Physiological learning theory

J Abnorm Child Psychol. 1976;4(4):309-14. doi: 10.1007/BF00922529.

Abstract

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.

MeSH terms

  • Attention / physiology
  • Auditory Perception / physiology
  • Brain / physiology
  • Child
  • Humans
  • Learning / physiology*
  • Neural Inhibition
  • Synaptic Transmission
  • Visual Perception / physiology