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Cognition and Neural Development (Hardcover)
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Cognition and Neural Development (Hardcover)
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Scientific research shows how experience shapes the organization of
the human brain through mechanisms of neural plasticity, which
capture the information of the world within the connections among
neurons. To understand this plasticity, it is important to look to
the developmental mechanisms through which the brain grows from a
single cell in embryogenesis to achieve the complex architecture of
the human brain. The process of neural morphogenesis involves
exuberant formation of neuronal connections, and then subtractive
elimination of unused connections. This process is continued after
birth, providing the neural plasticity of learning that allows
cognitive development in infancy and childhood. Recognizing this
continuity suggests an interesting insight; cognition is a
reflection of neural development throughout the life span. With
this insight, the authors of Cognition and Neural Development
examine the embryonic development of the brain to appreciate the
dimensions of developmental momentum that shape the neural and
psychological development of our lives. Human brain embryogenesis
involves gradients of trophic factors that guide the migration of
neurons from ventricular proliferative zones to organize the
architecture of the cerebral hemispheres. The architecture of human
cognition involves a functional differentiation of dorsal
(pyramidal) and ventral (granular) corticolimbic divisions. This
differentiation is a defining feature of not just human but
mammalian neuroanatomy, The separation of pyramidal and granular
cortical architectures appeared with the evolution of the
six-layered mammalian neocortex from the three-layered primitive
general cortex of reptiles and amphibians. The functional
differentiation of the dorsal and ventral divisions of the cerebral
hemispheres has been shown to be integral to multiple levels of
psychological function, from elementary motivation to the most
complex forms of executive self-regulation. Through an
evolutionary-developmental analysis of cortical differentiation,
the authors approach the basic questions of psychological function
in novel ways.
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