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Session 1 Presentation, Reading, Media Notes

The cortico-basal ganglia loop controls intentional movements like starting, continuing, stopping or inhibiting movements, while the cerebro-cerebellar circuit fine tunes movements, thoughts and language by regulating rate, rhythm and force. Certain functions like attention and motor skills need to be automated to focus on other tasks. Neurodiverse behaviors are often due to differences in brain functioning rather than conscious thinking or emotions. Cognition involves the interaction between the brain, body and environment through embodied, embedded, enactive and extended processes rather than occurring only in the mind.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
35 views2 pages

Session 1 Presentation, Reading, Media Notes

The cortico-basal ganglia loop controls intentional movements like starting, continuing, stopping or inhibiting movements, while the cerebro-cerebellar circuit fine tunes movements, thoughts and language by regulating rate, rhythm and force. Certain functions like attention and motor skills need to be automated to focus on other tasks. Neurodiverse behaviors are often due to differences in brain functioning rather than conscious thinking or emotions. Cognition involves the interaction between the brain, body and environment through embodied, embedded, enactive and extended processes rather than occurring only in the mind.

Uploaded by

Brian Chao
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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● Cortico-basal ganglia loop is responsible for intention programs

○ Start, continue, stop, or inhibit movements


● Cerebro-cerebellar circuit is responsible for fine tuning movements, thoughts, language
○ Controls rate, rhythm, and force of movements

● Certain things have to be automatic:


○ Attention is like a spotlight; certain people put all of spotlight on certain actions
■ E.g. if all of attention is on moving a pencil, it becomes very challenging to
automatize that movement to then focus on other things like writing a
story
○ E.g. can identify typically developing babies by observing micro-movements;
abnormal movement or lack of movement can indicate developmental issues
■ Connection between early gross motor skills and executive function as
well as global motor performance and executive function along with motor
coordination and executive function; cerebellar abnormalities found in
children with ADHD, AUT, and dyslexia
■ Misassumption that behaviors in classroom are due to thinking; however,
neurodiverse students who present neurobiological differences are not
always consciously aware of their actions
■ ** DO NOT ASSUME BEHAVIOR IS DUE TO CONSCIOUS THINKING
BUT ALSO DO NOT ASSUME THAT BEHAVIOR IS DUE TO A DEEP
SEATED EMOTIONAL ISSUE. SOMETIMES IT IS SIMPLY THE WAY
THEIR BRAIN WORKS
● Implication is change affordances in the classroom (e.g.
accommodations)

● 4E Cognition: Embodied, embedded, enactive, extended cognition: cognition not just in


the head; it involves the body as well as the whole environment (brain, body,
environment gestalt)
○ Embodied (Thompson & Roche, embodied mind): talks about how body
contributes toward cognitive processes
■ E.g. hands: if we did not have hands, we would have had a very different
brain; brain co-evolved with the body
○ Embedded: works under assumption that body is coupled with the environment;
environment is physical, social, and cultural that are all shaped by different
features of the environment; environment helps define different affordances
(opportunities for action)
○ Enactive: embodied in environment and our primary relationship is geared
toward action; we see the environment in terms of what we can do; tied to
affordances; we are attuned based on practicality of what we can do
○ Extended: develops out of theory of distributed cognition; makes strong claims
about role of instruments and tools and how they relate to cognition; involves
process of using instruments as vehicles of cognition
○ Empathy (maybe): involves how we form relationships with one another
○ Affective (maybe): also about affective processes like hunger, emotion, and
fatigue
■ Relates to Damasio’s research; argues that we cannot talk about
cognition as if it were divorced from affective factors or emotion;
motivation and perception of environment are based on affective factors
that are embodied

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