Governing behavior : how nerve cell dictatorships and democracies control everything we do / Ari Berkowitz.
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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Female Library | QP363.3 .B47 2016 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000336082 | |
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Main Library | QP363.3 .B47 2016 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000336099 |
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QP360 .C3667 2011 The shallows : what the Internet is doing to our brains / | QP360 .K325 2015 The future of the mind : the scientific quest to understand, enhance, and empower the mind / | QP360 .S592 2015 Social neuroscience : brain, mind, and society / | QP363.3 .B47 2016 Governing behavior : how nerve cell dictatorships and democracies control everything we do / | QP376 .B86 2012 Brain bugs : how the brain's flaws shape our lives / | QP376 .C493 2017 Brain bytes : quick answers to quirky questions about the brain / | QP376 .N672 2016 Neuro-philosophy and the healthy mind : learning from the unwell brain / |
"Everything we and other animals do is caused by electrical signals in nerve cells, or neurons. Neurons are organized into circuits, like the electrical circuits that run electronic devices. This book explores how these circuits function to control behaviors. In some circuits, a single neuron acts like a dictator, gathering information from many sources, making decisions, and issuing commands to produce movements, such as fish and crayfish escape maneuvers. In other circuits, a large population of neurons collectively votes, with no single neuron dominating, mediating color perception, for example, and controlling eye and hand movements to objects of interest. Neural circuits control all behaviors, from the simple and automatic to the complex and deliberative. Some of the most critical circuits generate rhythmic outputs that make an animal breathe, chew, digest, walk, run, swim, or fly. These central nervous system circuits can churn out rhythmic signals on their own, like central government programs, but modify output to match demand, using feedback signals from moving body parts. To select the right behavior for each moment, nervous systems use sophisticated sensory surveillance. For example, owl circuits calculate the precise locations of sound sources to catch mice in the dark. Bats catch flying insects by emitting ultrasonic pulses and using specialized circuits to analyze the echoes, a form of sonar. Central nervous systems keep track of their own movement commands to update the surveillance circuits. Although some neural circuits are innate, others, such as those producing human speech and bird song, depend on learning, even in adulthood."-- Provided by publisher.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
How to spy on the government -- Isn't there an easier way? -- Neuronal dictatorships -- Neuronal democracies -- How are the factories run? -- The plot (and the chemical soup) thickens -- Government surveillance -- Government self-monitoring -- Becoming a political animal -- Governing behavior.
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