Truls Ljungström’s Reviews > Cognition: The Thinking Animal > Status Update
Truls Ljungström
is on page 92 of 604
Thalamus A relay station for sensory and motor information. For all
senses except smell, the receptors first send information to the thalamus,
which passes it on to the cortex.
Amygdala Believed to be important in the processing of emotion (especially fear) and probably information about social functions.
— Nov 19, 2025 04:06AM
senses except smell, the receptors first send information to the thalamus,
which passes it on to the cortex.
Amygdala Believed to be important in the processing of emotion (especially fear) and probably information about social functions.
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Truls’s Previous Updates
Truls Ljungström
is on page 324 of 604
Sample illustration of what participants were supposed to image in Kosslyn’s (1975, 1976) experiments. In one case, they imaged a rabbit next to an elephant, and in another they imaged a rabbit next to a fly. Participants were slower to verify that a rabbit has a pink nose in the former than in the latter, presumably because they had to enlarge the image of the rabbit to see its nose.
— Nov 24, 2025 01:32AM
Truls Ljungström
is on page 111 of 604
The final two characters are identical in the first line and the second line, but they are interpreted differently because of the surrounding context.
— Nov 19, 2025 05:24AM
Truls Ljungström
is on page 103 of 604
demonstrated that the gravity-based orientation of a diamond or square can be overridden by a purely visual frame of reference, in this case a rectangle. Participants were to report whether they saw a square or diamond (relative to gravity). On some
trials, there was no reference frame except gravity. On other trials, the square or diamond was surrounded by a rectangle that was either upright or tilted at 45 degrees.
— Nov 19, 2025 05:22AM
trials, there was no reference frame except gravity. On other trials, the square or diamond was surrounded by a rectangle that was either upright or tilted at 45 degrees.
Truls Ljungström
is on page 102 of 604
Hermann von Helmholtz (1910/1962), one of the first giants of vision research, called this the likelihood principle. (varför en kvadrat, inte en kub)
— Nov 19, 2025 04:09AM

