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Mental Organs

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Mental Organs. Phrenology was an important part of popular culture in Victorian England and in Europe during the 19th century. Four assumptions behind phrenology. Assumption 1. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Mental Organs

Mental Organs

Page 2: Mental Organs

Phrenology was an importantpart of popular culture in Victorian England and in Europe during the 19th century.

Page 3: Mental Organs

Four assumptions

behind phrenology

Four assumptions

behind phrenology

Page 4: Mental Organs

Gall assumed that minds were made up of different mental “organs”, each of which is localized in distinct parts of the brain.These include not only basic domains like language and colour but also self-esteem and secretiveness which is distinct from cautiousness .

Gall assumed that minds were made up of different mental “organs”, each of which is localized in distinct parts of the brain.These include not only basic domains like language and colour but also self-esteem and secretiveness which is distinct from cautiousness .

Assumption 1

Page 5: Mental Organs

A further assumption Gall made is that the mental faculties he listed were innate propensities or predispositions to behave or perceive the world in a particular way.

Assumption 2

Page 6: Mental Organs

Gall also assumed that each faculty is determined by the content of the information on which it relies, not by the way this information is used to carry out different tasks.

We talk about modes of operation to refer to the various ways in which knowledge can be recruited for different kinds of tasks.

Assumption 3

Page 7: Mental Organs

Modes of operation? Refers to the various ways in which knowledge can be recruited for different kinds of tasks

MemoryReasonClassifyAttend

Modes of Operation

Page 8: Mental Organs

Gall’s mental faculties were considered by him to be domain-specific, not general modes of operation. According to Gall’s taxonomy, there are no mental organs localizable in the brain that are responsible for general abilities like reason, attention or memory.

Page 9: Mental Organs

Finally, Gall assumed that an especially well developed faculty (i.e. mental organ) requires a correspondingly well developed cortical (i.e. physical) organ. Because the bones of an infant are soft and pliable, a highly developed cortical organ will create a protrusion of the adjoining skull that is measurable.

Assumption 4

Page 10: Mental Organs

What does this view imply aboutconstructs like general intelligence, reason, memory and imagination?

Gall:There are no such mental organs (faculties)!

Page 11: Mental Organs

So, it is possible on this viewto be very gifted insome particular domain ofknowledge and yet becongenitally predisposed (predisposed at birth) to be well below average ability in other faculties.

Page 12: Mental Organs

It should be clear that Gall was interested in measuring differences in the talents or natural propensities between individuals. So his approach, for better or worse, required him to look for exceptional cases whom he considered either very gifted or seriously deficient in a particular faculty.

Page 13: Mental Organs

Domain-specific abilities (for examples, see the accompanying figure) are referred to as vertical faculties. The function of a vertical faculty is to provide us with a particular kind of knowledge about the world (that’s why we say a vertical faculty is domain-specific).

Page 14: Mental Organs

Some examples of cross-modal perceptual representations that we investigate still exist in psychology. For example, this object directs your visual attention to the right side of space, but also movements will occur faster in this direction, as will your response to sound when occurring on your right as opposed to your left. Our representation of space integrates a number of modalities.

Page 15: Mental Organs

For Gall, there is no specific mental organ for memory, nor for any of the Aristotelian faculties. Rather, each separate biological cortical organ has its own special memory.

Similarly, there was no organ for the ‘Intellect’.In other words, Intellect could not be neurologically localized and so was not a biologically plausible category. Instead, each mental organ had its own intelligent mode of functioning.

Page 16: Mental Organs

The goal of modern psychology is to understand the details of mental computations in a particular domain, so we need to go well beyond Gall’s notion of mental organs.

Page 17: Mental Organs

The term we now use, modularity, refers to the idea that complex neural systems responsible for some task (e.g. understanding a sentence) are organized into subcomponents -- modules -- which are functionally independent of one another.

This principle of modularity makes very good sense when processing tasks are very complicated (like sentence comprehension).

In non-modular systems, a small change to improve one part (whether by natural selection in the case of the brain or by a human designer in the case of a machine) would have consequences (often undesirable) in many other places.

Page 18: Mental Organs

Dissociation Methodology

Modular Modular System ASystem A

Modular Modular System BSystem B

Page 19: Mental Organs

HOW CAN WE IDENTIFY THE ACTUAL MODULES OF MIND?

Letter Letter IdentificationIdentification

Orthographic Orthographic Lexicon Lexicon

Phonological Phonological Lexicon Lexicon

SPEECH OUTPUT

PRINT

Grapheme-Grapheme-phoneme phoneme

conversion conversion rulesrules

Semantic Semantic SystemSystem

Page 20: Mental Organs

Letter Letter IdentificationIdentification

Orthographic Orthographic Lexicon Lexicon

Phonological Phonological Lexicon Lexicon

SPEECH OUTPUT

PRINT

Grapheme-Grapheme-phoneme phoneme

conversion conversion rulesrules

Semantic Semantic SystemSystem

BOOKLEOPARDPINTHAND

FOR READINGA DANGEROUS FELINE PREDATORA MEASURE OF VOLUME FOR LIQUIDBODY PART

OOK IS PRONOUNCED ‘UK’B IS PRONOUNCED ‘BUH’B-O-O-K IS ‘BOOK’

LEXICAL

NONLEXICALVOOK

Page 21: Mental Organs

TASK 1: READ ALOUDYINT, GOOP, SIFE, LUNK ETC.

TASK 2: READ ALOUDPINT, ACHE, BEAD, BOTH, ETC.

PHONOLOGICAL DYSLEXIAIMPAIRMENT TO NONLEXICAL ROUTE

SURFACE DYSLEXIAIMPAIRMENT TO LEXICAL ROUTE

OKAY

OKAY

WE ALWAYS MEASURE IMPAIRMENT RELATIVE TO A GROUP OF NORMAL CONTROLS

Page 22: Mental Organs

Surface Dyslexic

Phonological Dyslexic

Normal Control

Accuracy

100%

50%

Exception words

Pronounceable Nonsense words

A classic double dissociation

Page 23: Mental Organs

Surface Dyslexic

Phonological Dyslexic

Normal Control

Accuracy

100%

50%

Exception words

Pronounceable Nonsense words

This is not a classic double dissociation Why

not?

Page 24: Mental Organs

Surface Dyslexic

Phonological Dyslexic

Normal ControlAccuracy

100%

50%

Exception words

Pronounceable Nonsense words

This is not a classic double dissociation Why

not?

Patient A is better than Patient B on Task X. Patient B is better than Patient A on Task Y.

Page 25: Mental Organs

PHONOLOGICAL AND SURFACE DYSLEXIA TOGETHER MAKEUP A DOUBLE DISSOCIATION BETWEEN THE LEXICAL ANDNON-LEXICAL READING ROUTE.

THE EXISTENCE OF THESE TWO READING DISORDERS PROVIDESEVIDENCE THAT THESE TWO ROUTES FROM PRINT TO SOUNDARE SEPARATE FUNCTIONAL COMPONENTS (MODULES) OF THE READING SYSTEM.

ANOTHER WAY TO STATE THIS IS THAT THE LEXICAL AND NON-LEXICAL READING ROUTES ARE DOUBLY DISSOCIABLE.