60,219 research outputs found

    AI at Ames: Artificial Intelligence research and application at NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California, February 1985

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    Charts are given that illustrate function versus domain for artificial intelligence (AI) applications and interests and research area versus project number for AI research. A list is given of project titles with associated project numbers and page numbers. Also, project descriptions, including title, participants, and status are given

    Neuroimaging of Habit-based vs. Goal-directed behavior in Instrumental Learning

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    Addiction has been proposed to result from an overreliance on the habit-based and goal-directed controllers of behavior; however, few data exist to simultaneously support both behavioral and neuoranatomical aspects of this theory in humans. Here, we clarify the locations of the homologous structures controlling behavior in the human brain to those studied in animal models. The study included two parts. 1) The first part established in a behavioral experiment that the devaluation video in the present paradigm was able to influence instrumental behavior. Using a 3-session instrumental learning task to examine behavior, we examined 78 participants, aged 18-35. A significant difference in the change in response rate immediately before and after devaluation was found between the 2 groups viewing worms in devaluation compared to the group not viewing worms. There was a significant difference in change in liking immediately before and after devaluation between the three conditions, as well as in the change in liking, hunger, and response rate between the paired and empty bowl unpaired conditions. There was a significant correlation between snack liking pre-session 3 and response rate in session 3, as well as between pre-extinction snack liking and response rate in the start of extinction. 2) The second part of the study used the same 3-session training paradigm over 3-days, with fMRI on the third day to measure neural activity during this same instrumental learning task. Although the results are preliminary (N=10), these show that the comparable regions of the human brain are involved in goal-directed and habit-based control of behavior, with a perfect negative Spearman correlation of mean vmPFC activity at the end of training and the change in responding from immediately before to immediately after devaluation. Three of the 10 subjects were addicted smokers, which is insufficient data to determine whether they were less sensitive to reward devaluation and whether they relied more heavily on brain structures associated with habit-based controllers of behavior. However, understanding the relationship between habit-based and goal-directed controllers of behavior and their role in addiction and clarifying the human brain structures responsible for these systems can lead to the development of therapies for addiction

    The neural correlates of emotion regulation by implementation intentions

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    Several studies have investigated the neural basis of effortful emotion regulation (ER) but the neural basis of automatic ER has been less comprehensively explored. The present study investigated the neural basis of automatic ER supported by ‘implementation intentions’. 40 healthy participants underwent fMRI while viewing emotion-eliciting images and used either a previously-taught effortful ER strategy, in the form of a goal intention (e.g., try to take a detached perspective), or a more automatic ER strategy, in the form of an implementation intention (e.g., “If I see something disgusting, then I will think these are just pixels on the screen!”), to regulate their emotional response. Whereas goal intention ER strategies were associated with activation of brain areas previously reported to be involved in effortful ER (including dorsolateral prefrontal cortex), ER strategies based on an implementation intention strategy were associated with activation of right inferior frontal gyrus and ventro-parietal cortex, which may reflect the attentional control processes automatically captured by the cue for action contained within the implementation intention. Goal intentions were also associated with less effective modulation of left amygdala, supporting the increased efficacy of ER under implementation intention instructions, which showed coupling of orbitofrontal cortex and amygdala. The findings support previous behavioural studies in suggesting that forming an implementation intention enables people to enact goal-directed responses with less effort and more efficiency

    Satellite remote sensing facility for oceanograhic applications

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    The project organization, design process, and construction of a Remote Sensing Facility at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at LaJolla, California are described. The facility is capable of receiving, processing, and displaying oceanographic data received from satellites. Data are primarily imaging data representing the multispectral ocean emissions and reflectances, and are accumulated during 8 to 10 minute satellite passes over the California coast. The most important feature of the facility is the reception and processing of satellite data in real time, allowing investigators to direct ships to areas of interest for on-site verifications and experiments

    The struggle for sentencing reform : will the English guidelines model spread?

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    Are closely comparable countries following the path forged by England and Wales by moving towards the development of systematic sentencing guidelines by a Sentencing Council? And if they are not, how are these different paths explicable

    FAIR WARNING?: The First Amendment, Compelled Commercial Disclosures, and Cigarette Warning Labels

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    The cognitive neuroscience of visual working memory

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    Visual working memory allows us to temporarily maintain and manipulate visual information in order to solve a task. The study of the brain mechanisms underlying this function began more than half a century ago, with Scoville and Milner’s (1957) seminal discoveries with amnesic patients. This timely collection of papers brings together diverse perspectives on the cognitive neuroscience of visual working memory from multiple fields that have traditionally been fairly disjointed: human neuroimaging, electrophysiological, behavioural and animal lesion studies, investigating both the developing and the adult brain
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