05031nam 2200685Ia 450 991101999900332120230828213045.00-470-93939-71-280-41136-897866104113680-470-04819-0(CKB)1000000000355893(EBL)256190(OCoLC)165935646(SSID)ssj0000138070(PQKBManifestationID)11134673(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000138070(PQKBWorkID)10096981(PQKB)10447586(MiAaPQ)EBC256190(EXLCZ)99100000000035589320051201d2006 uy 0engur|n|---|||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierDevelopmental psychopathologyVolume 2Developmental neuroscience[electronic resource] /editors, Dante Cicchetti and Donald J. Cohen2nd ed.Hoboken, N.J. John Wiley & Sonsc20061 online resource (896 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-471-23737-X Includes bibliographical references and indexes.DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY, Second Edition, Volume Two: Developmental Neuroscience; Contents; Preface to Developmental Psychopathology, Second Edition; Chapter 1: The Developing Brain and Neural Plasticity: Implications for Normality, Psychopathology, and Resilience; GOALS OF THIS CHAPTER; PRINCIPLES OF DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROSCIENCE AND DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY; THE BRAIN AS A DYNAMIC, SELF-ORGANIZING DEVELOPMENTAL SYSTEM; SELF-ORGANIZATION; THE DEVELOPING BRAIN; EXPERIENCE AND BRAIN DEVELOPMENTCONTRIBUTION OF BRAIN DEVELOPMENT IN ATYPICAL POPULATIONS TO FURTHERING INSIGHTS INTO TYPICAL NEUROLOGICAL PROCESSESRESILIENCE; EXPERIENCE AND THE BRAIN: A BRIEF HISTORY; NEURAL PLASTICITY; CONCLUSION AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 2: Collaborative Regulations of Vitality in Early Childhood: Stress in Intimate Relationships and Postnatal Psychopathology; EPIGENISIS OF BODY AND BRAIN FOR HEALTH IN SOCIABILITY AND LEARNING; THE IMPORTANCE OF THE CHILD'S VOLITION IN HUMAN COMPANY; REGULATION: BALANCING THE ENERGY BUDGET OF THE BODY IN ACTIONSTRESS: NATURE, PSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONS, AND STRESS DISORDERSDEVELOPMENT: MUTUAL REGULATIONS IN MORPHOGENESIS OF A HUMAN MIND; EARLY STRESS AND PSYCHOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT: PROCESSES THAT CAUSE OR RESIST PATHOLOGY; FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR INFANT MENTAL HEALTH: FOSTERING MOTIVES FOR CONFIDENT REGULATION OF EXPERIENCE IN AFFECTIONATE COMPANIONSHIP; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 3: Anatomic Brain Imaging Studies of Normal and Abnormal Brain Development in Children and Adolescents; METHODOLOGY; TYPICAL DEVELOPMENT; STUDIES OF ATYPICAL DEVELOPMENT; SUMMARY AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS; REFERENCESChapter 4: Typical and Atypical Human Functional Brain DevelopmentTHREE PERSPECTIVES ON THE FUNCTIONAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE HUMAN BRAIN; ASSUMPTIONS UNDERLYING THE THREE APPROACHES; PREDICTIONS OF THE THREE APPROACHES; BRAIN IMAGING OF TYPICAL DEVELOPMENT; BRAIN IMAGING OF ATYPICAL DEVELOPMENT; EFFECTS OF EARLY ACQUIRED BRAIN DAMAGE; EFFECTS OF ATYPICAL EARLY EXPERIENCE; CONCLUSIONS; FUTURE DIRECTIONS; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 5: The Development of the Prefrontal Cortex: The Maturation of Neurotransmitter Systems and Their InteractionsCONSTITUTION AND THE ENVIRONMENT AS DETERMINANTS OF PERSONALITY AND VULNERABILITYTHE CORTICOLIMBIC SYSTEM; DEVELOPMENT OF THE CORTICOLIMBIC SYSTEM; THE ROLE OF THE AMYGDALA IN THE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OFMENTAL DISORDERS; FUTURE DIRECTIONS; CONCLUSIONS; REFERENCES; Chapter 6: Early Nutritional Deficiencies in Brain Development: Implications for Psychopathology; BASIC PRINCIPLES; OVERVIEW; STUDIES