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Books > Social sciences > Psychology > Physiological & neuro-psychology
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Progress In Psychobiology and Physiological Psychology (Hardcover)
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Progress In Psychobiology and Physiological Psychology (Hardcover)
Series: Progress in Psychobiology and Physiological Psychology
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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For 31 years, Progress in Psychobiology and Physiological
Psychology has provided cutting-edge literature to behavioral
neuroscience research. Volume 18 includes four original chapters
covering a broad range of contemporary topics in behavioral
neuroscience. In the first of these, Alan Rosenwasser skillfully
reviews the current status of the rapidly developing field of
circadian neurobiology. He focuses on the mammalian suprachiasmatic
nucleus system emphasizing inputs to the "clock," their
neurochemical phenotype, and outputs from the "clock" to behavioral
and other effector systems. Another virtue of this chapter is its
integration of current data and organizing principles drawn from
the analysis of non-vertebrates species and cellular system. Next,
Lori Flanagan-Cato??'s essay focuses on the neuroendocrine controls
of female reproductive behavior in the rat. She first reviews
research from her own laboratory that utilizes pseudo-rabies viral
tract tracing to identify pathways from the VMH through the
periaqueductal gray, medullary reticulospinal and terminating on
motor neurons in lumbar ventral horn that innervate the female
flank muscles. She then goes on to describe more recent experiments
suggesting that estrogen may modulate the synaptic strength of this
circuit by controlling dendritic spines on neurons intrinsic to the
VMH, as well as those that project to lordosis relevant brain
circuitry. The elucidation of these estrogen-induced changes within
a defined neural circuit emphasizes why the study of lordosis
continues to be one of the best models to investigate hormones and
their effects on behavior.
The last few years have witnessed unprecedented advances in
ourunderstanding of the neurobiological controls of feeding
behavior. This period of rapid discovery was ushered in by the
identification of leptin as an adiposity hormone that acts in the
brain to control food intake and energy expenditure commensurate
with fat stores. Since its discovery by Friedman and colleagues in
1995, progress has been swift in identifying the many neurochemical
systems in brain that are regulated by leptin. Almost all of this
research has focused on the final common path of ingestion, food
consumption during a meal. However, as Tim Bartness points out in
his chapter, the long term regulation of food intake and energy
homeostasis is a much richer landscape involving many adaptive
changes in food searching strategies and storage. Finally, the
development of strategies for unraveling the taste sensory code is
at the heart of Alan Spector's contribution. He and his associates
employ a research strategy that combines psychophysical analysis of
taste-guided behavior with selective gustatory receptive field
denervation to investigate the hypothesis that taste nerves
innervate functionally specialized populations of taste receptors.
Spector reviews a fascinating set of findings from his laboratory
and integrates these results with current information on taste
receptors, taste systems neuroscience, neural development and
recovery of function.
Volume 18 is the last volume to be published in this serial.
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