1: Introduction: the issues
1.1: Introduction
1.2: Rewards and punishers
1.3: Approaches to emotion and motivation
1.4: Outline
2: The nature of emotion
2.1: Introduction
2.2: A theory of emotion
2.3: Different emotions
2.4: Refinements of the theory of emotion
2.5: The classification of emotion
2.6: Other theories of emotion
2.7: Individual differences in emotion, personality and emotional
intelligence
2.8: Cognition and emotion
2.9: Emotion, motivation, reward and mood
2.10: The concept of emotion
2.11: Advantages of the approach
3: The functions of emotion: reward, punishment and emotion in
brain design
3.1: Introduction
3.2: Brain design and the functions of emotion
3.3: Selection of behaviour: cost-benefit 'analysis'
3.4: Further functions of emotion
3.5: The functions of emotion in an evolutionary, Darwinian,
context
3.6: The functions of motivation in an evolutionary, Darwinian,
context
3.7: Are all goals for action gene-specified?
4: The brain mechanisms underlying emotion
4.1: Introduction
4.2: Overview
4.3: Representations of primary reinforcers
4.4: Representing potential secondary reinforcers
4.5: The orbitofrontal cortex
4.6: The amygdala
4.7: The cingulate cortex
4.8: Human brain imaging investigations of mood and depression
4.9: Output pathways for emotional responses
4.10: Effects of emotion on cognitive processing and memory
4.11: Laterality effects in human emotional processing
4.12: Summary
5: Hunger
5.1: Introduction
5.2: Peripheral signals for hunger and satiety
5.3: The control signals for hunger and satiety
5.4: The brain control of eating and reward
5.5: Obesity, bulimia and anorexia
5.6: Conclusions on reward, affective responses to food, and the
control of appetite
6: Thirst
6.1: Introduction
6.2: Cellular stimuli for drinking
6.3: Extracellular thirst stimuli
6.4: Control of normal drinking
6.5: Reward and satiety signals for drinking
6.6: Summary
7: Brain-stimulation reward
7.1: Introduction
7.2: The nature of the reward produced
7.3: The location of brain-stimulation reward sites in the
brain
7.4: The effects of brain lesions on intracranial
self-stimulation
7.5: The neurophysiology of reward
7.6: Some of the properties of brain-stimulation reward
7.7: Stimulus-bound motivational behaviour
7.8: Conclusions
7.9: Apostasis
8: Pharmacology of emotion, reward and addiction; the basal
ganglia
8.1: Introduction
8.2: The noradrenergic hypothesis
8.3: Dopamine and reward
8.4: The basal ganglia
8.5: Opiate reward systems, analgesia, and food reward
8.6: Pharmacology of depression in relation to brain systems
involved in emotion
8.7: Pharmacology of anxiety in relation to brain systems involved
in emotion
8.8: Cannabinoids
8.9: Overview of behavioural selection and output systems involved
in emotion
9: Sexual behaviour, reward and brain function; sexual selection of
behaviour
9.1: Introduction
9.2: Mate selection, attractiveness and love
9.3: Parental attachment, care and parent-offspring conflict
9.4: Sperm competition
9.5: Concealed ovulation and its consequences for sexual
behaviour
9.6: Sexual selection of sexual and non-sexual behaviour
9.7: Individual differences in sexual rewards
9.8: The neural reward mechanisms that might mediate some aspects
of sexual behaviour
9.9: Neural basis of sexual behaviour
9.10: Conclusion
10: Emotional feelings and consciousness: a theory of
consciousness
10.1: Introduction
10.2: A theory of consciousness
10.3: Dual routes to action
10.4: Representations
10.5: Discussion
10.6: Conclusions and comparisons
11: Conclusions and broader issues
11.1: Conclusions
11.2: Decision-making
11.3: Emotion and ethics
11.4: Emotion and literature
11.5: Close
App A: Neural networks and emotion-related learning
App B: Reward reversal in the orbitofrontal cortex - a model
Edmund T. Rolls is Professor of Experimental Psychology at the
University of Oxford, and a Fellow and Tutor of Corpus Christi
College, Oxford. He read preclinical medicine at the University of
Cambridge, and now performs research in neuroscience at Oxford. His
research links neurophysiological and computational neuroscience
approaches to human functional neuroimaging and neuropsychological
studies in order to provide a fundamental basis for understanding
human
brain function and its disorders. He is author of The Brain and
Emotion (1999, Oxford University Press), with A.Treves of Neural
Networks and Brain Function (1998, Oxford University Press), and
with G.Deco
of Computational Neuroscience of Vision (2002, Oxford University
Press).
I would strongly recommend this book to any neuroscientist or
psychologist interested in emotion ... it should be required
reading for all students in behavioural neuroscience, and has
sufficient breadth that many of its chapters will be of interest
also to experts in neurology, psychology or philosophy.
*Brain*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |