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Books in Neuroscience

Elsevier's Neuroscience collection empowers educators, researchers, and students with actionable knowledge to drive collaborative research and advancements in the field. Content covers the nervous system's intricate workings, covering branches like Affective, Behavioral, and Cognitive neuroscience to investigate the neural basis of emotions, behavior, and cognitive functions. Spanning from Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience to Developmental Neuroscience, content provides insights into brain function in health and disease.

    • Disorders of Consciousness

      • 1st Edition
      • Volume 90
      • June 6, 2008
      • G. Bryan Young + 1 more
      • English
      • Hardback
        9 7 8 0 4 4 4 5 1 8 9 5 8
      • eBook
        9 7 8 0 0 8 0 5 6 9 8 5 7
      This volume encompasses a variety of topics pertaining to patients with altered levels of consciousness, including valuable differences between disorders. Neurologists, researchers, and clinicians will find a comprehensive accounting of the distinctions between disorders that cause these altered states. Beginning with basic concepts of consciousness and neurobiology, this handbook progresses into more targeted and complex areas of discussion, including important technological advancements that have occurred in neuroimaging. Neurologists who are frequently called upon for prognostication and to guide management of patients with these disorders will find invaluable information, including chapters discussing comatose states in children and pregnant women, encephalopathic patients, nutrition disorders, and vegetative and minimally conscious states. In addition, chapters devoted to philosophical backgrounds and ethical implications involving patients with impaired consciousness, are thoroughly presented.
    • The Psychology of Learning and Motivation

      • 1st Edition
      • Volume 49
      • June 3, 2008
      • English
      • Hardback
        9 7 8 0 1 2 3 7 4 3 1 6 9
      • eBook
        9 7 8 0 0 8 0 9 2 1 6 8 6
      • eBook
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      The Psychology of Learning and Motivation publishes empirical and theoretical contributions in cognitive and experimental psychology, ranging from classical and instrumental conditioning to complex learning and problem solving. Volume 49 contains chapters on short-term memory, theory and measurement of working memory capacity limits, development of perceptual grouping in infancy, co-constructing conceptual domains through family conversations and activities, the concrete substrates of abstract rule use, ambiguity, accessibility, and a division of labor for communicative success, and lexical expertise and reading skill.
    • Handbook of Motivation and Cognition Across Cultures

      • 1st Edition
      • May 30, 2008
      • Richard Sorrentino + 1 more
      • English
      • Hardback
        9 7 8 0 1 2 3 7 3 6 9 4 9
      • eBook
        9 7 8 0 0 8 0 5 6 0 0 0 7
      In recent years there has been a wealth of new research in cognition, particularly in relation to supporting theoretical constructs about how cognitions are formed, processed, reinforced, and how they then affect behavior. Many of these theories have arisen and been tested in geographic isolation. It remains to be seen whether theories that purport to describe cognition in one culture will equally prove true in other cultures. The Handbook of Motivation and Cognition Across Cultures is the first book to look at these theories specifically with culture in mind. The book investigates universal truths about motivation and cognition across culture, relative to theories and findings indicating cultural differences. Coverage includes the most widely cited researchers in cognition and their theories- as seen through the looking glass of culture. The chapters include self-regulation by Tory Higgins, unconscious thought by John Bargh, attribution theory by Bernie Weiner, and self-verification by Bill Swann, among others. The book additionally includes some of the best new researchers in cross-cultural psychology, with contributors from Germany, New Zealand, Japan, Hong Kong, and Australia. In the future, culture may be the litmus test of a theory before it is accepted, and this book brings this question to the forefront of cognition research.
    • Neurologie du comportement

      • 1st Edition
      • May 13, 2008
      • Armin Schnider
      • French
      • Paperback
        9 7 8 2 2 9 4 0 6 8 2 4 9
      • eBook
        9 7 8 2 9 9 4 0 9 8 4 9 2
      À la confluence de la neurologie, de la neuropsychologie et de la psychiatrie, la neurologie comportementale est une spécialité qui s'intéresse aux troubles cognitifs, émotionnels et comportementaux dus à des atteintes cérébrales. Elle explore les mécanismes, la base anatomique et les étiologies des dysfonctionnements des fonctions supérieures du cerveau, telles que la mémoire, le langage, la pensée spatiale et le raisonnement. Conçu dans une approche clinique, cet ouvrage constitue une introduction approfondie à la neurologie du comportement. Après un rappel des bases anatomiques du cerveau, chaque chapitre traite successivement des principaux troubles : • État confusionnel et troubles de l'attention • Syndromes frontaux • Aphasies et syndromes apparentés • Troubles du traitement spatial • Agnosies • Troubles mnésiques • Syndromes calleux • Démences Ces troubles sont d'abord définis, puis passés au crible de l'analyse anatomoclinique afin d'en examiner les causes et l'évolution. Pour chacune de ces pathologies, les techniques d'évaluation sont détaillées en fonction du contexte clinique. Aussi, cet ouvrage présente un réel intérêt pratique et pédagogique à travers l'étude de nombreux cas cliniques, des propositions de tests adaptés, et de multiples schémas anatomiques et tableaux récapitulatifs.
    • Cytokines and the Brain

