The Mind: A User's ManualWiley, 29/08/2006 - 302 páginas Our minds are subtle, beautiful and complex things. John Taylor explores how the mind works and shows us how to understand ourselves, how we can develop our minds to their full potential and how to keep them running smoothly. 'Based on his sustained scientific investigations, John Taylor takes us on a fascinating and erudite journey of what it is that our minds do for us. This is an important addition to the library of anyone who has pondered how the brain conjures up our every thinking moment'. Igor Alexander, Professor in Neutral Systems Engineering, Imperial College, University of London 'The book is such a fascinating, daring, gentle and thoughtful work that when you finish it it's like losing a friend or a dear child leaving home... I can only try to convey some of the emotional enjoyment, coupled with a sense of discovery. I felt while reading it... John Taylor's mind really does reach out to so many people, young, middle-aged and old'. Nicolas Roeg, Film Director |
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Anosognosia report Reproduced with permission from Psychology Press | 3 |
Defining Your Mind | 9 |
A Guide to MindUsers Manuals | 24 |
Direitos de autor | |
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able achieve action Alzheimer's disease animals anosognosia areas arise attention control signal attention control system attention copy buffer attention copy model attention copy signal attention movement control attention movement signal attentional blink awareness behaviour brain activity brain imaging buffer sites cause claim cognitive complex components conscious experience control model cortical created crucial damage developed drugs efference copy emotions engineering control example external feedback forward model frontal frontal eye fields frontal lobes function goal hippocampus important infant inner experience input involved loss lucid dream machine meditation memory mental mind mind-user's manual model of consciousness model of Figure module monitor motor move movement control signal nerve cells neural activity neurons occur ownership pain parietal lobes patient person Phineas Gage posterior prefrontal cortex problem processing pure consciousness relevant religions response reward saccade schizophrenia scientific sensory buffer society soul stimulus suitable temporal lobe unconscious understanding various visual