The amygdala: a functional analysis
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford [u.a.]
Oxford Univ. Press
2000
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Ausgabe: | 2. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke |
Beschreibung: | XIV, 690 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0198505019 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a The amygdala |b a functional analysis |c ed. by John P. Aggleton |
250 | |a 2. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Oxford [u.a.] |b Oxford Univ. Press |c 2000 | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
List of contributors xiii
1 The amygdala—what s happened in the last decade? 1
John P. Aggleton and Richard C. Saunders
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Does the amygdala exist? 1
1.3 Connectional analyses of the amygdala 3
1.4 The amygdala and olfactory processing 7
1.5 Plastic mechanisms within the amygdala 15
1.6 Neurotoxic lesions of the amygdala 16
1.7 The effects of amygdala pathology in humans 16
2 Connectivity of the rat amygdaloid complex 31
Asia Pitkanen
2.1 Introduction 31
2.2 Intra amygdaloid, afferent, and efferent connections of different
amygdaloid nuclei 33
2.3 Organization of intra amygdaloid connections 88
2.4 Convergence of afferent inputs in the amygdala 89
2.5 Parallel innervation of amygdaloid nuclei 93
2.6 Organization of amygdaloid outputs 95
2.7 Knock out of amygdaloid nuclei in brain diseases: what does the
anatomy predict about the functional consequences? 99
3 Synaptic plasticity in the amygdala 117
Paul F. Chapman and Sumantra Chattarji
3.1 Introduction 117
3.2 Long term potentiation 118
3.3 Electrophysiological survey of the amygdala: circuits, cells,
and synapses 122
3.4 LTP in the amygdala 132
3.5 Summary of amygdala LTP: properties and parameters 144
4 Amygdala plasticity: the neurobiological implications of kindling 155
Susan R.B. Weiss, He Li, Martina Sitcoske O Shea, and R.M. Post
4.1 Introduction 155
4.2 Kindling 157
4.3 Kindling induced plasticity 160
4.4 Synaptic plasticity and metaplasticity in the unkindled amygdala 171
4.5 Clinical implications 176
5 The amygdala: anxiety and benzodiazepines 195
Sandra E. File
5.1 Introduction 195
5.2 Central nucleus 200
5.3 Basolateral nucleus 202
5.4 Conclusions 206
6 The role of the amygdala in conditioned and unconditioned fear and anxiety 213
Michael Davis
6.1 Introduction 213
6.2 Anatomical connections between the central nucleus of the amygdala
and brain areas involved in fear and anxiety 215
6.3 Elicitation of fear responses by electrical or chemical stimulation of
the amygdala 218
6.4 Effects of amygdala lesions on conditioned fear 224
6.5 Effects of amygdala lesions on unconditioned fear 232
6.6 Effects of infusing drugs into the amygdala on measures of fear and
anxiety 237
6.7 The role of excitatory amino acids receptors in the amygdala in fear
conditioning 251
6.8 Are aversive memories actually stored in the amygdala? 253
7 The amygdala and emotion: a view through fear 289
Joseph LeDoux
7.1 Introduction 289
7.2 The emotional brain in a historical context 289
7.3 The amygdala and fear: Pavlovian versus instrumental
conditioning 291
7.4 Neural mechanisms underlying Pavlovian fear learning 293
7.5 Circuits into, within, and out of the amygdala involved in fear
conditioning 293
7.6 Cellular and molecular plasticity in the amygdala related to fear
conditioning 297
7.7 Memory versus modulation 299
7.8 Fear conditioning and the human amygdala 300
7.9 So where s the fear? 300
7.10 Views of the emotional brain in the light of conditioned fear research:
have we made progress? 301
8 The amygdala and associative learning 311
Michela Gallagher
8.1 Introduction 311
8.2 Connectivity of BLA/CeA to output/action systems from brainstem
to cortex 312
8.3 Connectional systems for the control of species typical behaviour by
associative learning 313
8.4 Connectional systems for the control of voluntary behaviour on the
