Read Idiot Brain Online

Authors: Dean Burnett

Idiot Brain (39 page)

10
A. Hampshire et al., “The role of the right inferior frontal gyrus: inhibition and attentional control,”
Neuroimage
, 2010, 50(3), pp. 1313–19

11
J. Davidson, “Contesting stigma and contested emotions: Personal experience and public perception of specific phobias,”
Social Science & Medicine
, 2005, 61(10), pp. 2155–64

12
V. F. Castellucci and E. R. Kandel, “A quantal analysis of the synaptic depression underlying habituation of the gill-withdrawal reflex in Aplysia,”
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
, 1974, 71(12), pp. 5004–8

13
S. Mineka and M. Cook, “Social learning and the acquisition of snake fear in monkeys,”
Social Learning: Psychological and Biological Perspectives
, 1988, pp. 51–73

14
K. M. Mallan, O. V. Lipp and B. Cochrane, “Slithering snakes, angry men and out-group members: What and whom are we evolved to fear?,”
Cognition & Emotion
, 2013, 27(7), pp. 1168–80

15
M. Mori, K. F. MacDorman and N. Kageki, “The uncanny valley [from the field],”
Robotics & Automation Magazine, IEEE
, 2012, 19(2), pp. 98–100

16
M. E. Bouton and R. C. Bolles, “Contextual control of the extinction of conditioned fear,”
Learning and Motivation
, 1979, 10(4), pp. 445–66

17
W. J. Magee et al., “Agoraphobia, simple phobia, and social phobia in the National Comorbidity Survey,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
, 1996, 53(2), pp. 159–68

18
L. H. A. Scheller, “This Is What A Panic Attack Physically Feels Like,” http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/21/panic-attack-feeling_n_5977998.html (accessed September 2015)

19
J. Knowles et al., “Results of a genome-wide genetic screen for panic disorder,”
American Journal of Medical Genetics
, 1998, 81(2), pp. 139–47

20
E. Witvrouw et al., “Catastrophic thinking about pain as a predictor of length of hospital stay after total knee arthroplasty: a prospective study,”
Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy
, 2009, 17(10), pp. 1189–94

21
R. Lieb et al., “Parental psychopathology, parenting styles, and the risk of social phobia in offspring: a prospective-longitudinal community study,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
, 2000, 57(9), pp. 859–66

22
J. Richer, “Avoidance behavior, attachment and motivational conflict,”
Early Child Development and Care
, 1993, 96(1), pp. 7–18

23
http://www.nhs.uk/conditions/social-anxiety/Pages/Social-anxiety.aspx (accessed September 2015)

24
G. F. Koob, “Drugs of abuse: anatomy, pharmacology and function of reward pathways,”
Trends in Pharmacological Sciences
, 1992, 13, pp. 177–84

25
L. Reyes-Castro et al., “Pre-and/or postnatal protein restriction in rats impairs learning and motivation in male offspring,”
International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience
, 2011, 29(2), pp. 177–82

26
W. Sluckin, D. Hargreaves and A. Colman, “Novelty and human aesthetic preferences,”
Exploration in Animals and Humans
, 1983, pp. 245–69

27
B. C. Wittmann et al., “Mesolimbic interaction of emotional valence and reward improves memory formation,”
Neuropsychologia
, 2008, 46(4), pp. 1000–1008

28
A. Tinwell, M. Grimshaw and A. Williams, “Uncanny behavior in survival horror games,”
Journal of Gaming & Virtual Worlds
, 2010, 2(1), pp. 3–25

29
See
Chapter 2
, n. 29

30
R. S. Neary and M. Zuckerman, “Sensation seeking, trait and state anxiety, and the electrodermal orienting response,”
Psychophysiology
, 1976, 13(3), pp. 205–11

31
L. M. Bouter et al., “Sensation seeking and injury risk in downhill skiing,”
Personality and Individual Differences
, 1988, 9(3), pp. 667–73

32
M. Zuckerman, “Genetics of sensation seeking,” in J. Benjamin, R. Ebstein and R. H. Belmake (eds.),
Molecular Genetics and the Human Personality
, Washington, DC, American Psychiatric Association, pp. 193–210.

