<p>Of all the areas of biological science, there is, perhaps, none that has experienced in recent decades so great an increase in findings as neurobiology, the discipline that concerns memory in all of its myriad aspects. The notion of exploring memory, that capacity to store and recall individual e
Catecholamines and Behavior Β· 1: Basic Neurobiology
β Scribed by Paul Mandel, GΓ©rard Mack, Christo Goridis (auth.), Arnold J. Friedhoff (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1975
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 244
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The editor of these volumes has asked me to contribute a brief foreword. When I accepted this honor I suddenly became aware of the enormous progress that has taken place in this field in the 50 years since I began as a medical student, in a humble way, to take interest in the catecholamine system. At about that time some evidence was forthcoming to the effect that catecholamines were an important factor in eliciting emotional reactions, thus secondarily influencing behavior. The great physiologist Walter B. Cannon showed in his classic experiments that when a cat was exposed to a dog it responded not only with overt signs of aversion and dislike, but also with an increased flow of adrenaline from its adrenals. The relationships between catecholamines and behavior have since then become the subject of intense research by physiologists, pharmacologists, and psychologists. InfuΒ sion of adrenaline in man was shown to provoke a typical pattern of emoΒ tional and behavioral changes. The development of more convenient methods for the measurement of catecholamines in blood and urine led to important new findings. A close association between emotional stress and catecholamine release could be esΒ tablished. This was further extended to psychiatric disorders in which characteristic disturbances in catecholamine release patterns were described.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xv
Function of the Central Catecholaminergic Neuron: Synthesis, Release, and Inactivation of Transmitter....Pages 1-40
Catecholamines in Regulation of Motor Function....Pages 41-57
Catecholamines in Behavior and Sensorimotor Integration: The Neostriatal System....Pages 59-87
Catecholamines in Activation, Stereotypy, and Level of Mood....Pages 89-107
Functional Interrelationships of Principal Catecholaminergic Centers in the Brain....Pages 109-166
Tremography as a Measure of Extrapyramidal Function in Study of the Dopamine Hypothesis....Pages 167-185
Mammalian Biosynthesis of Potential Psychotogens Derived from Dopamine....Pages 187-200
Regulation of Brain Dopamine Turnover Rate: Pharmacological Implications....Pages 201-227
Back Matter....Pages 229-235
β¦ Subjects
Neurology
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