01657nam0 22003133i 450 VAN025214720221109092027.430978-88-921324-2-9N9788892185951IT2020-393220221109d2020 |0itac50 baitaIT|||| |||||Le idee di identità e di identità personale nei presocratici e in diritto italianoMichele Martoni, Enrico PattaroTorinoGiappichelli2020149 p.24 cmTorinoVANL000001MartoniMicheleVANV084550738936PattaroEnricoVANV004207230640Giappichelli <editore>VANV107921650ITSOL20240628RICAhttps://biblioteca.giappichelli.it/biblioteche/biblioteca-giuridica-unicampania/index.htmlVolume disponibile sulla “Biblioteca Digitale Giappichelli”
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possibile avere in prestito la copia digitale per 5 giorni, attraverso la generazione di un codice OTP che verrà inviato alla mail, non è consentita la copia, la stampa o la condivisione delle pagine dei libri.BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI GIURISPRUDENZAIT-CE0105VAN00NVAN0252147BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI GIURISPRUDENZA00PREST E-BOOK SBA GIUR 00EBG252147 20221109 Idee di identità e di identità personale nei presocratici e in diritto italiano1866960UNICAMPANIA02770nam 2200481z- 450 991016165050332120210212(CKB)3710000001041959(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/58442(oapen)doab58442(EXLCZ)99371000000104195920202102d2016 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierReward- and aversion-related processing in the brain: translational evidence for separate and shared circuitsFrontiers Media SA20161 online resource (181 p.)Frontiers Research Topics2-88919-836-7 Affective brain circuits underpin our moods and emotions. Appetitive and aversive stimuli from our exteroceptive and interoceptive worlds play a key role in the activity of these circuits, but we still do not know precisely how to characterize these so-called reward-related and aversion-related systems. Moreover, we do we yet understand how they interact anatomically or functionally. The aim of the current project was to gather some translational evidence to help clarify the role of such circuits. A multi-dimensional problem in its own right, the book contains 14 works from authors exploring these questions at many levels, from the cellular to the cognitive-behavioral, and from both experimental and conceptual viewpoints. The editorial which introduces the book provides brief summaries of each perspective (Hayes, Northoff, Greenshaw, 2015). While questions of how to accurately define affect- and emotion-related concepts at the psychological level are far from answered, here we have attempted to provide some insight into the brain-based underpinnings of such processes. The near future will undoubtedly involve making new inroads and will require the joint efforts of behavioral, brain-based, and philosophical perspectives to do so.Reward- and aversion-related processing in the brainNeurosciencesbicsscAffective DisordersAffective NeuroscienceappetitiveaversiveemotionPunishmentReinforcementRewardTranslational researchvalueNeurosciencesDave J. Hayesauth1302108Andrew J. GreenshawauthGeorg NorthoffauthBOOK9910161650503321Reward- and aversion-related processing in the brain: translational evidence for separate and shared circuits3026121UNINA