A sequence of images, sounds, or words can be stored at several levels of detail, from specific items and their timing to abstract structure. We propose a taxonomy of five distinct cerebral mechanisms for sequence coding: transitions and timing knowledge, chunking, ordinal knowledge, algebraic patterns, and nested tree structures. In each case, we review the available experimental paradigms and list the behavioral and neural signatures of the systems involved. Tree structures require a specific recursive neural code, as yet unidentified by electrophysiology, possibly unique to humans, and which may explain the singularity of human language and cognition
Bahlmann J, Schubotz RI, Mueller JL, Koester D, Friederici AD. Neural circuits of hierarchical visuo...
Chunking is the process by which frequently repeated segments of temporal inputs are concatenated in...
Working memory capacity can be improved by recoding the memorized information in a condensed form. H...
International audienceA sequence of images, sounds, or words can be stored at several levels of deta...
The current research describes a functional trajectory from sensorimotor sequence learning to the le...
The current research describes a functional trajectory from sensorimotor sequence learning to the le...
Cognitive neuroscience approaches the brain as a cognitive system: a system that functionally is con...
In this work we explore how close the artificial intelligence community has come to model the human ...
Real-time estimation of what we will do next is a crucial prerequisite of purposive behavior. During...
According to the language-of-thought hypothesis, regular sequences are compressed in human memory us...
A crucial step towards the representation of structured, symbolic knowledge in a connectionist syste...
We are constantly processing sequential information in our day-to-day life, from listening to a piec...
Several organizational principles of the neocortex appear to imply a strong predisposition to acquir...
Chunking is the process by which frequently repeated segments of temporal inputs are concatenated in...
Many different aspects of cognitive function express themselves as structured temporal sequences. On...
Bahlmann J, Schubotz RI, Mueller JL, Koester D, Friederici AD. Neural circuits of hierarchical visuo...
Chunking is the process by which frequently repeated segments of temporal inputs are concatenated in...
Working memory capacity can be improved by recoding the memorized information in a condensed form. H...
International audienceA sequence of images, sounds, or words can be stored at several levels of deta...
The current research describes a functional trajectory from sensorimotor sequence learning to the le...
The current research describes a functional trajectory from sensorimotor sequence learning to the le...
Cognitive neuroscience approaches the brain as a cognitive system: a system that functionally is con...
In this work we explore how close the artificial intelligence community has come to model the human ...
Real-time estimation of what we will do next is a crucial prerequisite of purposive behavior. During...
According to the language-of-thought hypothesis, regular sequences are compressed in human memory us...
A crucial step towards the representation of structured, symbolic knowledge in a connectionist syste...
We are constantly processing sequential information in our day-to-day life, from listening to a piec...
Several organizational principles of the neocortex appear to imply a strong predisposition to acquir...
Chunking is the process by which frequently repeated segments of temporal inputs are concatenated in...
Many different aspects of cognitive function express themselves as structured temporal sequences. On...
Bahlmann J, Schubotz RI, Mueller JL, Koester D, Friederici AD. Neural circuits of hierarchical visuo...
Chunking is the process by which frequently repeated segments of temporal inputs are concatenated in...
Working memory capacity can be improved by recoding the memorized information in a condensed form. H...