ON PSYCHOPATHOLOGY; PRIMER; PRIMER; FUTURE DIRECTIONS; REFERENCES; Chapter 7: Cognitive Neuroscience and the Prefrontal Cortex: Normative Development and Vulnerability to PsychopathologyTHE PREFRONTAL CORTEX DEFINEDThis volume applies multiple levels of analysis to neurobiological developmental organization, and functioning in normality and psychopathology. It also covers topics central to a developmental perspective on neuroscience.Mental illnessEtiologyDevelopmental psychologyMental illnessRisk factorsAdjustment (Psychology)Mental illnessEtiology.Developmental psychology.Mental illnessRisk factors.Adjustment (Psychology)616.89618.9289Cicchetti Dante184562Cohen Donald J1838883MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911019999003321Developmental psychopathology4417970UNINA03664nam 22005414a 450 991096610450332120251116153444.097801980375450198037546(MiAaPQ)EBC7036370(CKB)24235116200041(MiAaPQ)EBC279540(MiAaPQ)EBC3051977(Au-PeEL)EBL3051977(CaPaEBR)ebr10103536(CaONFJC)MIL53423(OCoLC)922952581(Au-PeEL)EBL7036370(OCoLC)824165896(Au-PeEL)EBL279540(OCoLC)826490517(EXLCZ)992423511620004120030328d2004 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierEcological orbits how planets move and populations grow /Lev Ginzburg, Mark Colyvan1st ed.Oxford ;New York Oxford University Press2004xv, 166 p. illIncludes bibliographical references (p. 151-160) and index.Intro -- Contents -- 1 On Earth as It Is in the Heavens -- 1.1 How Planets Move -- 1.2 How Populations Grow -- 1.3 Metaphors and the Language of Science -- 1.4 Inertial Population Growth -- 2 Does Ecology Have Laws? -- 2.1 Ecological Allometries -- 2.2 Kepler's Laws -- 2.3 What Is a Law of Nature? -- 2.4 Laws in Ecology -- 3 Equilibrium and Accelerated Death -- 3.1 Accelerated Death -- 3.2 Galileo and Falling Bodies -- 3.3 The Slobodkin Experiment -- 3.4 Falling Bodies and Dying Populations -- 3.5 The Meaning of Abundance Equilibrium -- 3.6 The Damuth Allometry -- 3.7 A Harder Question -- 4 The Maternal Effect Hypothesis -- 4.1 Inertial Growth and the Maternal Effect -- 4.2 The Missing Periods -- 4.3 The Calder Allometry -- 4.4 The Eigenperiod Hypothesis -- 4.5 What Can Be Done in the Laboratory -- 5 Predator-Prey Interactions and the Period of Cycling -- 5.1 An Alternative Limit Myth -- 5.2 Prey-Dependent versus Ratio-Dependent Models -- 5.3 The Fallacy of Instantism -- 5.4 Why Period Travels Bottom Up -- 5.5 Competing Views on Causes and Cyclicity -- 6 Inertial Growth -- 6.1 The Implicit Inertial-Growth Model -- 6.2 Parametric Specification -- 6.3 Malthusian Invariancy -- 6.4 What Is and What Is Not Analogous -- 7 Practical Consequences -- 7.1 Theoretical and Applied Ecology -- 7.2 Managing Inertial Populations -- 7.3 Rates of Evolution -- 7.4 Risk Analysis -- 7.5 The Moral -- 8 Shadows on the Wall -- 8.1 Plato's Cave -- 8.2 Evidence and Aesthetics -- 8.3 Overfitting -- 8.4 A Simplified Picture of Population Ecology -- Appendix A: Notes and Further Reading -- Appendix B: Essential Features of the Maternal Effect Model -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- Z.Preface1. On Earth as it is in the Heavens2. Does Ecology Have Laws?3. Equilibrium and Accelerated Death4. The Maternal E_ect Hypothesis5. Predator-Prey Interactions and the Period of Cycling6. Inertial Growth7. Practical Consequences8. Shadows on the WallA Notes and Further ReadingB Essential Features of the Maternal Effect ModelC AppreciationsBibliographyIndex.Population biologyEcologyPopulation biology.Ecology.577.8/8Ginzburg Lev R486983Colyvan Mark734259MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQ9910966104503321Ecological orbits1449121UNINA