Spatial choices of animals based on abstract visual stimuli: Configuration or shape?
Volba prostoru u zvířat na základě abstraktních vizuálních stimulů: Konfigurace nebo tvar?
dizertační práce (OBHÁJENO)
Zobrazit/ otevřít
Trvalý odkaz
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/8891Identifikátory
SIS: 140037
Kolekce
- Kvalifikační práce [1780]
Autor
Vedoucí práce
Oponent práce
Syka, Josef
Kršiak, Miloslav
Frynta, Daniel
Fakulta / součást
2. lékařská fakulta
Obor
-
Katedra / ústav / klinika
Mimofakultní pracoviště
Datum obhajoby
8. 1. 2007
Nakladatel
Univerzita Karlova, 2. lékařská fakultaJazyk
Angličtina
Známka
Prospěl/a
Volba prostoru u zvířat na základě abstraktních vizuálních stimulů: Konfigurace nebo tvar? Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)
Spatial cognition as a model for study of learning, memory and problem solving has a long history in neurosciences. This cognitive ability is used for several reasons. Firstly, the ability to form the inner representation of a space, to orient in an environment, to perceive positions of prominent objects and of other animals is essential for all mammals and birds. Thus it is natural for animals to perform such behavior even in experimental conditions. Secondly, it is possible to compare spatial cognition of different species in similar tasks. And thirdly, there are strong indices of the possible neuroanatomical substrate and mechanism underlying spatial cognition. There are different strategies of navigation in an environment, which could be distinguished by different criterions. They differ in the frames of reference in which the observer operates, i.e. whether the co-ordinates are centered in a subject (egocentric orientation) or whether the co-ordinates encode only the relations between objects and dominants in the environment and they are not dependent on observer (geocentric orientation). The navigational strategies also differ by the type of cues that are used for navigation. In allothetic orientation the subject employs external landmarks, which may be not only visual stimuli, but also the stimuli of...