A recurring question for cognitive science is whether functional neuroimaging data can provide evidence for or against psychological theories. As posed, the question reflects an adherence to a popular scientific method known as 'strong inference'. The method entails constructing multiple hypotheses (Hs) and designing experiments so that alternative possible outcomes will refute at least one (i.e., 'falsify' it). In this article, after first delineating some well-documented limitations of strong inference, I provide examples of functional neuroimaging data being used to test Hs from rival modular information-processing models of spoken word production. 'Strong inference' for neuroimaging involves first establishing a systematic mapping of 'p...
A common goal of neuroimaging research is to use imaging data to identify the mental processes that ...
Cognitive neuroscientists habitually deny that functional neuroimaging can furnish causal informatio...
At the outset, let us accept that our object of study is the linguistic system of the individual. Su...
A recurring question for cognitive science is whether functional neuroimaging data can provide evide...
Work on functional neuroimaging of cognition falls into two categories. The first aims at localizing...
Evidence from functional neuroimaging (NI) is often used to support cognitive hypotheses. The natur...
Evidence from functional neuroimaging (NI) is often used to support cognitive hypotheses. The nature...
Cognitive scientists were not quick to embrace the functional neuroimaging technologies that emerged...
Functional imaging has become a primary tool in the study of human psychology but is not without its...
How likely are published findings in the functional neuroimaging literature to be false? According t...
The aim of this article is to discuss the conditions under which functional neuroimaging can contrib...
Exploring information processing mechanisms in the human brain is of significant importance to the d...
The manner in which we judge multiple hypotheses and consider multiple items of evidence is fundamen...
In this paper, I critically review the usefulness of functional neuroimaging to the cognitive psycho...
Considerable methodological difficulties abound in neuroimaging and several philosophers of science ...
A common goal of neuroimaging research is to use imaging data to identify the mental processes that ...
Cognitive neuroscientists habitually deny that functional neuroimaging can furnish causal informatio...
At the outset, let us accept that our object of study is the linguistic system of the individual. Su...
A recurring question for cognitive science is whether functional neuroimaging data can provide evide...
Work on functional neuroimaging of cognition falls into two categories. The first aims at localizing...
Evidence from functional neuroimaging (NI) is often used to support cognitive hypotheses. The natur...
Evidence from functional neuroimaging (NI) is often used to support cognitive hypotheses. The nature...
Cognitive scientists were not quick to embrace the functional neuroimaging technologies that emerged...
Functional imaging has become a primary tool in the study of human psychology but is not without its...
How likely are published findings in the functional neuroimaging literature to be false? According t...
The aim of this article is to discuss the conditions under which functional neuroimaging can contrib...
Exploring information processing mechanisms in the human brain is of significant importance to the d...
The manner in which we judge multiple hypotheses and consider multiple items of evidence is fundamen...
In this paper, I critically review the usefulness of functional neuroimaging to the cognitive psycho...
Considerable methodological difficulties abound in neuroimaging and several philosophers of science ...
A common goal of neuroimaging research is to use imaging data to identify the mental processes that ...
Cognitive neuroscientists habitually deny that functional neuroimaging can furnish causal informatio...
At the outset, let us accept that our object of study is the linguistic system of the individual. Su...