basis of learning 314
8.5 Additional connectional systems for the control of goal directed
behaviour 316
8.6 Connectivity of BLA/CeA to systems for regulating attention 319
8.7 Central nucleus regulation of attention 320
8.8 An integrative neurobiology of the BLA/CeA system 323
9 The amygdala in conditioned taste aversion: it s there, but where 331
Raphael Lamprecht and Yadin Dudai
9.1 Conditioned taste aversion 331
9.2 The amygdala and circuits that process taste and malaise 335
9.3 A selection of questions 336
9.4 The effects of lesions 337
9.5 Cellular and molecular mechanisms 339
9.6 A reminder of sources of variability and some caveats 342
9.7 Concluding remarks 344
10 Differential involvement of amygdala subsystems in appetitive conditioning
and drug addiction 353
Barry J. Everitt, Rudolf N. Cardinal, Jeremy Hall, John A. Parkinson, and Trevor W. Robbins
10.1 Introduction 353
10.2 Appetitive Pavlovian conditioning and conditioned reinforcement 355
10.3 Associative representations in the amygdala 366
10.4 Dissociable amygdala subsystems and drug addiction 376
10.5 Conclusion 381
11 Amygdala: role in modulation of memory storage 391
James. L. McGaugh, Barbara Ferry, Almira Vazdarjanova, and Benno Roozendaal
11.1 Introduction 391
11.2 Amygdala stimulation and modulation of memory storage 392
11.3 Hormonal modulation of memory storage 393
11.4 Amygdala mediation of neuromodulatory influences on
memory storage 394
11.5 Selective involvement of the basolateral nucleus 399
11.6 a and (3 adrenergic interactions in the BLA 403
11.7 Amygdala interactions with other brain systems modulating
memory storage 406
11.8 Concluding comments 412
12 Modulation of long term memory in humans by emotional arousal:
adrenergic activation and the amygdala 425
Larry Cahill
12.1 Introduction 425
12.2 Understanding memory formation for emotionally stressful events:
the foundation in animal research 426
12.3 Neural mechanisms of explicit memory for emotionally arousing events
in humans 427
12.4 Modulation of memory by modulation of reverberation? 437
12.5 Concluding remarks 440
13 Neurophysiology and functions of the primate amygdala, and the
neural basis of emotion 447
Edmund Rolls
13.1 Introduction 448
13.2 Neurophysiology of the primate amygdala 454
13.3 Comparisons of the responses of neurons in the primate amygdala
and orbitofrontal cortex 467
13.4 The role of the amygdala in emotion 469
14 Primate evolution and the amygdala 479
Robert A. Barton and John P. Aggleton
14.1 Introduction 480
14.2 The comparative method and evolutionary neuroanatomy 482
14.3 Evolution of amygdala size 486
14.4 Lifestyle correlates of amygdala evolution 494
14.5 Synopsis 497
15 The amygdala, social behaviour, and autism 509
Jocelyne Bachevalier
15.1 Introduction 509
15.2 Anatomical considerations 511
15.3 The amygdala and social cognition in primates 513
15.4 Amygdala and social cognition during development 519
15.5 The amygdala and autism 526
15.6 Conclusions 531
16 Reinterpreting the behavioural effects of amygdala lesions in non human primates 545
Mark G. Baxter and Elisabeth A. Murray
16.1 Introduction 545
16.2 Disconnection of temporal cortex produced by amygdala aspiration 546
16.3 Reinterpreting behavioural effects of amygdala lesions 548
16.4 Stimulus memory 549
16.5 Stimulus reward associations 553
16.6 Stimulus affect association 558
16.7 Additional considerations 560
16.8 Summary and future directions 561
17 Amygdala and the memory of reward: the importance of fibres of
passage from the basal forebrain 569
Alexander Easton and David Gaffan
17.1 The learning of object reward associations 569
17.2 The amygdala and learning about the intrinsic reward value
of objects 570
17.3 Functions of fibres of passage 571
17.4 Perceptual demand increases reliance on perirhinal cortex 573
17.5 The basal forebrain and reward learning 575
17.6 The subcortical communication of frontal and inferior temporal
cortex via the basal forebrain 576
