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Motor and Sensory Experience in Neuroscience
Motor and Sensory Experience in Neuroscience


''edited by'' Anna Munster
[http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/ISBN_Numbers ISBN: 978-1-60785-266-7]
 
''edited by'' [http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/Nerves_of_Perception/bio Anna Munster]
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__TOC__
== [http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/Neuroscience/Introduction '''Introduction: Neuro-perception and What's at Stake in Giving Neurology Its Nerves?''']  ==
For the last few years, all things ‘neuro’ have been doing the rounds in the creative arts and humanities. We have had the declensions ‘neuropolitics’ and ‘noopolitics’; we have panicked about screen media and the internet rewiring our plastic brains; we have marvelled at artists incorporating MRIs into videos, photomedia and installations. Little wonder at such a response – after all, weren’t the 1990s officially declared, by&nbsp;[http://www.loc.gov/loc/brain/proclaim.html US Presidential proclamation]&nbsp;to be the ‘Decade of the Brain’? Neuroscience – the collective nomenclature we give the sciences of the brain&nbsp; – is in fact a disparate assemblage of disciplines, methods and practices for understanding, healing, transposing, interpreting, imaging and, most importantly, constituting the nervous system in organisms. To get a sense of how diverse these sciences are, we can simply draw a small list up of some of them: for example, neuroanatomy, behavioural neuroscience, computational neuroscience, neuroethnology, molecular neuroscience, systems neuroscience, developmental neuroscience, and so on. These all designate various specialities within neuroscience but also, sometimes vastly different methods, philosophical approaches and indeed ways of realising the brain as organ, system, structure or entity. Within or across any of these specialities, competing and dissonant approaches to how the nervous system is seen to function exist. A decade, indeed more than a century, of practice and research in neuroscience has only multiplied the neural as a vast field of unknown quanta and qualia. [http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/Neuroscience/Introduction (more...)] <br><br>


== '''Nervous Perception: Germinal Articles in Neuroscience on Sensorimotor Experience'''<br> ==
== [http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/Neuroscience/Introduction Introduction: Neuro-perception and What's at Stake in Giving Neurology Its Nerves?]  ==
For the last few years, all things ‘neuro’ have been doing the rounds in the creative arts and humanities. We have had the declensions ‘neuropolitics’ and ‘noopolitics’; we have panicked about screen media and the internet rewiring our plastic brains; we have marvelled at artists incorporating MRIs into videos, photomedia and installations. Little wonder at such a response – after all, weren’t the 1990s officially declared, by&nbsp;[http://www.loc.gov/loc/brain/proclaim.html US Presidential proclamation]&nbsp;to be the ‘Decade of the Brain’? Neuroscience – the collective nomenclature we give the sciences of the brain&nbsp; – is in fact a disparate assemblage of disciplines, methods and practices for understanding, healing, transposing, interpreting, imaging and, most importantly, constituting the nervous system in organisms. To get a sense of how diverse these sciences are, we can simply draw a small list up of some of them: for example, neuroanatomy, behavioural neuroscience, computational neuroscience, neuroethnology, molecular neuroscience, systems neuroscience, developmental neuroscience, and so on. These all designate various specialities within neuroscience but also, sometimes vastly different methods, philosophical approaches and indeed ways of realising the brain as organ, system, structure or entity. Within or across any of these specialities, competing and dissonant approaches to how the nervous system is seen to function exist. A decade, indeed more than a century, of practice and research in neuroscience has only multiplied the neural as a vast field of unknown quanta and qualia. [http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/Neuroscience/Introduction (more...)]
 
== Nervous Perception: Germinal Articles in Neuroscience on Sensorimotor Experience  ==
; J. Y. Lettvin, H. R. Maturana, W. S. McCulloch, and W. H. Pitts : [http://jerome.lettvin.info/lettvin/Jerome/WhatTheFrogsEyeTellsTheFrogsBrain.pdf What the Frog’s Eye Tells the Frog’s Brain]
; Evan Thompson : [http://individual.utoronto.ca/evant/PCSEnactive06pdf.pdf Sensorimotor Subjectivity and the Enactive Approach to Experience]
; Evan Thompson : [http://individual.utoronto.ca/evant/ColourSynthese95.pdf Colour Vision, Evolution, and Perceptual Content]
; Alva Noë : [http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~noe/EWTH.pdf Experience Without the Head]
; Vittorio Gallese and Christian Keysers : [http://www.unipr.it/arpa/mirror/pubs/pdffiles/Gallese/Gallese-Keysers%202001.pdf Mirror Neurons: A Sensorimotor Representation System]
; Susan Martinez-Conde, Stephen L. Macknik and David H. Hubel : [http://hubel.med.harvard.edu/publications.htm The Role of Fixational Eye Movements in Visual Perception]


