
doi: 10.1007/bf00922529
pmid: 187637
Attention or "concentration" requires control of activity in those excess neurons that are not necessary for the present task. The control is probably not a massive inhibitory suppression but may be a recruiting process, a function of complex perceptual and associative learning that begins with early experience. Inhibition, however, may still be of crucial importance as a sharpener of associative mechanisms, and the child with minimal brain damage may have suffered a selective loss of inhibitory neurons.
Auditory Perception, Visual Perception, Brain, Humans, Learning, Attention, Neural Inhibition, Child, Synaptic Transmission
Auditory Perception, Visual Perception, Brain, Humans, Learning, Attention, Neural Inhibition, Child, Synaptic Transmission
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