MIT CogNet, The Brain Sciences ConnectionFrom the MIT Press, Link to Online Catalog
SPARC Communities
Subscriber : Stanford University Libraries » LOG IN

space

Powered By Google 
Advanced Search

Selected Title Details  
Apr 2001
ISBN 0262122332
264 pp.
33 illus.
BUY THE BOOK
I of the Vortex
Rodolfo R. Llinás

In I of the Vortex, Rodolfo Llinás, a founding father of modern brain science, presents an original view of the evolution and nature of mind. According to Llinás, the "mindness state" evolved to allow predictive interactions between mobile creatures and their environment. He illustrates the early evolution of mind through a primitive animal called the "sea squirt." The mobile larval form has a brainlike ganglion that receives sensory information about the surrounding environment. As an adult, the sea squirt attaches itself to a stationary object and then digests most of its own brain. This suggests that the nervous system evolved to allow active movement in animals. To move through the environment safely, a creature must anticipate the outcome of each movement on the basis of incoming sensory data. Thus the capacity to predict is most likely the ultimate brain function. One could even say that Self is the centralization of prediction.

At the heart of Llinás's theory is the concept of oscillation. Many neurons possess electrical activity, manifested as oscillating variations in the minute voltages across the cell membrane. On the crests of these oscillations occur larger electrical events that are the basis for neuron-to-neuron communication. Like cicadas chirping in unison, a group of neurons oscillating in phase can resonate with a distant group of neurons. This simultaneity of neuronal activity is the neurobiological root of cognition. Although the internal state that we call the mind is guided by the senses, it is also generated by the oscillations within the brain. Thus, in a certain sense, one could say that reality is not all "out there," but is a kind of virtual reality.

Table of Contents
 Preface
 Motor Primacy and the Organization of Neuronal Networks: Thinking as Internalized Movement
1 Setting Mind to Mind
2 Prediction is the Ultimate Function of the Brain
3 The Embedding of Universals through the Embedding of Motricity
4 Nerve Cells and Their Personalities
5 Lessons from the Evolution of the Eye
6 The I of the Vortex
7 Fixed Action Patterns: Automatic Brain Modules that Make Complex Movements
8 Emotions as FAPs
9 Of Learning and Memory
10 Qualia from a Neuronal Point of View
11 Language as the Child of Abstract Thought
12 The Collective Mind?
 References
 Index
 
Options
Related Topics
Neuroscience
Psychology, Cognitive Science


© 2010 The MIT Press
MIT Logo