Literature DB >> 6317064

The physiological basis of mental images.

W J Freeman.   

Abstract

An important hypothesis in neurophysiology supposes that sensory information is encoded in spatial patterns of neural activity. A test of this hypothesis in rabbits reveals that the spatial pattern of encephalographic (EEG) activity of the olfactory bulb depends less on odor than on expectation of odor. Analysis of the structure and nonlinear dynamics of the olfactory system suggests that the EEG manifests a neural activity pattern that is an active filter corresponding to what ethologists call a "chemical search image." This first glimpse at the physical aspect of what may be a primitive form of mental image allows us to infer some of its properties. It is self-organized; input destabilizes the bulb, and the event runs a course that is shaped by the initial conditions, the sensory input, the chemical state of the bulb from centrifugal input, and the record of past input embedded in synaptic connections. The event is analog, but not an analog of input. Its intensity pattern exists in two dimensions but it is not a picture. Its bases in feedback and resonance make it connotative and ascriptive, not denotative or descriptive. The neural-mental image is an operator, not an operand. It gathers neurons by the millions into coherent activity and creates information, which it transmits to the next stage in the brain, thereby helping to shape behavior. It cannot be understood without reference to both what the subject does and what is done to it. Its function in the bulb is to regulate olfactory input with minimal and nonspecific centrifugal control.

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Mesh:

Year:  1983        PMID: 6317064

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Psychiatry        ISSN: 0006-3223            Impact factor:   13.382


  9 in total

1.  Olfactory predictive codes and stimulus templates in piriform cortex.

Authors:  Christina Zelano; Aprajita Mohanty; Jay A Gottfried
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2011-10-06       Impact factor: 17.173

2.  State-changes in the brain viewed as linear steady-states and non-linear transitions between steady-states.

Authors:  J J Wright; R R Kydd; G J Lees
Journal:  Biol Cybern       Date:  1985       Impact factor: 2.086

3.  Larger topographical variance and decreased duration of brain electric microstates in depression.

Authors:  W K Strik; T Dierks; T Becker; D Lehmann
Journal:  J Neural Transm Gen Sect       Date:  1995

4.  Action potential propagation in mitral cell lateral dendrites is decremental and controls recurrent and lateral inhibition in the mammalian olfactory bulb.

Authors:  T W Margrie; B Sakmann; N N Urban
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2001-01-02       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Neural correlates of visualizations of concrete and abstract words in preschool children: a developmental embodied approach.

Authors:  Amedeo D'Angiulli; Gordon Griffiths; Fernando Marmolejo-Ramos
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2015-06-29

6.  First report of generalized face processing difficulties in möbius sequence.

Authors:  Sarah Bate; Sarah Jayne Cook; Joseph Mole; Jonathan Cole
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-04-24       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Context-driven activation of odor representations in the absence of olfactory stimuli in the olfactory bulb and piriform cortex.

Authors:  Nathalie Mandairon; Florence Kermen; Caroline Charpentier; Joelle Sacquet; Christiane Linster; Anne Didier
Journal:  Front Behav Neurosci       Date:  2014-04-29       Impact factor: 3.558

8.  Associative learning changes cross-modal representations in the gustatory cortex.

Authors:  Roberto Vincis; Alfredo Fontanini
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2016-08-30       Impact factor: 8.140

9.  Meta-analytic comparison of trial- versus questionnaire-based vividness reportability across behavioral, cognitive and neural measurements of imagery.

Authors:  Matthew S Runge; Mike W-L Cheung; Amedeo D'Angiulli
Journal:  Neurosci Conscious       Date:  2017-04-22
  9 in total

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