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生物心理學(第9版英文版教育部高等學校心理學教學指導委員會推薦用書)
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【ISBN】9787115175236
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內容介紹



  • 出版社:人民郵電
  • ISBN:9787115175236
  • 作者:(美)詹姆斯·卡拉特
  • 頁數:582
  • 出版日期:2008-03-01
  • 印刷日期:2008-03-01
  • 包裝:平裝
  • 開本:16開
  • 版次:1
  • 印次:1
  • 字數:770千字
  • 本書分別論述了神經細胞與神經衝動、突觸、神經繫統的解剖構造、腦的發育和可塑性、感覺繫統、覺醒與睡眠、生殖行為、情緒行為、心理障礙等問題。為許多重大問題本質的理解提供了**好的觀點和視角,不僅向讀者展示了生理學方面的發展,還展示了神經科學、基因學以及進化心理學等領域的知識和成就。適合用作心理學專業、認知神經科學、醫學專業的教材或教學輔助材料。
  • 這是由詹姆斯·卡拉特撰寫的《生物心理學》到2007年已連續修訂至第 9版,多年來一直是該領域第一暢銷書,也是美國相應課程采用量最大的教 材。 全書共15章,分別論述了神經細胞與神經衝動、突觸、神經繫統的解剖 構造、腦的發育和可塑性、感覺繫統、覺醒與睡眠、生殖行為、情緒行為、 心理障礙等問題。 本書寫作風格清新幽默,詳略得當,案例豐富詳細,學術水平高,為許 多重大問題本質的理解提供了非常好的觀點和視角,不僅向讀者展示了生理 學方面的發展,還展示了神經科學、基因學以及進化心理學等領域的知識和 成就。 本書適合用作心理學專業、認知神經科學、醫學專業的教材或教學輔助 材料。
  • 1 The Major Issues 1
    Module 1.1 The Mind-Brain Relationship 2
     Biological Explanations of Behavior 3
     The Brain and Conscious Experience 5
     Research Approaches 7
      Career Opportunities 8
      In Closing: Your Brain and Your Experience 10
      Summary 10
     Answers to Stop & Check Questions 10
      Thought Questions 11
      Author’s Answer About Machine Consciousness 11
     Module 1.2 The Genetics of Behavior 12
     Mendelian Genetics 12
        Chromosomes and Crossing Over 13
       Sex-Linked and Sex-Limited Genes 13
        Sources of Variation 14
      Heredity and Environment 14
       Possible Complications 14
       Environmental Modification 15
       How Genes Affect Behavior 16
      The Evolution of Behavior 16
       Common Misunderstandings About Evolution 16
       Evolutionary Psychology 19
      In Closing: Genes and Behavior 20
      Summary 21
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 21
      Thought Questions 21
     Module 1.3 The Use of Animals in Research 22
      Reasons for Animal Research 22
      The Ethical Debate 23
      In Closing: Humans and Animals 25
      Summary 25
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 25
      Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
      Terms 26
      Suggestions for Further Reading 26
      Websites to Explore 26
      Exploring Biological Psychology CD 27
      ThomsonNOW 27
    2 Nerve Cells and Nerve Impulses 29
     Module 2.1 The Cells of the Nervous System 30
     Anatomy of Neurons and Glia 30
      EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Santiago Ramón y Cajal, a Pioneer of Neuroscience 30
      The Structures of an Animal Cell 31
      The Structure of a Neuron 32
      Variations Among Neurons 34
      Glia 35
     The Blood-Brain Barrier 36
      Why We Need a Blood-Brain Barrier 36
      How the Blood-Brain Barrier Works 36
     The Nourishment of Vertebrate Neurons 37
     In Closing: Neurons 37
     Summary 38
     Answers to Stop & Check Questions 38
     Module 2.2 The Nerve Impulse 39
     The Resting Potential of the Neuron 39
      Forces Acting on Sodium and Potassium Ions 40
      Why a Resting Potential? 41
     The Action Potential 42
      The Molecular Basis of the Action Potential 43
      The All-or-None Law 44
      The Refractory Period 44
     Propagation of the Action Potential 45
     The Myelin Sheath and Saltatory Conduction 46
     Local Neurons 47
      Graded Potentials 47
      EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Small Neurons and Big Misconceptions 47
     In Closing: Neural Messages 47
     Summary 48
     Answers to Stop & Check Questions 48
     Thought Questions 48
     Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
     Terms 49
     Suggestions for Further Reading 49
     Websites to Explore 49
     Exploring Biological Psychology CD 49
     ThomsonNOW 50
    3 Synapses 51
     Module 3.1 The Concept of the Synapse 52
     The Properties of Synapses 52
      Speed of a Reflex and Delayed Transmission at the Synapse 53
      Temporal Summation 53
      Spatial Summation 53
      Inhibitory Synapses 54
     Relationship Among EPSP, IPSP, and Action Potential 56
     In Closing: The Neuron as Decision Maker 56
     Summary 56
     Answers to Stop & Check Questions 56
     Thought Questions 57
     Module 3.2 Chemical Events at the Synapse 58
