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BIOPSYCHOLOGY
Biopsychology is one of
"the most rapidly progressing fields of science. This edition of Biopsychology has
kept abreast of recent developments; it contains approximately 430 references to articles
that have been published since the last edition. Indeed, these additions have dictated
changes to many parts of this text.
Changes to This Edition
The following is a list of
some of the topics that receive more or better coverage in this edition than in the last:
cognitive neuroscience
thinking about evolution
mitochondrial DNA
the human genome project
functions of the autonomic
nervous system
metabotropic and ionotropic
receptors
ligands and ligand-gated
channels
human brain scanning
approaches to
neuropsychological testing
genetic engineering
transgenetic animal models
necrosis and apoptosis
ischemic brain damage
search for a Parkinson's gene
two streams of visual
cortical analysis
secondary auditory cortex
anterior cingulate cortex and
pain
conscious awareness
selective attention
change blindness
secondary motor cortex
somatotopic organization of
the motor cortex
cerebellum and learning
ob/ob mice
leptin
calorie restriction and
health
neuroanatomy of osmoreceptors
update on the notorious case
of ablatio penis
sexual attraction
genetics of circadian rhythms
polyphasic sleep and sleep
reduction
melatonin and sleep
theories of hippocampal
function
functional brain imaging and
memory
memory and the striatum
theories of drug conditioning
methamphetamine and ecstasy
stem cells
human studies of
neuroplasticity
genetic treatments of brain
disorders
dyslexia
functional brain imaging and
language
lateralization of memory
diathesis-stress model
ulcers, infection, and stress
culture and depression
beneficial effects of sleep
deprivation on depression
Learning Aids
Biopsychology has four
features that are expressly designed to help students learn and remember the material:
I boldfaced key terms and
their marginal definitions- additional key terms of less importance appear in italics;
I study exercises that occur
in the chapters at key transition points, where students can benefit most from pausing to
consolidate preceding material before continuing;
I food-for-thought discussion
questions at the end of each chapter;
I appendices, which serve as
convenient sources of important information that is too detailed for some students of
biopsychology.
Illustrations
The illustrations in
Biopsychology are special. This is because each illustration was conceptualized and
designed by a scientist-artist team who were uniquely qualified to create illustrations to
clarify and reinforce the text. This uniquely qualified team was my wife, Maggie, with
occasional suggestions from me.
550 pages