Functional specificity in the human brain: A window into the functional architecture of the mind
McGovern Institute for Brain Research · Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract
Is the human mind/brain composed of a set of highly specialized components, each carrying out a specific aspect of human cognition, or is it more of a general-purpose device, in which each component participates in a wide variety of cognitive processes? For nearly two centuries, proponents of specialized organs or modules of the mind and brain--from the phrenologists to Broca to Chomsky and Fodor--have jousted with the proponents of distributed cognitive and neural processing--from Flourens to Lashley to McClelland and Rumelhart. I argue here that research using functional MRI is beginning to answer this long-standing question with new clarity and precision by indicating that at least a few specific aspects of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.46
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 104
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Cognition
- Cognitive science
- CLARITY
- Perception
- Set (abstract data type)
- Cognitive architecture
- Psychology
- Variety (cybernetics)
- Quality Education