     The Discovery of Chemical Transmission at Synapses 58
     The Sequence of Chemical Events at a Synapse 59
      Types of Neurotransmitters 59
      Synthesis of Transmitters 60
      Transport of Transmitters 61
      Release and Diffusion of Transmitters 61
      Activation of Receptors of the Postsynaptic Cell 62
      Inactivation and Reuptake of Neurotransmitters 66
      Negative Feedback from the Postsynaptic Cell 67
      Synapses and Personality 67
       Intersexes 341
       Interests and Preferences of CAH Girls 342
       Testicular Feminization 343
       Issues of Gender Assignment and Rearing 343
       Discrepancies of Sexual Appearance 344
      Possible Biological Bases of Sexual Orientation 345
       Genetics 345
       Hormones 346
       Prenatal Events 347
       Brain Anatomy 348
      In Closing: We Are Not All the Same 349
      Summary 349
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 350
      Thought Questions 350
      Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
      Terms 351
      Suggestions for Further Reading 351
      Websites to Explore 351
      Exploring Biological Psychology CD 351
      ThomsonNOW 351
    12 Emotional Behaviors 353
     Module 12.1 What Is Emotion? 354
      Emotions, Autonomic Response, and the James-Lange Theory 354
       Is Physiological Arousal Necessary for Emotions? 355
       Is Physiological Arousal Sufficient for Emotions? 355
      Brain Areas Associated with Emotion 356
       Attempts to Localize Specific Emotions 357
       Contributions of the Left and Right Hemispheres 358
      The Functions of Emotions 359
      In Closing: Emotions and the Nervous System 360
      Summary 360
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 360
      Thought Question 360
     Module 12.2 Attack and Escape Behaviors 361
      Attack Behaviors 361
       Heredity and Environment in Violence 361
       Hormones 363
       Brain Abnormalities and Violence 363
       Serotonin Synapses and Aggressive Behavior 364
      Escape, Fear, and Anxiety 366
       Fear, Anxiety, and the Amygdala 366
       Studies of Rodents 366
       Studies of Monkeys 367
       Activation of the Human Amygdala 368
       Damage to the Human Amygdala 369
       METHODS 12.1 Microdialysis 371
       Anxiety-Reducing Drugs 371
       EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Alcohol as an Anxiety Reducer 373
      In Closing: Doing Something About Emotions 373
      Summary 374
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 374
      Thought Questions 375
     Module 12.3 Stress and Health 376
      Concepts of Stress 376
      Stress and the Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Adrenal Cortex Axis 376
       The Immune System 377
       Effects of Stress on the Immune System 378
      Posttraumatic Stress Disorder 379
      In Closing: Emotions and Body Reactions 380
      Summary 380
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 380
      Thought Question 380
      Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
      Terms 381
      Suggestions for Further Reading 381
      Websites to Explore 381
      Exploring Biological Psychology CD 381
      ThomsonNOW 381
    13 The Biology of Learning and Memory 383
     Module 13.1 Learning, Memory, Amnesia, and Brain Functioning 384
      Localized Representations of Memory 384
       Lashley’s Search for the Engram 384
       The Modern Search for the Engram 386
      Types of Memory 387
       Short- and Long-Term Memory 387
       Working Memory 389
      The Hippocampus and Amnesia 389
       Amnesia After Hippocampal Damage 390
       Individual Differences in Hippocampus and Memory 393
       Theories of the Function of the Hippocampus 393
       The Hippocampus and Consolidation 397
      Other Types of Brain Damage and Amnesia 398
       Korsakoff’s Syndrome and Other Prefrontal Damage 398
       Alzheimer’s Disease 399
       What Patients with Amnesia Teach Us 401
      In Closing: Different Types of Memory 402
      Summary 402
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 402
      Thought Questions 403
     Module 13.2 Storing Information in the Nervous System 404
       EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Blind Alleys and Abandoned Mines 404
      Learning and the Hebbian Synapse 405
      Single-Cell Mechanisms of Invertebrate Behavior Change 406
       Aplysia as an Experimental Animal 406
       Habituation in Aplysia 406
       Sensitization in Aplysia 406
      Long-Term Potentiation in Mammals 408
       Biochemical Mechanisms 408
       LTP and Behavior 410
      In Closing: The Physiology of Memory 411
      Summary 411
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 412
      Thought Question 412
      Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
      Terms 412
      Suggestion for Further Reading 413
      Websites to Explore 413
      Exploring Biological Psychology CD 413
      ThomsonNOW 413
    14 Cognitive Functions 415
     Module 14.1 Lateralization of Function 416
      Handedness and Its Genetics 416
      The Left and Right Hemispheres 417
      Visual and Auditory Connections to the Hemispheres 418
      Cutting the Corpus Callosum 419
       METHODS 14.1 Testing Hemispheric Dominance for Speech 421
       Split Hemispheres: Competition and Cooperation 421
       The Right Hemisphere 423
       Hemispheric Specializations in Intact Brains 424
      Development of Lateralization and Handedness 424
       Anatomical Differences Between the Hemispheres 425
       Maturation of the Corpus Callosum 425
       Development Without a Corpus Callosum 426
       Hemispheres, Handedness, and Language Dominance 426
       Recovery of Speech After Brain Damage 426
      Avoiding Overstatements 427
      In Closing: One Brain, Two Hemispheres 427
      Summary 427
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 428
      Thought Question 428
     Module 14.2 Evolution and Physiology of Language 429
      Nonhuman Precursors of Language 429
       Common Chimpanzees 429
       Bonobos 429
       Nonprimates 430
      How Did Humans Evolve Language? 432
       Language as a Product of Overall Intelligence 432
       Language as a Special Module 434
       Does Language Learning Have a Critical Period? 434
      Brain Damage and Language 435
       Broca’s Aphasia (Nonfluent Aphasia) 435
       Wernicke’s Aphasia (Fluent Aphasia) 437
      Dyslexia 438
      In Closing: Language and the Brain 440
      Summary 440
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 441
      Thought Questions 441
     Module 14.3 Attention 442
      Alterations in Brain Responses 442
      Neglect 443
      Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder 444
       Measurements of ADHD Behavior 445
       Possible Causes and Brain Differences 445
       Treatments 446
      In Closing: Attending to Attention 446
      Summary 446
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 447
      Thought Question 447
      Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
      Terms 448
      Suggestions for Further Reading 448
      Websites to Explore 448
      Exploring Biological Psychology CD 448
      ThomsonNOW 449
    15 Psychological Disorders 451
     Module 15.1 Substance Abuse and Addictions 452
      Synapses, Reinforcement, and Addiction 452
       Reinforcement and the Nucleus Accumbens 452
       Addiction as Increased “Wanting” 452
       Sensitization of the Nucleus Accumbens 453
      Alcohol and Alcoholism 454
       Genetics 454
       Risk Factors 455
      Medications to Combat Substance Abuse 456
       Antabuse 456
       Methadone 456
      In Closing: Addictions 457
      Summary 457
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 458
      Thought Question 458
     Module 15.2 Mood Disorders 459
      Major Depressive Disorder 459
       Genetics and Life Events 459
       Hormones 460
       Abnormalities of Hemispheric Dominance 461
       Viruses 461
       Antidepressant Drugs 462
       EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Accidental Discoveries of Psychiatric Drugs 462
       Other Therapies 464
      Bipolar Disorder 466
       Genetics 467
       Treatments 467
      Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) 467
      In Closing: The Biology of Mood Swings 468
      Summary 468
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 469
      Thought Question 469
