100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Class notes

Cognitive Neuropsychology B&C3 | Cognitive Neuropsychology, Radboud University, 2025. Lecture notes

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
76
Uploaded on
21-09-2025
Written in
2025/2026

Comprehensive lecture summaries and literature notes for Cognitive Neuropsychology (B&C3), covering methods, lesion logic, perception, attention, memory systems, language, emotion, social cognition and decision neuroscience. Includes paradigms (EEG/MEG/fMRI), key patient syndromes (aphasia, agnosia, amnesia, neglect), neural circuits and clinical implications, organized week-by-week for exam revision and advanced course preparation. Optimized for Radboud University students preparing seminars and assessments.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
September 21, 2025
Number of pages
76
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Unknown
Contains
All classes

Subjects

Content preview

Summary LITERATURE & LECTURES
B&C3: Cognitive Neuropsychology
(Radboud University Nijmegen)




Gedownload door: ikarumba316 | € 912 per jaar
Dit document is auteursrechtelijk beschermd, het verspreiden van dit document is strafbaar. extra verdienen?

,Intro / tools of neuropsychology
Why cognitive neuropsychology ? Mind vs. Brain:
- Descartes thought inputs are passed on by the sensory organs in the brain and from there to
the immaterial spirit (mind)
- Gall introduced the idea of localization of function → phrenology. He observed that some
people were good at doing something, but really bad at doing other things. He realized that
because of that there had to be some sort of specialization in certain parts of the brain.
- Broca found evidence for localization → found several patients with lesions in left frontal
cortex (Broca´s area)




→ if you want to understand behavior, you need to understand the brain!
Example for the fact that behavior arises from the brain: sea squirt eating its own brain once it
settled down at a spot where it can “rest”

Toolbox:
- To understand the brain and behavior, we have to combine different methods (converging
evidence: conclusions are stronger when supported by different approaches)

Cognitive psychology and behavioral research:
- We do not directly perceive the world, but interpret the incoming information
- Mental we can think of as an information processing problem → information processing
depends on pre-existing internal representations (beliefs, concepts, desires etc.).
- These mental representations undergo transformations
Case study: memory comparison task (Sternberg):
- Participant is presented with a set of one, two or four letters and asked to memorize them.
After a delay, a single probe latter appears and the participant indicates whether that letter
was a member of the memory set.
- Reaction time increases with set size, indicating that the target letter must be compared with
the memory set sequentially rather than in parallel.
- Encode: identify the visible target
- Compare: compare the mental representation of the target with the representations of the
items in memory
- Decide: decide whether the target matches one of the memorized items
- Respond: respond appropriately for the decision made in step 3




- Word superiority effect → participants are most accurate in identifying the target letter
when the stimuli are words


Gedownload door: ikarumba316 | € 912 per jaar
Dit document is auteursrechtelijk beschermd, het verspreiden van dit document is strafbaar. extra verdienen?

,Limitations in information processing also inform us about mental transformations:
- Incongruent Stroop condition shows that 2 representations are activated. “word”
representation is dominant, at least when reporting verbally.

Cognitive psychology uses behavioral tasks to study mental representations and transformations,
however, it cannot probe anything that is not expressed in behavior → no insight in how these
processes are implemented in the brain!

Context matters for information processing, because multiple representations may be activated by a
simple stimulus → letter-matching task (Michael Posner): participants press one of two buttons to
indicate if two letters belong to the same or different categories. Results showed that participants
respond fastest to the physical-identity (AA) condition and slowest to the same-category (SC) with
both consonants

Patient studies:
- Study how cognition breaks down may tell us about how it is organized
- Study the cognitive function of brain regions through brain damage
- Angiography → imaging method to evaluate the circulatory system in the brain and diagnose
disruptions in circulation
- Cerebral vascular accidents → occur when blood flow to the brain is suddenly disrupted
- Degenerative disorders → result from progressive disease and associated with both genetic
aberrations and environmental agents (Alzheimer´s, parkinson´s, Huntington´s etc.)
- Traumatic Brain Injury → the skull remains intact, but brain is damaged; increased pressure
causing decreased blood flow are the consequences
- Lesion studies may be used to link certain mental functions to specific brain structures
(comparing brain lesioned patients with healthy individuals). Limitations → analyzing
functions may not be easy since only the functional consequences are observable, lesions
may alter connected regions, there may be compensatory processes at play and there is
great variability in naturally occurring lesions

