打字猴:1.70161581e+09
1701615810
1701615811 189. Panksepp, J. Affective neuroscience: The foundations of human and animal emotions.Oxford University Press, New York, 1998.
1701615812
1701615813 190. Jacobson, L., and Sapolsky, R. The role of the hippocampus in feedback regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis. Endocrine Reviews12, 118–134(1991).
1701615814
1701615815 191. McEwen, B. S., Angulo, J., Cameron, H., Chao, H. M., Daniels, D., Gannon,M. N., Gould, E., Mendelson, S., Sakai, R., Spencer, R. et al., Paradoxical effects of adrenal steroids on the brain: Protection versus degeneration. Biological Psychiatry31, 177–199 (1992).
1701615816
1701615817 192. Vyas, A., Mitra, R., Shankaranarayana Rao, B. S., and Chattarji, S. Chronic stress induces contrasting patterns of dendritic remodeling in hippocampal and amygdaloid neurons. Journal of Neuroscience22, 6810–6818 (2002).
1701615818
1701615819 193. Drevets, W. C. Neuroimaging abnormalities in the amygdala in mood disorders.Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences985, 420–444 (2003).
1701615820
1701615821 194. Hettema, J. M., Neale, M. C., and Kendler, K. S. A review and meta-analysis of the genetic epidemiology of anxiety disorders. American Journal of Psychiatry158,1568–1578 (2001).
1701615822
1701615823 195. Blair, R. J. R., Mitchell, D., and Blair, K. The psychopath: Emotion and the brain.Blackwell, Oxford, UK, 2005.
1701615824
1701615825 196. Stone, M. H. Normal narcissism: An etiological and ethological perspective. In Disorders of narcissism: Diagnostic, clinical, and empirical implications, ed. E. F. Ronningstram. American Psychiatric Press, Washington, DC, 1997, 7–28.
1701615826
1701615827 197. Cooper, A. M. Further developments in the clinical diagnosis of narcissistic personality disorder. In Disorders of narcissism: Diagnostic, clinical, and empirical implications, ed. E. F. Ronningstram. American Psychiatric Press, Washington, DC,1997, 53–74.
1701615828
1701615829 198. Schlesinger, L. Pathological narcissism and serial homicide: Review and case study. Current Psychology17, 212–221 (1997).
1701615830
1701615831 199. Di Martino, A., Ross, K., Uddin, L. Q., Sklar, A. B., Castellanos, F. X., and Milham,M. P. Functional brain correlates of social and nonsocial processes in autism spectrum disorders: An activation likelihood estimation meta-analysis. Biological Psychiatry65, 63–74 (2009).
1701615832
1701615833 200. Lombardo, M. V., Baron-Cohen, S., Belmonte, M. K., and Chakrabarti, B. Neural endophenotypes of social behavior in autism spectrum conditions. In Handbook of Social Neuroscience, ed. J. Decety and J. Cacioppo. Oxford University Press, Oxford,UK, in press.
1701615834
1701615835 201. Happé, F., Ehlers, S., Fletcher, P., Frith, U., Johansson, M., Gillberg, C., Dolan,R., Frackowiak, R., and Frith, C. “Theory of mind” in the brain: Evidence from a PET scan study of Asperger Syndrome. Neuroreport8, 197–201 (1996).
1701615836
1701615837 202. Wang, A. T., Lee, S. S., Sigman, M., and Dapretto, M. Neural basis of irony comprehension in children with autism: The role of prosody and context. Brain129,932–943 (2006).
1701615838
1701615839 203. Wang, A. T., Lee, S. S., Sigman, M., and Dapretto, M. Reading affect in the face and voice: Neural correlates of interpreting communicative intent in children and adolescents with autism spectrum disorders. Archives of General Psychiatry64, 698–708 (2007).
1701615840
1701615841 204. Baron-Cohen, S., and Hammer, J. Parents of children with Asperger Syndrome:What is the cognitive phenotype? Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience9, 548–554(1997).
1701615842
1701615843 205. Baron-Cohen, S., Wheelwright, S., Hill, J., Raste, Y., and Plumb, I. The “Reading the Mind in the Eyes” test revised version: A study with normal adults, and adults with Asperger Syndrome or high-functioning autism. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry42, 241–252 (2001).
1701615844
1701615845 206. Pelphrey, K. A., Morris, J. P., and McCarthy, G. Neural basis of eye gaze processing deficits in autism. Brain128, 1038–1048 (2005).
1701615846
1701615847 207. Herrington, J. D., Baron-Cohen, S., Wheelwright, S., Brammer, M., Singh,K. D., Bullmore, E. T., and Williams, S. C. R. The role of MT+/V5 during biological motion perception in Asperger Syndrome: An fMRI study. Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders 1, 14–27 (2007).
1701615848
1701615849 208. Pierce, K., Muller, R.-A., Ambrose, J., Allen, G., and Courchesne, E. Face processing occurs outside the “fusiform face area” in autism: Evidence from functional MRI. Brain124, 2059–2073 (2001).
1701615850
1701615851 209. Wang, A. T., Dapretto, M., Hariri, A. R., Sigman, M., and Bookheimer, S.Y.Neural correlates of facial affect processing in children and adolescents with autism spectrum disorder. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry43, 481–490 (2004).
1701615852
1701615853 210. Ashwin, C., Baron-Cohen, S., O’Riordan, M., Wheelwright, S., and Bullmore,E. T. Differential activation of the amygdala and the “social brain” during fearful face-processing in Asperger Syndrome. Neuropsychologia45, 2–14 (2007).
1701615854
1701615855 211. Corbett, B. A., Constantine, L. J., Hendren, R., Rocke, D., and Ozonoff, S. Examining executive functioning in children with autism spectrum disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and typical development. Psychiatry Research166,210–222 (2009).
1701615856
1701615857 212. Critchley, H. D., Daly, E. M., Bullmore, E. T., Williams, S. C. R., Van Amelsvoort,T., Robertson, D. M., Rowe, A., Phillips, M., McAlonan, G., Howlin, P., and Murphy, D.G. The functional neuroanatomy of social behaviour: Changes in cerebral blood flow when people with autistic disorder process facial expressions. Brain123, 2203–2212 (2000).
1701615858
1701615859 213. Dalton, K. M., Nacewicz, B. M., Johnstone, T., Schaefer, H. S., Gernsbacher,M. A., Goldsmith, H. H., Alexander, A. L., and Davidson, R. J. Gaze fixation and the neural circuitry of face processing in autism. Nature Neuroscience10, 1–8 (2005).
[ 上一页 ]  [ :1.70161581e+09 ]  [ 下一页 ]