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Zusatztext Der Altmeister gibt sich die Ehre - sehr unterhaltsam! sehr britisch! sehr lehrreich (wundervolle Einführung ins Bayes-Theorem).[...] (Amazon.de! Juni 2009) Informationen zum Autor Chris Frith is Professor in Neuropsychology at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at University College London. His publications include Schizophrenia: A Very Short Introduction (2003, with Eve C. Johnstone) and The Neuroscience of Social Interaction (2004, edited with Daniel Wolpert). Klappentext Written by one of the world's leading neuroscientists, Making Up the Mind is the first accessible account of experimental studies showing how the brain creates our mental world.* Uses evidence from brain imaging, psychological experiments and studies of patients to explore the relationship between the mind and the brain* Demonstrates that our knowledge of both the mental and physical comes to us through models created by our brain* Shows how the brain makes communication of ideas from one mind to another possible Zusammenfassung Written by one of the world's leading neuroscientists, Making Up the Mind is the first accessible account of experimental studies showing how the brain creates our mental world. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Abbreviations Preface Acknowledgments Prologue: Real Scientists Don't Study the Mind 1 The Psychologist's Fear of the Party 1 Hard Science and Soft Science 3 Hard Science - Objective; Soft Science - Subjective 5 Can Big Science Save Soft Science? 7 Measuring Mental Activity 9 How Can the Mental Emerge from the Physical? 15 I Can Read Your Mind 16 How the Brain Creates the World 16 Part I Seeing through the Brain's Illusions 19 1 Clues from a Damaged Brain 21 Sensing the Physical World 21 The Mind and the Brain 22 When the Brain Doesn't Know 24 When the Brain Knows, But Doesn't Tell 27 When the Brain Tells Lies 29 How Brain Activity Creates False Knowledge 31 How to Make Your Brain Lie to You 34 Checking the Reality of Our Experiences 36 How Do We Know What's Real? 37 2 What a Normal Brain Tells Us about the World 40 Illusions of Awareness 40 Our Secretive Brain 44 Our Distorting Brain 48 Our Creative Brain 50 3 What the Brain Tells Us about Our Bodies 61 Privileged Access? 61 Where's the Border? 61 We Don't Know What We Are Doing 64 Who's in Control? 66 My Brain Can Act Perfectly Well without Me 68 Phantoms in the Brain 70 Part II How the Brain Does It 83 4 Getting Ahead by Prediction 85 Patterns of Reward and Punishment 85 How the Brain Embeds Us in the World and Then Hides Us 100 The Feeling of Being in Control 105 When the System Fails 107 The Invisible Actor at the Center of the World 109 5 Our Perception of the World Is a Fantasy That Coincides with Reality 111 Our Brain Creates an Effortless Perception of the Physical World 111 The Information Revolution 112 What Can Clever Machines Really Do? 116 A Problem with Information Theory 117 The Reverend Thomas Bayes 119 The Ideal Bayesian Observer 123 How a Bayesian Brain Can Make Models of the World 125 Is There a Rhinoceros in the Room? 125 Where Does Prior Knowledge Come From? 127 How Action Tells Us about the World 130 My Perception Is Not of the World, But of My Brain's Model of the World 132 Color Is in the Brain, Not in the World 134 Perception Is a Fantasy That Coincides with Reality 134 We Are Not the Slaves of Our Senses 135 So How Do We Know What's Real? 136 Imagination Is Extremely Boring 137 6 How Brains Model Minds 139