TopicNeuroscience

prefrontal cortices

Content Overview
2Total items
1Seminar
1ePoster

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SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Towards a Translational Neuroscience of Consciousness

Hakwan Lau
UCLA Psychology Department
Mar 25, 2021

The cognitive neuroscience of conscious perception has seen considerable growth over the past few decades. Confirming an influential hypothesis driven by earlier studies of neuropsychological patients, we have found that the lateral and polar prefrontal cortices play important causal roles in the generation of subjective experiences. However, this basic empirical finding has been hotly contested by researchers with different theoretical commitments, and the differences are at times difficult to resolve. To address the controversies, I suggest one alternative venue may be to look for clinical applications derived from current theories. I outline an example in which we used closed-loop fMRI combined with machine learning to nonconsciously manipulate the physiological responses to threatening stimuli, such as spiders or snakes. A clinical trial involving patients with phobia is currently taking place. I also outline how this theoretical framework may be extended to other diseases. Ultimately, a truly meaningful understanding of the fundamental nature of our mental existence should lead to useful insights for our colleagues on the clinical frontlines. If we use this as a yardstick, whoever loses the esoteric theoretical debates, both science and the patients will always win.

ePosterNeuroscience

Roles of prelimbic and infralimbic prefrontal cortices in an appetitive inhibitory discrimination learning task

Rebecca M. Hock, Lauren Waite, Charlotte Muir, Carl Stevenson, Charlotte Bonardi, Helen J. Cassaday

prefrontal cortices coverage

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