Physiology

Amber Smith, Sarah Dumas, Eric Moody

Updated: 2/17/99


In addition to being a science in and of itself, physiology also provides answers to questions posed by cognitive scientists. The development of the brain and its functions directly affects our behaviors, moods, and emotions, leaving cognitive scientists no choice but to be expert physiologists. Physiology is used to explain the mechanisms underlying what is observed. Cognitive scientists are always questioning what people think and what causes the thought process, a subject physiologists have been long researching. It is beneficial for cognitive scientists and physiologists to work together on the same problem. Other professions are battling this question as well. The medical field is continually producing ways to "see" the brain to help them understand the why of medical problems. MRI's and CAT scans are among the many examples of tecnological inventions used to study the physiology of the brain.


Physiological Issues of Cognitive Science



General Resources in Biological Bases of Behavior

The Nervous Systems

Researching the Brain


URLs

Sources for Cognitive Science

Left and Right Brains

 


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