<br> J. Y. Lettvin, H. R. Maturana, W. S. McCulloch, and W. H. Pitts<br>[http://jerome.lettvin.info/lettvin/Jerome/WhatTheFrogsEyeTellsTheFrogsBrain.pdf What the Frog’s Eye Tells the Frog’s Brain]<br><br> Evan Thompson<br>[http://individual.utoronto.ca/evant/PCSEnactive06pdf.pdf Sensorimotor Subjectivity and the Enactive Approach to Experience]<br><br> Evan Thompson<br>[http://individual.utoronto.ca/evant/ColourSynthese95.pdf Colour Vision, Evolution, and Perceptual Content],<br><br> Alva Noë<br>[http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~noe/EWTH.pdf Experience Without the Head]<br><br> Vittorio Gallese and Christian Keysers<br>[http://www.unipr.it/arpa/mirror/pubs/pdffiles/Gallese/Gallese-Keysers%202001.pdf Mirror Neurons: A Sensorimotor Representation System]<br><br> Susan Martinez-Conde, Stephen L. Macknik and David H. Hubel<br>[http://hubel.med.harvard.edu/publications.htm The Role of Fixational Eye Movements in Visual Perception]<br><br>
== Aspects of Sensorimotor Experience in the Perceptual Systems of Humans and Nonhumans ==
; Nachum Ulanovsky and Cynthia F. Moss : [http://www.pnas.org/content/105/25/8491.full What the Bat's Voice Tells the Bat's Brain]
; Jaime A Pineda : [http://www.behavioralandbrainfunctions.com/content/pdf/1744-9081-4-47.pdf Sensorimotor Cortex As a Critical Component of an 'Extended' Mirror Neuron System: Does It Solve the Sevelopment, Correspondence, and Control Problems in Mirroring?]
; Caroline Catmur : [http://www.frontiersin.org/human_neuroscience/10.3389/fnhum.2011.00015/full Contingency Is Crucial for Creating Imitative Responses]
; Fortunato Battaglia, Sarah H. Lisanby and David Freedberg : [http://www.frontiersin.org/human_neuroscience/10.3389/fnhum.2011.00015/full Corticomotor Excitability During Observation and Imagination of a Work of Art]
; Michele Rucci and Gaëlle Desbordes : [http://www.journalofvision.org/content/3/11/18.full Contributions of Fixational Eye Movements to the Discrimination of Briefly Presented Stimuli]


== '''Aspects of Sensorimotor Experience in the Perceptual Systems of Humans and Nonhumans'''<br><br> ==
== Perception and Sensorimotor Experience from Neuroscientfic, Philosophical and Creative Practices ==
; William Forsythe and Alva Noë : [http://www.nypl.org/audiovideo/william-forsythe-alva-noë LIVE at the New York Public Library]
; Stephen Macknick : [http://macknik.neuralcorrelate.com/node/6 Visual Illusions]
; Garrison Institute Interview with Evan Thompson on the Contribution of Phenomenologies of Experience to the Neuroscience of Perception : <youtube>dmwm8tFnmNk</youtube>


Nachum Ulanovsky and Cynthia F. Moss<br>[http://www.pnas.org/content/105/25/8491.full What the Bat's Voice Tells the Bat's Brain]<br><br> Jaime A Pineda<br>[http://www.behavioralandbrainfunctions.com/content/pdf/1744-9081-4-47.pdf Sensorimotor Cortex As a Critical Component of an 'Extended' Mirror Neuron System: Does It Solve the Sevelopment, Correspondence, and Control Problems in Mirroring?]<br><br> Caroline Catmur<br>[http://www.frontiersin.org/human_neuroscience/10.3389/fnhum.2011.00015/full Contingency Is Crucial for Creating Imitative Responses]<br><br> Fortunato Battaglia, Sarah H. Lisanby and David Freedberg<br>[http://www.frontiersin.org/human_neuroscience/10.3389/fnhum.2011.00015/full Corticomotor Excitability During Observation and Imagination of a Work of Art]<br><br> Michele Rucci and Gaëlle Desbordes<br>[http://www.journalofvision.org/content/3/11/18.full Contributions of Fixational Eye Movements to the Discrimination of Briefly Presented Stimuli]<br><br>
[http://www.neuroculture.org/ Neuroculture.org: examples of work at the intersection of art and neuroscience]


