Young neurons led astray - 0 views
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"Cdk5 therefore appears to be crucial only for later stages of the maturation of newborn neurons. The authors suggest that the improper connections formed by these cells could interfere with information processing in the hippocampus. However, they did not carry out any behavioural tests to explore the consequences of blocking cdk5 activity. This would be an interesting thing to do next, given the recent discovery that new neurons are needed for new memories. Nevertheless, the new findings could have important implications for the use of stem cells in cell replacement therapies for neurological diseases, as they suggest that cells would have to be transplanted accurately into specific locations in order to be effective. " (Neurophilosophy)
"No evidence of Human Mirror Neurons" - 0 views
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"Social scientists are often concerned about the importation of poorly understood concepts from the hard sciences into "softer" fields like anthropology or sociology. In my view, the story of mirror neurons shows that the reverse also happens: scores of brilliant neuroscientists were set to work on entities celebrated and, one might say, partly invented because they allowed neuroscience to relate to social concepts, like imitation, culture, and art. Once it got started, the story was one of mutual seduction. The disenchantment, if it takes place at all, may take years. Will the speculative bubble burst? "
We Empathize, Therefore We Are: Toward a Moral Neuropolitics - 0 views
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"Based on recent findings from neuroscience we can plausibly deduce that the mirror neurons of the viewer were engaged by these images of others suffering. The appeal was to the public's awakened sense of compassion and revulsion toward graphic depictions of the wholesale violence, barbarity, and torture routinely practiced on these Atlantic voyages. Rediker notes that the images would instantaneously "make the viewer identify and sympathize with the 'injured Africans' on the lower deck of the ship . . ." while also producing a sense of moral outrage (p. 315, Olson, 2008)."
Mood Is Chemistry. No Really, It Is. - 0 views
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If we knew what made some people vulnerable to the effects of tryptophan depletion, we would be a long way towards understanding depression. We still don't. But it's something to do with serotonin. In some people, in some circumstances, serotonin is the only thing between happiness and despair. No, really. (Neuroskeptic)
What Makes the Human Mind? - 0 views
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Across the board, Hauser says, there are signs that animal evolution passed along some capabilities "and then something dramatic happened, a huge leap that enabled humans to break away. Once symbolic representation happened, if the combinatorial capacity was there, things just took off. Precisely how and when this happened, we may never know." (November-December 2008)
"No evidence of Human Mirror Neurons" - 0 views
Of Mice and Models - 0 views
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"Now a recent breakthrough by the Cambridge neuroscientist and geneticist Seth Grant may provide a third possibility. In a report published in the June 2008 issue of Nature Neuroscience, Grant and his colleagues analyzed synapses in organisms of increasing evolutionary complexity, from single-celled organisms to vertebrates. They found that more advanced organisms also had more complex synapses, allowing neurons to communicate in more complicated ways." Seed
Did My Neurons Make Me Do It? | Review - 0 views
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The picture of agency presented here is one well worth pursuing. Murphy and Brown have not presented us with a view that is defensible, both because it is far too sketchy to be properly assessed, and because many of the claims made will no doubt turn out to be false. However, the general outlines of the view are plausible, and there is a rich research agenda here. Perhaps future work will see some of the details worked out, and the gaps filled. (Neil Levy)
Do abnormal responses show utilitarian bias? - 0 views
Politika Erotika: DAVID BROOKS: The Morality Line - 0 views
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There still seems to be such things as selves, which are capable of making decisions and controlling destiny. It’s just that these selves can’t be seen on a brain-mapping diagram, and we no longer have any agreement about what they are.
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we are renegotiating what you might call the Morality Line, the spot where background forces stop and individual choice — and individual responsibility — begins. The killings happen at a moment when the people who explain behavior by talking about biology, chemistry and social science are assertive and on the march, while the people who explain behavior by talking about individual character are confused and losing ground.
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now the language of morality is often replaced with the language of determinism. >
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Paying Attention vs. Needing to Pay Attention - 0 views
Neurosemantics Bibliography - 0 views
Mixing Memory : Emotion, Reason, and Moral Judgment - 0 views
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emotion and intuition, both of which operate automatically and unconsciously for the most part, play a much larger role than most philosophers and psychologists had previously been willing to admit.
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VMPC plays a role in encoding the reward value of stimuli, as well as emotions like fear.
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determines approach and avoidance behavior.
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Do the Impossible: Know Thyself - 0 views
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Two main questions arose in my mind during the neuropsychiatric conference. The first was whether any scientific self-understanding was possible. The second was whether, if possible, it was desirable. My answer to both questions was, and is, no.
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difficult even to conceive of what a scientific self-understanding would actually be like
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How does one develop a universal law that explains an infinite number of unique events that are infused with meaning and intentionality?
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I doubt it will require a single universal law to understand human nature, or the mortivations for human behavior. At best we might develop theories that allow us to predict human behavior fairly accurately. We already try to do this personally; neuroscience, genetics, etc., should enhance those abilities considerably.
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Scientist Finds the Beginnings of Morality in Primate Behavior - New York Times - 0 views
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Marc Hauser, an evolutionary biologist at Harvard, proposed in his book “Moral Minds” that the brain has a genetically shaped mechanism for acquiring moral rules, a universal moral grammar similar to the neural machinery for learning language.
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Frans de Waal defends against philosopher critics his view that the roots of morality can be seen in the social behavior of monkeys and apes.
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human morality would be impossible without certain emotional building blocks that are clearly at work in chimp and monkey societies
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Study Finds Brain Injury Changes Moral Judgment - New York Times - 0 views
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native revulsion
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ventromedial prefrontal cortex
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active during moral decision-making
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Anterior cingulate cortex regulation of sympathetic activity -- Luu and Posner 126 (10)... - 0 views
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lesions to the ACC do not produce massive or consistent cognitive deficits.
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patients with ACC lesions do demonstrate performance deficits on the Stroop task and other tasks that have been shown to activate the ACC
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apathetic and unconcerned when significant events occur, such as making mistakes
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