potentials: Topodiagnostic Value, Spatiotemporal Aspect, and Phase Problem (Rarefaction Versus Condensation).- VII. Workshop: How Brains May Work.- The Brain-Wave Model as a Protosemantic Model.- How May Brains Work? A View from Comparative Physiology.- Thoughts on "How Brains May Work": The Truism, the Guess, and the Prediction.- Do EEG-like Processes Influence Brain Function at a Physiological Level?.- Resonating Fields in the Brain and the Hyperneuron.- A Watershed in the Study of Nonlinear Neural Dynamics.- Thoughts on Brain's Internal Codes.- Overview of Methodology.- Epilogue.- Brain Waves, Chaos, Learning, and Memory.
I. Compound Potentials of the Brain: From the Invertebrate Ganglion to the Human Brain.- Compound Potentials of the Brain, Ongoing and Evoked: Perspectives from Comparative Neurology.- Nonlinear Neural Dynamics in Olfaction as a Model for Cognition.- EEG - Dynamics and Evoked Potentials in Sensory and Cognitive Processing by the Brain.- Electrophysiological and Radiographic Evidence for the Mediation of Memory by an Anatomically Distributed System.- Recent Advances in Neurocognitive Pattern Analysis.- Dynamic Changes in Steady-State Responses.- Cortical Structure and Electrogenesis.- Evoked Potentials and Their Physiological Causes: An Access to Delocalized Cortical Activity.- II. Field Potentials and Nonlinear Dynamics. Do New Models Emerge?.- Electromagnetic Field Interactions in the Brain.- Global Contributions to Cortical Dynamics: Theoretical and Experimental Evidence for Standing Wave Phenomena.- Gross Electrocortical Activity as a Linear Wave Phenomenon, with Variable Temporal Damping.- Chaotic Dynamics in Brain Activity.- The EEG is Not a Simple Noise: Strange Attractors in Intracranial Structures.- III. New Scopes at the Cellular Level.- Assessment of Cooperative Firing in Groups of Neurons: Special Concepts for Multiunit Recordings from the Visual System.- Generation of Fast and Slow Field Potentials of the Central Nervous System - Studied in Model Epilepsies.- IV. Cognitive Potentials.- The Many Faces of Neuroreductionism.- The Endogenous Evoked Potentials.- Cognitive Processing in the EEG.- An Analysis of Preparation and Response Activity in P300 Experiments in Humans.- The CNV Potentials and Adaptive Preparatory Behaviour.- V. Magnetic Fields of the Brain.- Magnetic Fields from the Human Auditory Cortex.- Interpretation of Cerebral Magnetic FieldsElicited by Somatosensory Stimuli.- Auditory Evoked Magnetic Fields.- VI. Clinical Applications.- Iterative Estimation of Single-Trial Evoked Potentials.- Auditory Evoked Potentials: Topodiagnostic Value, Spatiotemporal Aspect, and Phase Problem (Rarefaction Versus Condensation).- VII. Workshop: How Brains May Work.- The Brain-Wave Model as a Protosemantic Model.- How May Brains Work? A View from Comparative Physiology.- Thoughts on "How Brains May Work": The Truism, the Guess, and the Prediction.- Do EEG-like Processes Influence Brain Function at a Physiological Level?.- Resonating Fields in the Brain and the Hyperneuron.- A Watershed in the Study of Nonlinear Neural Dynamics.- Thoughts on Brain's Internal Codes.- Overview of Methodology.- Epilogue.- Brain Waves, Chaos, Learning, and Memory.
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