Essays about: "Multisensory Experience"
Showing result 21 - 24 of 24 essays containing the words Multisensory Experience.
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21. The Virtual Self : Sensory-Motor Plasticity of Virtual Body-Ownership
University essay from Högskolan i Skövde/Institutionen för biovetenskapAbstract : The distinction between the sense of body-ownership and the sense of agency has attracted considerable empirical and theoretical interest lately. However, the respective contributions of multisensory and sensorimotor integration to these two varieties of body experience are still the subject of ongoing research. READ MORE
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22. Developing interactive interfaces for people with developmental disabilities to be used in Snoezelen environments
University essay from Lunds universitet/Certec - Rehabiliteringsteknik och DesignAbstract : Much of the equipment used in Snoezelen environments today is not interactive, and the equipment that is interactive can be hard for the user to access. By having interactive equipment in Snoezelen environments the user gets to experience and hopefully better understand the concept of cause and effect. READ MORE
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23. Evoked Multisensory Cortical Representations During Unisensory Stimulation
University essay from Institutionen för datavetenskap; Filosofiska fakultetenAbstract : The primary aim of this study was to establish whether redintegrative effects can be revealed under conditions with complex sensory stimulation. Specifically, would the cortical activity involved in the single-trial, passive encoding of a movie, be reactivated when subsequently exposed to a unisensory component of that movie, e.g. READ MORE
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24. The Mereological Self : A Multisensory Description of Self-Plasticity
University essay from Institutionen för kommunikation och informationAbstract : What am “I”? To what does the word “I” refer? The Self is a concept that feels intuitively obvious to us, but is nevertheless elusive to describe. Against a backdrop of theoretical speculation, this essay presents a basic exposition of the Self with the aid of recent advances in cognitive neuroscience to address one of its most confounding problems: How does the brain sustain the Self – our sense of bodily identity? What informs the question then is dealt with by providing a frame of reference based on the philosophical theory of mereology to contain the analysis (i. READ MORE