Cognition breaking down: single vs. double dissociation:
- Functions often have many components → what component leads to the disability in the
patient ? (bad performance on reading test may be caused by blindness, language disorder
etc.)
- Task sensitivity (is the task just more or less difficult) or selective impairment (is there really
a selective impairment)?
- People with damaged temporal lobe (important for memory). Temporal lobe patients are
particularly bad at familiarity memory, but not at recency memory. We could then conclude
that patients are particularly bad at familiarity memory tests (selective impairment), but we
could also conclude that familiarity memory tests are more difficult than recency memory
tests (task sensitivity).
- Frontal lobe patients have no problem with familiarity memory tests, but with recency
memory tests.

- In a single dissociation task, participants perform bad on only one task, so there is a
between-group difference in one task → conclusion could be that temporal lobe patients
have a problem with familiarity memory, but it could also be that familiarity tests are more
difficult than recency memory tests




Gedownload door: ikarumba316 | € 912 per jaar
Dit document is auteursrechtelijk beschermd, het verspreiden van dit document is strafbaar. extra verdienen?

, - Establishing a single dissociation between two functions provides limited and potentially
misleading information, whereas a double dissociation can conclusively demonstrate that the
two functions are localized in different areas of the brain.

- Double dissociation → one group of patients has a problem with one task and the other
with another task. That means it isn’t just that one task is more difficult than the other, but
that there really is a selective impairment. So, the third patient group shows the opposite
picture and therefore demonstrates that it is not just the task that is more difficult, but that
there has to be a selective impairment for the temporal lobe damaged patients




Dependent or independent functions?
- HM: impaired long-term memory but intact priming
- MS: impaired priming but intact working memory
- That destroys this model of how we think this processing happens, because somehow the
sensory input can go directly into episodic memory without needing the working memory
where priming happens. So, this tells us something about the dependency/independency of
functions!




Patient lesion research:
- Study the functional role of brain regions through brain damage → if part of brain is
important for particular function, this function will deteriorate after damage to this region
- If a patient has a lesion and can perform a particular task that means that he doesn’t require
this region to perform the task. However, that doesn’t mean that this brain region is not used
for the task in “normal” people. (patient without arms can open bottle with mouth, but that
doesn’t mean that people with two arms won´t open the bottle with their arms)
- Limitations → there are all sorts of compensation mechanisms when there are brain
lesions; damage location may vary between patients and there are no controlled ways of
studying brain damage!
- Solution animal studies ? → controlled, localized, replicable lesions

Methods to perturb mental function:
Example study for pharmacology:
- Dopamine has a selective reward-driven learning effect
- Group 1 was given Haloperidol (dopamine antagonist) and group 2 L-Dopa (dopamine
agonist) → group 2 won more in the learning task where the aim was to gain monetary
reward
- Shows the influence of pharmacology, however, a drawback is that you do not know how
much drug makes it to the point of interest in the brain



Gedownload door: ikarumba316 | € 912 per jaar
Dit document is auteursrechtelijk beschermd, het verspreiden van dit document is strafbaar. extra verdienen?

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
MedTechStudyHub Chamberlain College Of Nursing
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
30
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
2
Documents
1221
Last sold
1 week ago
BrainBooster

Get access to 100% verified exams, test banks, and study guides for ATI, NURSING, PMHNP, TNCC, USMLE, ACLS, WGU, and many more! We guarantee authentic, high-quality content designed to help you ace your exams with confidence. If you can’t find what you’re looking for, simply contact us — we’ll fetch it for you within minutes! ✅ Trusted by thousands of students ✅ Fast delivery & verified accuracy ✅ Guaranteed success on your next exam Buy with confidence — success starts here!

Read more Read less
4.4

11 reviews

5
7
4
2
3
1
2
1
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions