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Reciprocal Relations Between Cognitive Neuroscience and Cognitive Models: Opposites Attract?

posted Apr 10, 2011 10:19 PM by Perception Lab
New paper accepted at Trends in Cogntive Science: B. Forstmann, E.J. Wagenmakers, T. Eichele, S. Brown, J. Serences

Cognitive neuroscientists study how the brain implements particular cognitive processes such as perception, learning, and decision-making. Traditional approaches in which experiments are designed to target a specific cognitive process have been supplemented by two recent innovations. First, formal cognitive models can decompose observed behavioral data into multiple latent cognitive processes, allowing brain measurements to be associated with a particular cognitive process more precisely and more confidently. Second, cognitive neuroscience can provide additional data to inform the development of formal cognitive models, providing greater constraint than behavioral data alone. We argue that these fields are mutually dependent: not only can models guide neuroscientific endeavors, but understanding neural mechanisms can provide key insights into formal models of cognition.