      • 1st Edition
      • Volume 6
      • May 8, 2008
      • English
      • Hardback
        9 7 8 0 4 4 4 5 3 0 4 1 7
      • eBook
        9 7 8 0 0 8 0 5 5 9 3 5 3
      This book opens a new page of neuro-immunobiology providing substantive experimental and clinical data to support current understanding in the field, and potential applications of this knowledge in the treatment of disease. The volume is a collection of complex, new data drawn from multiple areas of investigation in the field. The contents summarize current understanding on the presence and function of CNS cytokines and their receptors in a variety of CNS cells during health and disease. The chapters are a collection of complex, new data demonstrating the presence and synthesis of cytokines in brain cells, as well as their receptors on cell membranes in health and disease. The strength of the volume are the descriptions of the authors own investigations, together with those of others in the field pertaining to a large number of cytokines in brain function, as well as mechanisms involved in the development of CNS disorders, including multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer’s disease. Also included are novel approaches to the treatment of CNS disorders based on new experimental data. The contributors to this volume are internationally known scientists and clinical researchers in their respective fields of investigation and treatment.
    • Essence of Memory

      • 1st Edition
      • Volume 169
      • April 28, 2008
      • Wayne S. Sossin + 3 more
      • English
      • Hardback
        9 7 8 0 4 4 4 5 3 1 6 4 3
      • eBook
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      This selection of reviews gives an up-to-date picture of memory research. Great progress has been made in identifying the memory trace at the molecular and cellular level and individual reviews address the major mechanisms by which changes in synaptic strength can persist. Exciting research at the systems level is also reviewed including the growing importance of changes in inhibitory interneurons and how they play a role in memory formation. Finally, reviews present cognitive and neurobiological models of human memory that explain, characterize and organize the act of memory within a coherent framework.
    • Neuropsychology and Behavioral Neurology

      • 1st Edition
      • Volume 88
      • April 15, 2008
      • Georg Goldenberg + 1 more
      • English
      • Hardback
        9 7 8 0 4 4 4 5 1 8 9 7 2
      • eBook
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      This volume presents a comprehensive guide to one of the most important goals of neuroscience, establishing precision structure-function relationships in the brain. Progressing from the early stages of research, specifically the advent of computerized tomography and later, magnetic resonance imaging, this invaluable resource will take clinicians on an all encompassing journey into the ways different fields of neurology can work together to advance our understanding of brain disorders. Complex topics including the neurochemistry of cognition, neuropsychology of aging and dementia, disorders of semantic memory, working memory, and the dysexecutive syndromes, amongst others, are thoroughly discussed and presented. Clinicians will find a state-of-the-art reference guide that can be used to further understand how the fields of neuropsychology and behavioral neurology can complement each other to produce advancements in the neurosciences.
    • The Limits of Dream

      • 1st Edition
      • March 24, 2008
      • J. F. Pagel
      • English
      • Hardback
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      • Paperback
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      Approx.250 pages
    • Handbook of the Neuroscience of Language

      • 1st Edition
      • March 19, 2008
      • Brigitte Stemmer + 1 more
      • English
      • Hardback
        9 7 8 0 0 8 0 4 5 3 5 2 1
      • Paperback
        9 7 8 1 4 8 3 2 9 9 6 9 3
      • eBook
        9 7 8 0 0 8 0 5 6 4 9 1 3
      • eBook
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      In the last ten years the neuroscience of language has matured as a field. Ten years ago, neuroimaging was just being explored for neurolinguistic questions, whereas today it constitutes a routine component. At the same time there have been significant developments in linguistic and psychological theory that speak to the neuroscience of language. This book consolidates those advances into a single reference. The Handbook of the Neuroscience of Language provides a comprehensive overview of this field. Divided into five sections, section one discusses methods and techniques including clinical assessment approaches, methods of mapping the human brain, and a theoretical framework for interpreting the multiple levels of neural organization that contribute to language comprehension. Section two discusses the impact imaging techniques (PET, fMRI, ERPs, electrical stimulation of language cortex, TMS) have made to language research. Section three discusses experimental approaches to the field, including disorders at different language levels in reading as well as writing and number processing. Additionally, chapters here present computational models, discuss the role of mirror systems for language, and cover brain lateralization with respect to language. Part four focuses on language in special populations, in various disease processes, and in developmental disorders. The book ends with a listing of resources in the neuroscience of language and a glossary of items and concepts to help the novice become acquainted with the field. Editors Stemmer & Whitaker prepared this book to reflect recent developments in neurolinguistics, moving the book squarely into the cognitive neuroscience of language and capturing the developments in the field over the past 7 years.
    • Handbook of Anxiety and Fear

      • 1st Edition
      • Volume 17
      • March 17, 2008
      • D. Caroline Blanchard + 2 more
      • English
      • Hardback
        9 7 8 0 4 4 4 5 3 0 6 5 3
      • eBook
        9 7 8 0 0 8 0 5 5 9 5 2 0
      This Handbook brings together and integrates comprehensively the core approaches to fear and anxiety. Its four sections: Animal models; neural systems; pharmacology; and clinical approaches, provide a range of perspectives that interact to produce new light on these important and sometimes dysfunctional emotions. Fear and anxiety are analyzed as patterns that have evolved on the basis of their adaptive functioning in response to threat. These patterns are stringently selected, providing a close fit with environmental situations and events; they are highly conservative across mammalian species, producing important similarities, along with some systematic differences, in their human expression in comparison to that of nonhuman mammals. These patterns are described, with attention to both adaptive and maladaptive components, and related to new understanding of neuroanatomic, neurotransmitter, and genetic mechanisms. Although chapters in the volume acknowledge important differences in views of fear and anxiety stemming from animal vs. human research, the emphasis of the volume is on a search for an integrated view that will facilitate the use of animal models of anxiety to predict drug response in people; on new technologies that will enable direct evaluation of biological mechanisms in anxiety disorders; and on strengthening the analysis of anxiety disorders as biological phenomena.