33
S. B. Martin et al., “Human experience seeking correlates with hippocampus volume: Convergent evidence from manual tracing and
voxel-based morphometry,”
Neuropsychologia
, 2007, 45(12), pp. 2874–81

34
R. F. Baumeister et al., “Bad is stronger than good,”
Review of General Psychology
, 2001, 5(4), p. 323

35
S. S. Dickerson, T. L. Gruenewald and M. E. Kemeny, “When the social self is threatened: Shame, physiology, and health,”
Journal of Personality
, 2004, 72(6), pp. 1191–216

36
E. D. Weitzman et al., “Twenty-four hour pattern of the episodic secretion of cortisol in normal subjects,”
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
, 1971, 33(1), pp. 14–22

37
See n. 12, above

38
R. S. Nickerson, “Confirmation bias: A ubiquitous phenomenon in many guises,”
Review of General Psychology
, 1998, 2(2), p. 175

4 Think you're clever, do you?

  
1
R. E. Nisbett et al., “Intelligence: new findings and theoretical developments,”
American Psychologist
, 2012, 67(2), pp. 130–59

  
2
H.-M. Süß et al., “Working-memory capacity explains reasoning ability—and a little bit more,”
Intelligence
, 2002, 30(3), pp. 261–88

  
3
L. L. Thurstone,
Primary Mental Abilities
, University of Chicago Press, 1938

  
4
H. Gardner,
Frames of Mind: The Theory of Multiple Intelligences
, Basic Books, 2011

  
5
A. Pant, “The Astonishingly Funny Story of Mr McArthur Wheeler,” 2014, http://awesci.com/the-astonishingly-funny-story-of-mr-mcarthur-wheeler/ (accessed September 2015)

  
6
T. DeAngelis, “Why we overestimate our competence,”
American Psychological Association
, 2003, 34(2)

  
7
H. J. Rosen et al., “Neuroanatomical correlates of cognitive self-appraisal in neurodegenerative disease,”
Neuroimage
, 2010, 49(4), pp. 3358–64

  
8
G. E. Larson et al., “Evaluation of a ‘mental effort' hypothesis for correlations between cortical metabolism and intelligence,”
Intelligence
, 1995, 21(3), pp. 267–78

  
9
G. Schlaug et al., “Increased corpus callosum size in musicians,”
Neuropsychologia
, 1995, 33(8), pp. 1047–55

10
E. A. Maguire et al., “Navigation-related structural change in the hippocampi of taxi drivers,”
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
, 2000, 97(8), pp. 4398–403

11
D. Bennabi et al., “Transcranial direct current stimulation for memory enhancement: From clinical research to animal models,”
Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
, 2014, issue 8

12
Y. Taki et al., “Correlation among body height, intelligence, and brain gray matter volume in healthy children,”
Neuroimage
, 2012, 59(2), pp. 1023–7

13
T. Bouchard, “IQ similarity in twins reared apart: Findings and responses to critics,”
Intelligence, Heredity, and Environment
, 1997, pp. 126–60

14
H. Jerison,
Evolution of the Brain and Intelligence
, Elsevier, 2012

15
L. M. Kaino, “Traditional knowledge in curricula designs: Embracing indigenous mathematics in classroom instruction,”
Studies of Tribes and Tribals
, 2013, 11(1), pp. 83–8

16
R. Rosenthal and L. Jacobson, “Pygmalion in the classroom,”
Urban Review
, 1968, 3(1), pp. 16–20

5 Did you see this chapter coming?

  
1
R. C. Gerkin and J. B. Castro, “The number of olfactory stimuli that humans can discriminate is still unknown,” edited by A. Borst,
eLife
, 2015, 4 e08127; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4491703/ (accessed September 2015)

  
2
L. Buck and R. Axel, “Odorant receptors and the organization of the olfactory system,”
Cell
, 1991, 65, pp. 175–87

  
3
R. T. Hodgson, “An analysis of the concordance among 13 US wine competitions,”
Journal of Wine Economics
, 2009, 4(01), pp. 1–9

  
4
See
Chapter 1
, n. 8

  
5
M. Auvray and C. Spence, “The multisensory perception of flavor,”
Consciousness and Cognition
, 2008, 17(3), pp. 1016–31

  
6
http://www.planet-science.com/categories/experiments/biology/2011/05/how-sensitive-are-you.aspx (accessed September 2015)

  
7
http://www.nationalbraille.org/NBAResources/FAQs/ (accessed September 2015)

  
8
H. Frenzel et al., “A genetic basis for mechanosensory traits in humans,”
PLOS Biology
, 2012, 10(5)

  
9
D. H. Hubel and T. N. Wiesel, “Brain Mechanisms of Vision,”
Scientific American
, 1979, 241(3), pp. 150–62

10
E. C. Cherry, “Some experiments on the recognition of speech, with one and with two ears,”
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
, 1953, 25(5), pp. 975–9

