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  1.  15
    The Neuroscience of Freedom and Creativity: Our Predictive Brain.Joaquin M. Fuster - 2013 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Joaquín M. Fuster is an eminent cognitive neuroscientist whose research over the last five decades has made fundamental contributions to our understanding of the neural structures underlying cognition and behaviour. This book provides his view on the eternal question of whether we have free will. Based on his seminal work on the functions of the prefrontal cortex in decision-making, planning, creativity, working memory, and language, Professor Fuster argues that the liberty or freedom to choose between alternatives is a function of (...)
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  2. Cognit activation: a mechanism enabling temporal integration in working memory.Joaquín M. Fuster & Steven L. Bressler - 2012 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 16 (4):207.
  3.  17
    Call it what it is: Motor memory.Joaquin M. Fuster - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (2):208-208.
  4.  15
    In search of the engrammer.Joaquin M. Fuster - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (3):476-476.
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  5.  19
    Hebb's other postulate at work on words.Joaquín M. Fuster - 1999 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (2):288-289.
  6.  58
    More than working memory rides on long-term memory.Joaquín M. Fuster - 2003 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (6):737-737.
    Single-unit data from the cortex of monkeys performing working-memory tasks support the main point of the target article. Those data, however, also indicate that the activation of long-term memory is essential to the processing of all cognitive functions. The activation of cortical long-term memory networks is a key neural mechanism in attention (working memory is a form thereof), perception, memory acquisition and retrieval, intelligence, and language.
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  7.  20
    Not the module does memory make – but the network.Joaquin M. Fuster - 1995 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (4):631-633.
    This commentary questions the target articles inferences from a limited set of empirical data to support this model and conceptual scheme. Especially questionable is the attribution of internal representation properties to an assembly of cells in a discrete cortical module firing at a discrete attractor frequency. Alternative inferences are drawn from cortical cooling and cell-firing data that point to the internal representation as a broad and specific cortical network defined by cortico-cortical connectivity. Active memory, it is proposed, consists in the (...)
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  8.  27
    There is doing with and without knowing, at any rate, and at any level.Joaquín M. Fuster - 1997 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (4):748-748.
    Ballard et al.'s is a plausible and useful model. Leaving aside some unnecessary constraints, the model would probably be valid through a wider gamut of interactions between the self and the environment than the authors envision.
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  9.  29
    Up and down the frontal hierarchies; whither Broca's area?Joaquin M. Fuster - 1991 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 14 (4):558-558.