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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $119.50

Format:
Hardback
312 pp.
36 illustrations, 3 mm x 3 mm

ISBN-13:
9780199791569

Publication date:
January 2012

Imprint: OUP US


Mind and the Frontal Lobes

Cognition, Behavior, and Brain Imaging

Edited by Brian Levine, PhD and Fergus Craik I.M., PhD

In the past 25 years, the frontal lobes have dominated human neuroscience research. Functional neuroimaging studies have revealed their importance to brain networks involved in nearly every aspect of mental and cognitive functioning. Studies of patients with focal brain lesions have expanded on early case study evidence of behavioral, emotional, and cognitive changes associated with frontal lobe brain damage. The role of frontal lobe function and dysfunction in human development (in both children and older adults), psychiatric disorders, the dementias, and other brain diseases has also received rapidly increasing attention. In this useful text, 14 leading frontal lobe researchers review and synthesize the current state of knowledge on frontal lobe function, including structural and functional brain imaging, brain network analysis, aging and dementia, traumatic brain injury, rehabilitation, attention, memory, and consciousness.

The book therefore provides a state-of-the-art account of research in this exciting area, and also highlights a number of new findings by some of the world's top researchers.

Readership : Psychologists, neuroscientists, and other health providers concerned with brain disease, aging, and mental health.

1. Unifying Clinical, Experimental, and Neuroimaging Studies of the Human Frontal Lobes
2. Confabulation
3. Reflections on ROBBIA
4. Rostral Prefrontal Cortex: What Neuroimaging Can Learn from Human Neuropsychology
5. Combining the Insights Derived from Lesion and fMRI Studies to Understand the Function of Prefrontal Cortex
6. Dynamic Communication and Connectivity in Frontal Networks
7. The Frontal Lobes and Mental State Attribution
8. Monitoring and Alerting: Two Forests among the Trees
9. Cognitive Rehabilitation in Old Age: The Totman Initiative
10. Effects of Aging on Memory and Attention: A frontal Lobe Problem?
11. The Aging Brain: An Alternate Perspective on Age-Related Changes
12. Structural Brain Imaging and Cognitive Aging
13. The Effects of Focal and Diffuse Brain Injury on Behavior: Assessing "A Slice of Life" with Neuropsychology and Multimodal Neuroimaging
14. Does the Future Exist?
15. The Necessary Narrative

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Brian Levine is a senior scientist at the Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest, professor of psychology and neurology at the University of Toronto, and Baycrest site director of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario Centre for Stroke Recovery. He is a registered psychologist in Ontario, board certified in Clinical Neuropsychology, American Board of Professional Psychology, and he is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and the Association for Psychological Science.

Principles of Frontal Lobe Function - Edited by Donald T. Stuss and Robert T. Knight
Predictions in the Brain - Edited by Moshe Bar
The Noisy Brain - Edmund T. Rolls and Gustavo Deco
Heuristics - Edited by Gerd Gigerenzer, Ralph Hertwig and Thorsten Pachur
Rationality and the Reflective Mind - Keith Stanovich
The New Executive Brain - Elkhonon Goldberg

Special Features

  • A comprehensive update of frontal lobe function.
  • Chapters present integration of patient and neuroimaging data.
  • Relevance to aging, brain disease, psychiatry, and brain injury rehabilitation.
  • Written by top researchers on frontal lobe function.