     Module 15.3 Schizophrenia 470
      Characteristics 470
       Behavioral Symptoms 470
       EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Differential Diagnosis of Schizophrenia 471
       Demographic Data 471
      Genetics 472
       Twin Studies 472
       Adopted Children Who Develop Schizophrenia 472
       Efforts to Locate a Gene 472
      The Neurodevelopmental Hypothesis 473
       Prenatal and Neonatal Environment 473
       Mild Brain Abnormalities 474
       METHODS 15.1 The Wisconsin Card Sorting Task 475
       Early Development and Later Psychopathology 476
      Neurotransmitters and Drugs 477
       Antipsychotic Drugs and Dopamine 477
       Role of Glutamate 478
       New Drugs 479
      In Closing: The Fascination of Schizophrenia 480
      Summary 480
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 481
      Thought Questions 481
      Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
      Terms 482
      Suggestions for Further Reading 482
      Websites to Explore 483
      Exploring Biological Psychology CD 483
      ThomsonNOW 483
    A Brief, Basic Chemistry 485
    B Society for Neuroscience Policies on the Use of Animals and Human Subjects in Neuroscience Research 491
    References 494
    Name Index 550
    Subject Index/Glossary 565
     In Closing: Neurotransmitters and Behavior 68
     Summary 68
     Answers to Stop & Check Questions 68
     Thought Questions 69
     Module 3.3 Drugs and Synapses 70
     Drug Mechanisms 71
     Common Drugs and Their Synaptic Effects 71
      Stimulant Drugs 71
      Nicotine 73
      Opiates 74
      Marijuana 74
      Hallucinogenic Drugs 75
     In Closing: Drugs and Behavior 76
     Summary 76
     Answers to Stop & Check Questions 77Thought Question 77
     Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
     Terms 78
     Suggestions for Further Reading 78
     Websites to Explore 78
     Exploring Biological Psychology CD 78
     ThomsonNOW 79
    4 Anatomy of the Nervous System 81
     Module 4.1 Structure of the Vertebrate Nervous System 82
     Terminology That Describes the Nervous System 82
     The Spinal Cord 84
     The Autonomic Nervous System 85
      EXTENSION AND APPLICATIONS Goose Bumps 85
     The Hindbrain 87
     The Midbrain 89
     The Forebrain 89
      Thalamus 91
      Hypothalamus 92
      Pituitary Gland 92
      Basal Ganglia 92
      Basal Forebrain 93
      Hippocampus 93
     The Ventricles 94
     In Closing: Learning Neuroanatomy 95
     Summary 95
     Answers to Stop & Check Questions 95
     Thought Question 95
     Module 4.2 The Cerebral Cortex 96
     Organization of the Cerebral Cortex 96
     The Occipital Lobe 98
     The Parietal Lobe 98
     The Temporal Lobe 98
     The Frontal Lobe 100
      EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS The Rise and Fall of Prefrontal Lobotomies 100
      Modern View of the Prefrontal Cortex 101
     How Do the Parts Work Together? 101
     In Closing: Functions of the Cerebral Cortex 103
     Summary 103
     Answers to Stop & Check Questions 104
     Thought Question 104
     Module 4.3 Research Methods 105
     Correlating Brain Anatomy with Behavior 105
     Recording Brain Activity 107
     Effects of Brain Damage 109
     Effects of Brain Stimulation 111
     Brain and Intelligence 112
      Comparisons Across Species 112
      Comparisons Across Humans 113
     In Closing: Research Methods and Their Limits 115
     Summary 116
     Answers to Stop & Check Questions 116
     Thought Question 116
     Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
     Terms 117
     Suggestions for Further Reading 118
     Websites to Explore 118
     Exploring Biological Psychology CD 118
     ThomsonNOW 119
    5 Development and Plasticity of the Brain 121
     Module 5.1 Development of the Brain 122
     Growth and Differentiation of the Vertebrate Brain 122
      Growth and Development of Neurons 122
      New Neurons Later in Life 125
     Pathfinding by Axons 125
      Chemical Pathfinding by Axons 125
      Competition Among Axons as a General Principle 127
     Determinants of Neuronal Survival 128
     The Vulnerable Developing Brain 129
     Fine-Tuning by Experience 131
      Experience and Dendritic Branching 131
      Effects of Special Experiences 132
     In Closing: Brain Development 135
     Summary 135
     Answers to Stop & Check Questions 136
     Thought Questions 136
     Module 5.2 Plasticity After Brain Damage 137
     Brain Damage and Short-Term Recovery 137
      EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS How Woodpeckers Avoid Concussions 137
      Reducing the Harm from a Stroke 137
     Later Mechanisms of Recovery 139
      Diaschisis 139
      The Regrowth of Axons 140
      Sprouting 141
      Denervation Supersensitivity 141
      Reorganized Sensory Representations and the Phantom Limb 142
      METHODS 5.1 Histochemistry 143
      Learned Adjustments in Behavior 144
     In Closing: Brain Damage and Recovery 146
     Summary 146
     Answers to Stop & Check Questions 147
     Thought Questions 147
     Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
     Terms 147
     Suggestions for Further Reading 148
     Websites to Explore 148
     Exploring Biological Psychology CD 149
     ThomsonNOW 149
    6 Vision 151
     Module 6.1 Visual Coding and the Retinal Receptors 152
      General Principles of Perception 152
       From Neuronal Activity to Perception 152
       Law of Specific Nerve Energies 152
      The Eye and Its Connections to the Brain 153
       The Route Within the Retina 153
       Fovea and Periphery of the Retina 155
      Visual Receptors: Rods and Cones 156
      Color Vision 157
       The Trichromatic (Young-Helmholtz) Theory 158
       The Opponent-Process Theory 159
       The Retinex Theory 161
       Color Vision Deficiency 163
       EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS People with Four Cone Types 163
      In Closing: Visual Receptors 164
      Summary 164
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 164
      Thought Question 165
     Module 6.2 The Neural Basis of Visual Perception 166
      An Overview of the Mammalian Visual System 166
      Processing in the Retina 167
      Pathways to the Lateral Geniculate and Beyond 169
      Pattern Recognition in the Cerebral Cortex 171
       Pathways in the Visual Cortex 171
       The Shape Pathway 173
       METHODS 6.1 Microelectrode Recordings 173
       The Columnar Organization of the Visual Cortex 175
       Are Visual Cortex Cells Feature Detectors? 175
       Shape Analysis Beyond Area V1 176
      Disorders of Object Recognition 177
      The Color, Motion, and Depth Pathways 179
       Structures Important for Motion Perception 179
       EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Suppressed Vision During Eye Movements 180
       Motion Blindness 181
      Visual Attention 181
      In Closing: From Single Cells to Vision 182
      Summary 182
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 183
      Thought Question 183
     Module 6.3 Development of Vision 184
      Infant Vision 184
       Attention to Faces and Face Recognition 184
       Visual Attention and Motor Control 184
      Early Experience and Visual Development 185
       Early Lack of Stimulation of One Eye 185
       Early Lack of Stimulation of Both Eyes 186
       Uncorrelated Stimulation in the Two Eyes 186
       Restoration of Response After Early Deprivation of Vision 187
       Early Exposure to a Limited Array of Patterns 187
       People with Vision Restored After Early Deprivation 188
      In Closing: The Nature and Nurture of Vision 190
      Summary 190
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 191
      Thought Questions 191
     Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
      Terms 192
      Suggestions for Further Reading 192
      Websites to Explore 192
      Exploring Biological Psychology CD 193
      ThomsonNOW 193
    7 The Other Sensory Systems 195
     Module 7.1 Audition 196
      Sound and the Ear 196
       Physical and Psychological Dimensions of Sound 196
       Structures of the Ear 196
      Pitch Perception 198
       Frequency Theory and Place Theory 198
       The Auditory Cortex 199
       Hearing Loss 201
      Sound Localization 202
      In Closing: Functions of Hearing 203
      Summary 204
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 204
