Cortical mechanisms and cues for action.

Monkeys have more highly developed brains and are more intelligent than rats; yet rats learn some tasks as efficiently as monkeys. For example, rats are as quick at discovering which of two doors hides food or how to open the doors. Presumably tasks of this sort do not greatly tax cortical associati...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Passingham, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1985
_version_ 1797069894477414400
author Passingham, R
author_facet Passingham, R
author_sort Passingham, R
collection OXFORD
description Monkeys have more highly developed brains and are more intelligent than rats; yet rats learn some tasks as efficiently as monkeys. For example, rats are as quick at discovering which of two doors hides food or how to open the doors. Presumably tasks of this sort do not greatly tax cortical associative mechanisms since the animals have only to cumulate facts about objects. It is argued that cortical mechanisms are crucial for the ability to relate together information that is presented at different times or in different places. After removal of parts of frontal cortex monkeys can still associate cues that are presented together but they are poor at relating cues that are presented apart.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T22:31:10Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:5854f55b-1c67-4314-9c79-095f058f5250
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T22:31:10Z
publishDate 1985
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:5854f55b-1c67-4314-9c79-095f058f52502022-03-26T17:02:35ZCortical mechanisms and cues for action.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:5854f55b-1c67-4314-9c79-095f058f5250EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford1985Passingham, RMonkeys have more highly developed brains and are more intelligent than rats; yet rats learn some tasks as efficiently as monkeys. For example, rats are as quick at discovering which of two doors hides food or how to open the doors. Presumably tasks of this sort do not greatly tax cortical associative mechanisms since the animals have only to cumulate facts about objects. It is argued that cortical mechanisms are crucial for the ability to relate together information that is presented at different times or in different places. After removal of parts of frontal cortex monkeys can still associate cues that are presented together but they are poor at relating cues that are presented apart.
spellingShingle Passingham, R
Cortical mechanisms and cues for action.
title Cortical mechanisms and cues for action.
title_full Cortical mechanisms and cues for action.
title_fullStr Cortical mechanisms and cues for action.
title_full_unstemmed Cortical mechanisms and cues for action.
title_short Cortical mechanisms and cues for action.
title_sort cortical mechanisms and cues for action
work_keys_str_mv AT passinghamr corticalmechanismsandcuesforaction