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The Mystery of the Moon Illusion Exploring Size Perception

The Mystery of the Moon Illusion Exploring Size Perception

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Out of Mind Varieties of Unconscious Processes

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9780198506300
 

Can we learn without consciousness? When the eminent neuropsychologist, Lawrence Weiskrantz first coined the term 'blindsight' to describe a condition whereby a patient could demonstrate that they were aware of some object, yet insist that they were completely unaware of its existence, the response from some in the scientific community was one of extreme skepticism. Even now, there are those who question the existence of unconscious (implicit) learning, and the topic remains one of the most actively researched and debated in psychology. In recent years evidence for unconscious processing across a range of sensory modalities have come from studies of vision, audition, memory, emotion, and action. Never before have these studies of unconscious processing in the different senses been brought together into a single volume. In a book dedicated to Lawrence Weiskrantz, some of the leading psychologists and cognitive neuroscientists of the day explain what we know about unconscious processing in the different senses. Including contributions from, amongst others, David Milner, Jon Driver, Alan Cowey, and Ray Dolan, the book presents a state of the art account of what we now know about 'the unconscious'. The book will provide a fascinating account for students and researchers in psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and philosophy.

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Author DE GELDER
Table Of Content

Preface
Introduction
Section I - Setting the stage
1: Why is blindsight blind?
2: Blindsight - putting beta on the back burner
Section II - Visual perception
3: Recovery of visual function following damage to the striate cortex in monkeys
4: Colour and the cortex
5: Disruption of visual evoked potentials following a V1 lesion: implications for blindsight
6: Is blindsight motion blind?
Section III - Attention and memory
7: Unconscious processing in neglect and extinction
8: Auditory-visual spatial interactions: automatic versus intentional components
9: Scope and limits of implicit memory in amnesia
10: Attention and alerting: cognitive processes spared in blindsight
Section IV - Emotion
11: The amygdala and unconscious fear processing
12: Covert affective cognition and affective blindsight
13: Conscious amd unconscious processing of emotional faces
Section V - Action
14: Direct and indirect visual routes to action
15: Numbsense: a case study and implications
Postscript - Lawrence Weiskrantz
Index

Publish Date 1 Jun 2001
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