== '''Perception and Sensorimotor Experience from Neuroscientfic, Philosophical and Creative Practices'''<br><br>  ==
==[http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/Neuroscience/Attributions Attributions]==


<br> William Forsythe &amp; Alva Noë<br>[http://www.nypl.org/audiovideo/william-forsythe-alva-noë LIVE at the New York Public Library]<br><br> Stephen Macknick<br>[http://macknik.neuralcorrelate.com/node/6 Visual Illusions]<br><br> Garrison Institute Interview with Evan Thompson on the Contribution of Phenomenologies of Experience to the Neuroscience of Perception<br><br>
== A 'Frozen' PDF Version of this Living Book ==
<youtube>dmwm8tFnmNk</youtube>
; [http://livingbooksaboutlife.org/pdfs/bookarchive/NervesofPerception.pdf Download a 'frozen' PDF version of this book as it appeared on 7th October 2011]
<br><br>
[http://www.neuroculture.org/ Neuroculture.org: examples of work at the intersection of art and neuroscience]<br><br> [http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/Neuroscience/Attributions Attributions]

Latest revision as of 13:56, 19 January 2012

NeurologyperceptionCover1.jpg
NeurologyperceptionCover1.jpg

Motor and Sensory Experience in Neuroscience

ISBN: 978-1-60785-266-7

edited by Anna Munster

Introduction: Neuro-perception and What's at Stake in Giving Neurology Its Nerves?

For the last few years, all things ‘neuro’ have been doing the rounds in the creative arts and humanities. We have had the declensions ‘neuropolitics’ and ‘noopolitics’; we have panicked about screen media and the internet rewiring our plastic brains; we have marvelled at artists incorporating MRIs into videos, photomedia and installations. Little wonder at such a response – after all, weren’t the 1990s officially declared, by US Presidential proclamation to be the ‘Decade of the Brain’? Neuroscience – the collective nomenclature we give the sciences of the brain  – is in fact a disparate assemblage of disciplines, methods and practices for understanding, healing, transposing, interpreting, imaging and, most importantly, constituting the nervous system in organisms. To get a sense of how diverse these sciences are, we can simply draw a small list up of some of them: for example, neuroanatomy, behavioural neuroscience, computational neuroscience, neuroethnology, molecular neuroscience, systems neuroscience, developmental neuroscience, and so on. These all designate various specialities within neuroscience but also, sometimes vastly different methods, philosophical approaches and indeed ways of realising the brain as organ, system, structure or entity. Within or across any of these specialities, competing and dissonant approaches to how the nervous system is seen to function exist. A decade, indeed more than a century, of practice and research in neuroscience has only multiplied the neural as a vast field of unknown quanta and qualia. (more...)

Nervous Perception: Germinal Articles in Neuroscience on Sensorimotor Experience

J. Y. Lettvin, H. R. Maturana, W. S. McCulloch, and W. H. Pitts
What the Frog’s Eye Tells the Frog’s Brain
Evan Thompson
Sensorimotor Subjectivity and the Enactive Approach to Experience
Evan Thompson
Colour Vision, Evolution, and Perceptual Content
Alva Noë
Experience Without the Head
Vittorio Gallese and Christian Keysers
Mirror Neurons: A Sensorimotor Representation System
Susan Martinez-Conde, Stephen L. Macknik and David H. Hubel
The Role of Fixational Eye Movements in Visual Perception

Aspects of Sensorimotor Experience in the Perceptual Systems of Humans and Nonhumans

Nachum Ulanovsky and Cynthia F. Moss
What the Bat's Voice Tells the Bat's Brain
Jaime A Pineda
Sensorimotor Cortex As a Critical Component of an 'Extended' Mirror Neuron System: Does It Solve the Sevelopment, Correspondence, and Control Problems in Mirroring?
Caroline Catmur
Contingency Is Crucial for Creating Imitative Responses
Fortunato Battaglia, Sarah H. Lisanby and David Freedberg
Corticomotor Excitability During Observation and Imagination of a Work of Art
Michele Rucci and Gaëlle Desbordes
Contributions of Fixational Eye Movements to the Discrimination of Briefly Presented Stimuli

Perception and Sensorimotor Experience from Neuroscientfic, Philosophical and Creative Practices

William Forsythe and Alva Noë
LIVE at the New York Public Library
Stephen Macknick
Visual Illusions
Garrison Institute Interview with Evan Thompson on the Contribution of Phenomenologies of Experience to the Neuroscience of Perception

Neuroculture.org: examples of work at the intersection of art and neuroscience

Attributions

A 'Frozen' PDF Version of this Living Book

Download a 'frozen' PDF version of this book as it appeared on 7th October 2011