ISBN-13: 9781841699738 / Angielski / Twarda / 2004 / 144 str.
ISBN-13: 9781841699738 / Angielski / Twarda / 2004 / 144 str.
Many topics have inspired significant amounts of neuroimaging research in the recent years, and the study of mental imagery was one of the earliest that elicited a thorough empirical investigation. Twenty years later, the goal of understanding this pervasive but elusive phenomenon continues to motivate a number of sustained research programs on the part of cognitive psychologists and neuroscientists. The issues at stake are easy to formulate, even if the answers sometimes may be difficult to obtain:
* Which parts of the human brain are active when a person generates a memory image of an absent object?
* To what extent does mental imagery activate cortical structures known to subserve perceptual visual experience?
* If imagery and like-modality perception produce similar patterns of brain activation, what sorts of theories should cognitive scientists develop about the underlying mechanisms?
* How can we best understand why people differ in their imagery abilities?
These are questions towhich the contributors to the special issue "Neuroimaging of Mental Imagery" offer to answer. Unlike most research in psychology, much of the work reported here explicitly addresses individual differences, which must be considered carefully in order to provide comprehensive accounts of the results of imagery experiments.