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Access to engrams.

Donald R. Meyer
- 01 Feb 1972 - 
- Vol. 27, Iss: 2, pp 124-133
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This article is published in American Psychologist.The article was published on 1972-02-01. It has received 64 citations till now.

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The limbic system

TL;DR: The structure of the Limbic System, the Amygdala, the Septal Area, the Hippocampus, and the Hypothalamus are explained and the role of these structures and their role in human emotion is explained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neural correlates of outcome after stroke: a cross-sectional fMRI study

TL;DR: A negative correlation between outcome and the degree of task-related activation in regions such as the supplementary motor area, cingulate motor areas, premotor cortex, posterior parietal cortex, and cerebellum is demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acquisition of classical conditioning without cerebellar cortex.

TL;DR: Cerebellar cortex, unlike the cerebellar interpositus nucleus, is not essential for acquisition or relearning/retention of classical conditioning but normally plays an important role since acquisition of classical eyeblink conditioning is prolonged and of poor quality in its absence.
Journal Article

Effects of posterior parietal lesion on visually guided behavior in monkeys

TL;DR: Young female monkeys ( Macaca fascicularis) were required to perform simple, visually guided reaching for small pieces of food placed in front of them and evidenced a temporary return of deficits that were identical to those produced by the surgery but which disappeared as the drug wore off.
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Journal ArticleDOI

The "visual cliff".

TL;DR: This simple apparatus is used to investigate depth perception in different animals and makes it possible not only to control the optical and other stimuli (auditory and tactual, for instance) but also to protect the experimental subjects.
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Some consequences of perinatal lesions of the visual cortex in the cat

TL;DR: Kittens with lesions of the visual cortex and their normal littermates were tested on visual placing responses and two measures of activity and Ss that had sustained the operation as infants learned the pattern habit as well as normal adult cats, but removal of visual neocortex severely retarded the performance of adult SS.
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Pattern discrimination following removal of visual neocortex in the cat

TL;DR: Comparison of the present experiment with previous investigations suggested that stimulus illumination and contrast, stimulus configuration, and amount of postoperative training are critical variables in the elaboration of visual pattern discrimination in the visually neodecorticated cat.
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