      Thought Questions 204
     Module 7.2 The Mechanical Senses 205
      Vestibular Sensation 205
      Somatosensation 206
       Somatosensory Receptors 206
       EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Tickle 206
       Input to the Spinal Cord and the Brain 208
      Pain 209
       Pain Stimuli and the Pain Pathways 209
       Ways of Relieving Pain 210
       Sensitization of Pain 212
      Itch 213
      In Closing: The Mechanical Senses 213
      Summary 213
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 214
      Thought Question 214
     Module 7.3 The Chemical Senses 215
      General Issues About Chemical Coding 215
      Taste 216
       Taste Receptors 216
       How Many Kinds of Taste Receptors? 216
       EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Chemicals That Alter the Taste Buds 216
       Mechanisms of Taste Receptors 218
       Taste Coding in the Brain 218
       Individual Differences in Taste 219
      Olfaction 220
       Behavioral Methods of Identifying Olfactory Receptors 221
       Biochemical Identification of Receptor Types 222
       Implications for Coding 223
       Messages to the Brain 223
       Individual Differences 223
      Vomeronasal Sensation and Pheromones 224
      Synesthesia 225
      In Closing: Different Senses as Different Ways of Knowing the World 226
      Summary 226
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 227
     Thought Questions 227
      Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
      Terms 228
      Suggestions for Further Reading 228
      Websites to Explore 228
      Exploring Biological Psychology CD 228
      ThomsonNOW 229
    8 Movement 231
     Module 8.1 The Control of Movement 232
      Muscles and Their Movements 232
       Fast and Slow Muscles 234
       Muscle Control by Proprioceptors 235
      Units of Movement 236
       Voluntary and Involuntary Movements 236
       EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Infant Reflexes 236
       Movements with Different Sensitivity to Feedback 238
       Sequences of Behaviors 238
      In Closing: Categories of Movement 239
      Summary 239
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 239
      Thought Question 239
     Module 8.2 Brain Mechanisms of Movement 240
      The Cerebral Cortex 241
       Connections from the Brain to the Spinal Cord 243
       Areas Near the Primary Motor Cortex 244
       Conscious Decisions and Movements 245
      The Cerebellum 247
       Evidence of a Broad Role 248
       Cellular Organization 249
      The Basal Ganglia 250
      Brain Areas and Motor Learning 251
      In Closing: Movement Control and Cognition 251
      Summary 252
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 252
      Thought Question 253
     Module 8.3 Disorders of Movement 254
      Parkinson’s Disease 254
       Possible Causes 254
       L-Dopa Treatment 257
       Therapies Other Than L-Dopa 257
      Huntington’s Disease 258
       Heredity and Presymptomatic Testing 259
      In Closing: Heredity and Environment in Movement Disorders 261
      Summary 261
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 261
      Thought Questions 262
      Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
      Terms 262
      Suggestions for Further Reading 263
      Websites to Explore 263
      Exploring Biological Psychology CD 263
      ThomsonNOW 263
    9 Wakefulness and Sleep 265
     Module 9.1 Rhythms of Waking and Sleeping 266
      Endogenous Cycles 266
       Duration of the Human Circadian Rhythm 268
      Mechanisms of the Biological Clock 269
       The Suprachiasmatic Nucleus (SCN) 269
       The Biochemistry of the Circadian Rhythm 270
       Melatonin 271
      Setting and Resetting the Biological Clock 271
       Jet Lag 272
       Shift Work 272
       How Light Resets the SCN 273
      In Closing: Sleep-Wake Cycles 273
      Summary 274
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 274
      Thought Questions 274
     Module 9.2 Stages of Sleep and Brain Mechanisms 275
      The Stages of Sleep 275
      Paradoxical or REM Sleep 276
      Brain Mechanisms of Wakefulness and Arousal 277
       Brain Structures of Arousal and Attention 278
