Why Cognitive Psychologists Should Know Comparative Psychology; Why Comparative Psychologists Should Know Cognitive Psychology [PDF]
David J. Smith
openalex +1 more source
Deep Brain Stimulation for VPS16‐Related Dystonia: A Multicenter Study
Objective The objective was to evaluate the effects of deep brain stimulation (DBS) in an international cohort of patients with VPS16‐related dystonia. Methods This observational study collected preoperative and postoperative demographic, clinical, stimulation, genetic, neuroimaging, and neurophysiological data of medically refractory DYT‐VPS16 ...
Tatiana Svorenova+46 more
wiley +1 more source
Analysis of the role of social support - cognitive psychology and emotional process approach. [PDF]
Heydari M+6 more
europepmc +1 more source
Within-subject mediation analysis for experimental data in cognitive psychology and neuroscience
Matti Vuorre, N. Bolger
semanticscholar +1 more source
Quantifying Imperfect Cognition Via Achieved Information Gain
Cognition, the processing of information in the form of inference, communication, and memorization, is the central activity of any intelligence. To quantify imperfect cognition, the concept of achieved information gain (AIG) is introduced. AIG can be derived axiomatically, allows cognitive fidelity and efficiency to be defined mathematically, and ...
Torsten Enßlin
wiley +1 more source
GUTS IN THE EDGE OF WEALTH: An inquiry to human creativeness [PDF]
Creativeness has been a hot topic of human intelligence system underlying innovations, discoveries, and many novelties brought to the enrichment of human civilization.
Hokky Situngkir, Rendra Suroso
core
Some Implications of Cognitive Psychology for Risk Regulation
Roger G. Noll, James E. Krier
openalex +2 more sources
The role of positive psychology constructs in predicting life satisfaction in adolescents with and without cognitive disabilities: An exploratory study [PDF]
Karrie A. Shogren+4 more
openalex +1 more source
Linking individual variation in facial musculature to facial behavior in rhesus macaques
Abstract Facial expression is a key component of primate communication, and primates (including humans) have a complex system of facial musculature underpinning this behavior. Human facial musculature is highly variable across individuals, but to date, whether other primate species exhibit a similar level of inter‐individual variation is unknown ...
Clare M. Kimock+7 more
wiley +1 more source