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The EBBS Publications Series is designed to provide researchers and
students with authoritative, topical reviews of major areas in the
brain and behaviour sciences. Each volume includes specially
commissioned and edited chapters by leading researchers, presented
in a lively and accessible style ideal for the non-specialist. The
study of appetite is of major interest to psychologists and
neuroscientists, and is understood to involve components relating
to both disciplines. Psychological research looks at the cues which
guide appetitive behaviour, and the cognitive mechanisms used to
interpret cues and influence choice of action. Neuroscience
research looks at the neural substrates for these behavioural
processes. This is the first volume to bring the two perspectives
together covering the areas of eating, drinking, sexual behaviour,
drug addiction, and gambling. It will be of interest to behavioural
researchers in general, and to clinicians interested in abnormal
forms of appetite.
At the time of original publication psychobiology was one of the
most rapidly developing areas of psychology. Its growth owed much
to recent advances both in techniques for studying the
physiological bases of behaviour and in major conceptual advances
in the way people thought about the brain. First published in 1989,
this textbook introduction to the field looks at the state of
psychobiology in the light of these advances. The issues covered
include: the factors that have shaped the current state of the
field; the value of animal subjects in the study of psychological
processes; the problems of studying the brain, including the
theoretical assumptions underlying the most widely used methods;
the current status of influential theories, like Stellar's 2-center
theory of motivation and Papez's theory of emotion; the
relationship between psychological theory and physiological data,
such as recent accounts of the visual system; the problems
presented by 'emergent properties' like consciousness.
At the time of original publication psychobiology was one of the
most rapidly developing areas of psychology. Its growth owed much
to recent advances both in techniques for studying the
physiological bases of behaviour and in major conceptual advances
in the way people thought about the brain. First published in 1989,
this textbook introduction to the field looks at the state of
psychobiology in the light of these advances. The issues covered
include: the factors that have shaped the current state of the
field; the value of animal subjects in the study of psychological
processes; the problems of studying the brain, including the
theoretical assumptions underlying the most widely used methods;
the current status of influential theories, like Stellar's 2-center
theory of motivation and Papez's theory of emotion; the
relationship between psychological theory and physiological data,
such as recent accounts of the visual system; the problems
presented by 'emergent properties' like consciousness.
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