000 01695nam a2200241Ia 4500
008 240430s2009 xx 000 0 und d
040 _cManila Tytana Colleges
100 _aDiamond, Adele.
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245 0 _aAll or none hypothesis :
_ba global-default mode that characterize the brain and mind /
_cAdele Diamond
260 _cJanuary 2009
336 _atext
337 _avolume
338 _aunmediated
440 _n45 : 1, pages 130-138
_aDevelopmental Psychology
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520 _aIt is proposed that the mind and brain often work at a gross level and only with fine tuning or inhibition act in a more differentiated manner, even when one might think the domains being issued the global command should be distinct. This applies to disparate findings in cognitive science and neuroscience in both children and adults. Thus, it is easier to switch everything, or nothing, than to switch one thing (the rule one is following or which button to press) but not the other. It is easier to issue the same command to both hands than to move only one hand. If one needs to respond to the opposite (or antonym) of a stimulus, one is faster if the correct response is to the side opposite the stimulus. People tend to think of the nervous system as sending out very precise commands only to the relevant recipient, but it appears that often the command goes out more globally and then parts of the system need to be inhibited from acting on the command.
521 _aPsychology.
650 _aBimanual coordination.
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650 _aCard sort test.
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650 _aInhibition.
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650 _aSimon effect.
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650 _aTask switching.
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942 _cA
999 _c86557
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