scholarly journals Role of interference and entanglement in quantum neural processing

Author(s):  
Alexandr A. Ezhov ◽  
Gennady Berman
Keyword(s):  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabelle A. G. Klinkenberg ◽  
Christian Dobel ◽  
Ann-Kathrin Bröckelmann ◽  
Franziska Plessow ◽  
Clemens Kirschbaum ◽  
...  

AbstractThere is growing evidence that humans use olfactory chemosensory signals for social communication, but their role in affective associative learning is largely unknown. To examine this, women implicitly learned face-odor associations by pairing different neutral male faces with either a male chemosignal presumably involved in human mating behavior (dissolved Δ4,16-androstadien-3-one, “AND”), a pleasant smell (dissolved vanillin) or the neutral solvent alone. After learning, women rated faces previously paired with AND or vanillin as more attractive than faces paired with solvent, even though they were unable to identify the contingency of face-odor pairings above chance level. On a neurophysiological level, both AND- and vanillin-associated faces evoked stronger magnetoencephalographic correlates of enhanced emotional attention than solvent-associated faces at early (<120 ms) and mid-latency (140-270 ms) processing stages. This study stresses the role of AND as a human chemosignal in implicit social communication and demonstrates its effectiveness in modulating emotional learning.


2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 643-643
Author(s):  
B. A. Urgen ◽  
M. Plank ◽  
M. Kutas ◽  
H. Poizner ◽  
A. P. Saygin

Author(s):  
Ajay B. Satpute ◽  
Erik C. Nook ◽  
Melis E. Cakar

Language is known to play an important role in communicating our thoughts, memories, and emotions. This chapter proposes that the role of language extends much more deeply to further shape and constitutively create these mental phenomena. Research on emotion has shown that language can powerfully influence experiences and perceptions that are affective or emotional. Research on memory, too, has also shown that language can be used to shape autobiographical experiences. The authors organize this work by the many forms and aspects that language may take such as rich narratives, specific emotion words, words that focus on the situation versus words that focus on the body, and even words that convey psychological distance from grammatical tense and pronoun usage. They describe a constructionist theoretical model to understand how language shapes emotion and memory in terms of psychological and neural mechanisms. Their model integrates with recent predictive coding models of neural processing. Finally, the chapter relates this work to clinical and translational models of therapeutic change.


2011 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 695-706 ◽  
Author(s):  
Preethi Premkumar ◽  
Ulrich Ettinger ◽  
Sophie Inchley-Mort ◽  
Alexander Sumich ◽  
Steven C.R. Williams ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
IRENE TOGOLI ◽  
Michele Fornaciai ◽  
Domenica Bueti

Magnitude information is essential to create a representation of the external environment and successfully interact with it. Duration and numerosity, for example, can shape our predictions and bias each other (i.e., the greater the number of people queuing, the longer we expect to wait). While these biases suggest the existence of a generalized magnitude system, asymmetric effects (i.e., numerosity affecting duration but not vice versa) challenged this idea. Here we propose that such asymmetric integration depends on the stimuli used and the neural processing dynamics they entail. Across multiple behavioral experiments employing different stimulus presentation displays (static versus dynamic), we show that the integration between numerosity and time can be symmetrical if the stimuli entail a similar neural time-course and numerosity unfolds over time. Overall, these findings support the idea of a generalized magnitude system, but also highlight the role of early sensory processing in magnitude representation and integration.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. e0260728
Author(s):  
Carlota Pagès-Portabella ◽  
Mila Bertolo ◽  
Juan M. Toro

In western music, harmonic expectations can be fulfilled or broken by unexpected chords. Musical irregularities in the absence of auditory deviance elicit well-studied neural responses (e.g. ERAN, P3, N5). These responses are sensitive to schematic expectations (induced by syntactic rules of chord succession) and veridical expectations about predictability (induced by experimental regularities). However, the cognitive and sensory contributions to these responses and their plasticity as a result of musical training remains under debate. In the present study, we explored whether the neural processing of pure acoustic violations is affected by schematic and veridical expectations. Moreover, we investigated whether these two factors interact with long-term musical training. In Experiment 1, we registered the ERPs elicited by dissonant clusters placed either at the middle or the ending position of chord cadences. In Experiment 2, we presented to the listeners with a high proportion of cadences ending in a dissonant chord. In both experiments, we compared the ERPs of musicians and non-musicians. Dissonant clusters elicited distinctive neural responses (an early negativity, the P3 and the N5). While the EN was not affected by syntactic rules, the P3a and P3b were larger for dissonant closures than for middle dissonant chords. Interestingly, these components were larger in musicians than in non-musicians, while the N5 was the opposite. Finally, the predictability of dissonant closures in our experiment did not modulate any of the ERPs. Our study suggests that, at early time windows, dissonance is processed based on acoustic deviance independently of syntactic rules. However, at longer latencies, listeners may be able to engage integration mechanisms and further processes of attentional and structural analysis dependent on musical hierarchies, which are enhanced in musicians.


2017 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomas Lenc ◽  
Peter Keller ◽  
Manuel Varlet ◽  
Sylvie Nozaradan

Author(s):  
Georgia O’Callaghan ◽  
Argyris Stringaris

The role of aberrant neural processing of rewards in the development of depression has long been proposed. This commentary reviews the reward literature in adolescent depression across imaging modalities such as functional magnetic resonance imaging and electroencephalography methodologies. When integrating findings across studies, consistent neural abnormalities emerge, expressed as reduced striatal blood oxygen level-dependent responses to anticipation and feedback outcome phases of reward tasks, altered frontostriatal connectivity, and blunted feedback-related negativity potentials. These are observed in current depression but, more importantly, have been found to be predictive of the onset of depression in longitudinal studies with community-based adolescent samples. The evidence for the specificity of these findings to depression is discussed, in addition to a review of intervention work probing this mechanism as it relates to decreases in depressive symptomatology. The chapter makes recommendations for future work that may continue to elucidate this relationship, a greater understanding of which may lead to more targeted and efficacious treatments for depression in adolescence.


2010 ◽  
Vol 112 (3) ◽  
pp. 214-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian M. Lyons ◽  
Andrew Mattarella-Micke ◽  
Matthew Cieslak ◽  
Howard C. Nusbaum ◽  
Steven L. Small ◽  
...  

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