       Getting to Sleep 280
      Brain Function in REM Sleep 281
      Sleep Disorders 282
       Sleep Apnea 283
       Narcolepsy 283
       Periodic Limb Movement Disorder 284
       REM Behavior Disorder 284
       Night Terrors, Sleep Talking, and Sleepwalking 284
      In Closing: Stages of Sleep 284
      Summary 285
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 285
      Thought Question 285
     Module 9.3 Why Sleep? Why REM? Why Dreams? 286
      Functions of Sleep 286
       Sleep and Energy Conservation 286
       EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Hibernation 286
       Restorative Functions of Sleep 288
       Sleep and Memory 288
      Functions of REM Sleep 289
       Individual and Species Differences 289
       Effects of REM Sleep Deprivation 289
       Hypotheses 289
      Biological Perspectives on Dreaming 290
       The Activation-Synthesis Hypothesis 290
       The Clinico-Anatomical Hypothesis 291
      In Closing: Our Limited Self-Understanding 291
      Summary 291
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 292
      Thought Question 292
      Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
      Terms 292
      Suggestions for Further Reading 293
      Websites to Explore 293
      Exploring Biological Psychology CD 293
      ThomsonNOW 293
    10 Internal Regulation 295
     Module 10.1 Temperature Regulation 296
      Homeostasis and Allostasis 297
      Controlling Body Temperature 297
       EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Surviving in Extreme Cold 298
       The Advantages of Constant High Body Temperature 299
       Brain Mechanisms 300
       Fever 300
      In Closing: Combining Physiological and Behavioral Mechanisms 301
      Summary 301
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 301
      Thought Question 302
     Module 10.2 Thirst 303
      Mechanisms of Water Regulation 303
      Osmotic Thirst 303
      Hypovolemic Thirst and Sodium-Specific Hunger 304
      In Closing: The Psychology and Biology of Thirst 306
      Summary 306
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 306
      Thought Questions 306
     Module 10.3 Hunger 307
      How the Digestive System Influences Food Selection 307
       Enzymes and Consumption of Dairy Products 308
       Other Influences on Food Selection 308
      Short- and Long-Term Regulation of Feeding 309
       Oral Factors 309
       The Stomach and Intestines 310
       Glucose, Insulin, and Glucagon 310
       Leptin 312
      Brain Mechanisms 313
       The Arcuate Nucleus and Paraventricular Hypothalamus 313
       The Lateral Hypothalamus 314
       Medial Areas of the Hypothalamus 315
      Eating Disorders 318
       Genetics and Body Weight 318
       Weight-Loss Techniques 319
       Anorexia Nervosa 319
       Bulimia Nervosa 320
      In Closing: The Multiple Controls of Hunger 320
      Summary 320
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 321
      Thought Question 322
      Chapter Ending Key Terms and Activities
      Terms 322
      Suggestions for Further Reading 323
      Websites to Explore 323
      Exploring Biological Psychology CD 323
      ThomsonNOW 323
    11 Reproductive Behaviors 325
     Module 11.1 Sex and Hormones 326
      Organizing Effects of Sex Hormones 327
       Sex Differences in the Gonads 327
       Sex Differences in the Hypothalamus 329
       Sex Differences in the Cerebral Cortex and Cognition 329
      Activating Effects of Sex Hormones 331
       Rodents 331
       Humans 331
      EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS Premenstrual Syndrome 334
      Parental Behavior 335
      In Closing: Reproductive Behaviors and Motivations 336
      Summary 337
      Answers to Stop & Check Questions 337
      Thought Questions 338
     Module 11.2 Variations in Sexual Behavior 339
      Evolutionary Interpretations of Mating Behavior 339
       Interest in Multiple Mates 339
       What Men and Women Seek in Their Mates 339
       Differences in Jealousy 340
       Evolved or Learned? 340
       Conclusions 340
      Gender Identity and Gender-Differentiated Behaviors 340
 
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