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Use of Modern Technology

Use of Modern Technology. Investigating the relationship between cognitive factors and behavior. Neuro-imaging techniques Obtain images of brain functioning and structures Understand relationship between cognitive processes and behavior. PET. Positron Emission Tomography

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Use of Modern Technology

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  1. Use of Modern Technology Investigating the relationship between cognitive factors and behavior

  2. Neuro-imaging techniques • Obtain images of brain functioning and structures • Understand relationship between cognitive processes and behavior

  3. PET • Positron Emission Tomography • Scanning method that can measure important functions in the brain – glucose assumption, blood flow • Detect brain tumors or memory disorders due to Alzheimer’s • Able to identify cellular-level metabolic changes

  4. New York University of Medicine • Developed brain-scan-based computer program that measures metabolic activity in hippocampus • PET Scan + computer program • Showed that in early stages of Alzheimer’s, there is reduction in brain metabolism (Lisa Mosconi 2005) even before the patients have detected something themselves

  5. MRI • Magnetic Resonance Imaging • Provides 3-dimensional picture of brain structures • Work by detecting changes in use of oxygen in blood • When area of brain is more active, it uses more oxygen • Used to monitor areas when performing cognitive tasks

  6. Case studies • HM • Clive Wearing • Bothhad MRI scanning that showedwheretheirbraindamagehadhappenedwhichprovidedinsightinto the relationshipbetweencognitivefactor and behaviour

  7. Task • Read the section on p. 87 and answer the followingquestions: • Whatdid Kilts investigate? • Whatdid Kilts foundout? • Whattype of scanwasused in the tests? • What are somefearsabout this kind of research (or findings) for the future?

  8. Videos • Can brain scans tell us who makes a good chief executive? By Rory Cellan-Jones Technology correspondent, BBC News • http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-11730685 • Brain scan research 'reconstructs images from human minds' http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZieFvCtMCc0

  9. Scanners can detect blood flow • Produces map showing which part of the brain is involved with a specific mental process

  10. Role of Brain in Product Preferences • Clinton Klits, Emory University, 2003 • Self-selected sample of volunteers • Ask to rate number of consumer goods (points according to attractiveness) • Participants were put into MRI scanner • Asked to rate pictures shown while scanner registered brain activity • Found out, there was activity in medial prefrontal cortex, as participants rated a product attractive

  11. Medial Prefrontal Cortex • Plan complex cognitive behaviors • Basic activity is orchestration of thoughts and actions in accordance to internal goals

  12. Pepsi or Coca Cola? • Read Montague, Baylor College of Medicine • Invited 70 participants to a blind taste-test of cola • Pepsi was more preferred • When consumers were told which brand of cola during taste-test, they preferred Coca Cola • Found activity in ventral putamen of brain

  13. Ventral Putamen • Round structure located in forebrain • Regulate movements and influence learning • rou

  14. Understanding of what happens in consumers’ heads when making a decision of consumer brands • Klits works with the US company Bright House Institute • Department for neurostrategy • You can use knowledge from neuromarketing to make tools for testing efficiency of marketing campaigns

  15. HOWEVER • Not everyone is happy about this development • Manipulation of people to serve your own ends

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