FUTURIST Jan./Feb. 2004, pp. 34-35
The New
Brain: Breakthroughs in Brain Imaging
by Richard
Restak
DALLAS
MORNING NEWS Feb. 12, 2001, pp. 3C+
'NEW
NEUROSCIENCE' MELDS COMPETING VIEWS OF BRAIN
by Tom
Siegfried
TIME June
10, 2002, pp. 46-54
The Science
of Anxiety: Why Do We Worry Ourselves Sick? Because the Brain Is Hardwired for
Fear, and Sometimes It Short-Circuits
by
Christine Gorman
AMERICAN
SCIENTIST Sept./Oct. 2000, pp. 426-431
BRAIN
PLASTICITY AND RECOVERY FROM STROKE
by Nina P.
Azari and Rudiger J. Seitz
PSYCHOLOGY
TODAY March/April 1999, pp. 30+
DEPRESSION:
BEYOND SEROTONIN
by Hara
Estroff Marano
PSYCHOLOGY
TODAY Jan./Feb. 1998, pp. 40+
THE MYSTERY
OF DISGUST
by Erik
D'Amato
DISCOVER
April 2001, pp. 36-43
WILD DREAMS
by Robert
Sapolsky
MACLEAN'S
Aug. 4, 2003, pp. 26-32
The Stuff
That Dreams Are Made Of
by Sue
Ferguson
LOS ANGELES TIMES Oct. 14, 1996, pp. A1+
THE
BRAIN--OUR EMOTIONS: WHY WE FEEL THE WAY WE DO
by Julie
Marquis
FREE
INQUIRY Summer 1998, pp. 54-56
SEARCHING
FOR GOD IN THE MACHINE
by David C.
Noelle
LOS ANGELES
TIMES MAGAZINE May 2, 2004, pp. 18+
How We
Think: Brain Researchers Are Using MRIs to Predict Our Decisions Before They
Are Made. The Results Are Intriguing, and a Little Disturbing.
By Michael
D'Antonio
U.S. NEWS
& WORLD REPORT Aug. 9, 1999, pp. 44+
INSIDE THE
TEEN BRAIN: Behavior Can Be Baffling When Young Minds Are Taking Shape
by Shannon
Brownlee
LOS ANGELES TIMES June
25, 1998, p. B2
REBELS WITH
A CAUSE: Studies of Adolescents' Brains Find Possible Physiological Basis for
Turbulent Teenage Emotions
by Robert
Lee Hotz
DISCOVER
April 2003, pp. 62-68
Laughter
by Steven
Johnson
PHILADELPHIA
INQUIRER April 1, 1999, p. A14
PUNCH
LINES, FRONTAL LOBES INTERSECT IN HUMOR STUDY
by Usha Lee
McFarling
THE SEATTLE
TIMES Aug. 8, 1997, pp. A1+
BRAIN NEEDS
SIX HOURS TO LEARN A PHYSICAL SKILL
Study Says
Memory Can Be Eroded by Interruption
by Paul
Recer
PSYCHOLOGY
TODAY Jan./Feb. 1995, pp. 44+
IT'S
MAGICAL. IT'S MALLEABLE. IT'S...MEMORY.
by Jill
Neimark
U.S. NEWS
& WORLD REPORT Aug. 3, 2001, n.p.
The Musical
Mind: If song has no purpose, why is it deep-wired in the brain?
by Tim
Appenzeller
LOS ANGELES
TIMES Aug. 4, 2003, pp. F1+
New Surgery
to Control Behavior: Long out of favor, operations in the brain as a way to
treat psychiatric illness are again attracting scientific attention.
by Benedict
Carey