17.7 Reinforcement of visual memories in inferior temporal cortex 579
17.8 What is the role of the amygdala? 580
18 Emotion, recognition, and the human amygdala 587
Ralph Adolphs and Daniel Tranel
18.1 Introduction 587
18.2 Neuroanatomy and neuropsychological background of S.M. 589
18.3 Recognition of emotion in facial expressions 595
18.4 Recognition of emotion in auditory stimuli 607
18.5 The amygdala s role in processing stimuli with high emotional
arousal 611
18.6 Recognition of social information 615
18.7 Influences of emotional processing on other aspects of cognition 621
18.8 Conclusions 622
19 Functional neuroimaging of the amygdala during emotional processing and
learning 631
Raymond J. Dolan
19.1 Introduction 631
19.2 The amygdala is sensitive to sensory stimuli that represent fear 633
19.3 The role of the amygdala in classical conditioning 633
19.4 Amygdala hippocampal interactions during trace conditioning 635
19.5 The expression of conditioned responses 636
19.6 Cortical and subcortical interactions of the amygdala during the
expression of learning 640
19.7 The amygdala s contribution to experience dependent sensory
plasticity 641
19.8 Intra amygdala differential neural responses during conditioning and
representation of a US 644
19.9 Is the amygdala involved in episodic memory function? 645
19.10Conclusions 648
20 The amygdala and Alzheimer s disease 655
Tiffany W. Chow and Jeffrey L. Cummings
20.1 Introduction 655
20.2 Neuroanatomy of the amygdalar complex 657
20.3 Neurochemistry of the amygdala 660
20.4 Changes in the amygdala in Alzheimer s disease 662
20.5 Neurochemistry of the amygdala in Alzheimer s disease 668
20.6 Neuroimaging evidence of amygdalar involvement in Alzheimer s
disease 669
20.7 Clinical correlates of amygdalar involvement in Alzheimer s
disease 670
20.8 Amygdalar involvement in other dementias 672
20.9 Conclusions 673
Index 681
|
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dewey-ones | 612 - Human physiology |
dewey-raw | 612.825 |
dewey-search | 612.825 |
dewey-sort | 3612.825 |
dewey-tens | 610 - Medicine and health |
discipline | Biologie Psychologie Medizin |
edition | 2. ed. |
format | Book |
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illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T18:46:52Z |
institution | BVB |
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language | English |
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physical | XIV, 690 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
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spelling | The amygdala a functional analysis ed. by John P. Aggleton 2. ed. Oxford [u.a.] Oxford Univ. Press 2000 XIV, 690 S. Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke Amygdaloid body Corpus amygdaloideum (DE-588)4224191-1 gnd rswk-swf Corpus amygdaloideum (DE-588)4224191-1 s DE-604 Aggleton, John P. Sonstige oth HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009213347&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | The amygdala a functional analysis Amygdaloid body Corpus amygdaloideum (DE-588)4224191-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4224191-1 |
title | The amygdala a functional analysis |
title_auth | The amygdala a functional analysis |
title_exact_search | The amygdala a functional analysis |
title_full | The amygdala a functional analysis ed. by John P. Aggleton |
title_fullStr | The amygdala a functional analysis ed. by John P. Aggleton |
title_full_unstemmed | The amygdala a functional analysis ed. by John P. Aggleton |
title_short | The amygdala |
title_sort | the amygdala a functional analysis |
title_sub | a functional analysis |
topic | Amygdaloid body Corpus amygdaloideum (DE-588)4224191-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Amygdaloid body Corpus amygdaloideum |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009213347&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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