11
D. Kahneman,
Attention and Effort
, Citeseer, 1973

12
B. C. Hamilton, L. S. Arnold and B. C. Tefft, “Distracted driving and perceptions of hands-free technologies: Findings from the 2013 Traffic Safety Culture Index,” 2013

13
N. Mesgarani et al., “Phonetic feature encoding in human superior temporal gyrus,”
Science
, 2014, 343(6174), pp. 1006–10

14
See
Chapter 3
, n. 14

15
D. J. Simons and D. T. Levin, “Failure to detect changes to people during a real-world interaction,”
Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
, 1998, 5(4), pp. 644–9

16
R. S. F. McCann, D. C. Foyle and J. C. Johnston, “Attentional Limitations with Heads-Up Displays,”
Proceedings of the Seventh International Symposium on Aviation Psychology
, 1993, pp. 70–5

6 Personality: a testing concept

  
1
E. J. Phares and W. F. Chaplin,
Introduction to Personality
(4th edn), Prentice Hall, 1997

  
2
L. A. Froman, “Personality and political socialization,”
Journal of Politics
, 1961, 23(02), pp. 341–52

  
3
H. Eysenck and A. Levey, “Conditioning, introversion-extraversion and the strength of the nervous system,” in V. D. Nebylitsyn and J. A. Gray (eds.),
Biological Bases of Individual Behavior
, Academic Press, 1972, pp. 206–20

  
4
Y. Taki et al., “A longitudinal study of the relationship between personality traits and the annual rate of volume changes in regional gray matter in healthy adults,”
Human Brain Mapping
, 2013, 34(12), pp. 3347–53

  
5
K. L. Jang, W. J. Livesley and P. A. Vemon, “Heritability of the big five personality dimensions and their facets: A twin study,”
Journal of Personality
, 1996, 64(3), pp. 577–92

  
6
M. Friedman and R. H. Rosenman,
Type A Behavior and Your Heart
, Knopf, 1974

  
7
G. V. Caprara and D. Cervone,
Personality: Determinants, Dynamics, and Potentials
, Cambridge University Press, 2000

  
8
J. B. Murray, “Review of research on the Myers-Briggs type indicator,”
Perceptual and Motor Skills
, 1990, 70(3c), pp. 1187–1202

  
9
A. N. Sell, “The recalibrational theory and violent anger,”
Aggression and Violent Behavior
, 2011, 16(5), pp. 381–9

10
C. S. Carver and E. Harmon-Jones, “Anger is an approach-related affect: evidence and implications,”
Psychological Bulletin
, 2009, 135(2), pp. 183–204

11
M. Kazén et al., “Inverse relation between cortisol and anger and their relation to performance and explicit memory,”
Biological Psychology
, 2012, 91(1), pp. 28–35

12
H. J. Rutherford and A. K. Lindell, “Thriving and surviving: Approach and avoidance motivation and lateralization,”
Emotion Review
, 2011, 3(3), pp. 333–43

13
D. Antos et al., “The influence of emotion expression on perceptions
of trustworthiness in negotiation,”
Proceedings of the Twenty-fifth AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence
, 2011

14
S. Freud,
Beyond the Pleasure Principle
, Penguin, 2003

15
S. McLeod, “Maslow's hierarchy of needs,”
Simply Psychology
, 2007 (updated 2014), http://www.simplypsychology.org/maslow.html (accessed September 2015)

16
R. M. Ryan and E. L. Deci, “Self-determination theory and the facilitation of intrinsic motivation, social development, and well-being,”
American Psychologist
, 2000, 55(1), p. 68

17
M. R. Lepper, D. Greene and R. E. Nisbett, “Undermining children's intrinsic interest with extrinsic reward: A test of the ‘overjustification' hypothesis,”
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
, 1973, 28(1), p. 129

18
E. T. Higgins, “Self-discrepancy: A theory relating self and affect,”
Psychological Review
, 1987, 94(3), p. 319

19
J. Reeve, S. G. Cole and B. C. Olson, “The Zeigarnik effect and intrinsic motivation: Are they the same?,”
Motivation and Emotion
, 1986, 10(3), pp. 233–45

Other books

A Matter of Pride by Harte, Marie
Gilded Nightmare by Hugh Pentecost
The Knockoff Economy by Raustiala, Kal, Sprigman, Christopher
Be Mine by Jennifer Crusie
Over the Fence by Melanie Moreland
LACKING VIRTUES by Thomas Kirkwood