Disorders of volition /
Philosophers, psychologists, neuroscientists, and psychiatrists examine the will and its pathologies from theoretical and empirical perspectives, offering a conceptual overview and discussing schizophrenia, depression, prefrontal lobe damage, and substanc.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Cambridge, Mass. :
MIT Press,
©2006.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Toward a science of volition
- Conceptual foundations
- Conscious volition and mental representation: toward a more fine-grained analysis
- Feeling of doing: deconstructing the phenomenology of agency
- Conscious intention and sense of agency
- Agency in schizophrenia from a control theory viewpoint
- Selectionist model of the ego: implications for self-control
- If-then plans and the intentional control of thoughts, feelings, and actions
- Disorders of volition in schizophrenia
- From volition to agency: the mechanism of action recognition and its failures
- Motivated attention and schizophrenia
- Schizophrenic avolition: implications from functional and structural neuroimaging
- Interpersonal factors in the disorders of volition associated with schizophrenia
- Disorders of volition in depression
- Prefrontal and anterior cingulate contributions to volition in depression
- Action control and its failure in clinical depression: a neurocognitive theory
- Cost of pleasure: effort and cognition in anhedonia and depression
- Disorders of volition in patients with prefrontal lobe damage
- Human ventrolateral frontal cortex and intended action
- Volition and the human prefrontal cortex
- Rostral prefrontal brain regions (area 10): a gateway between inner thought and the external world?
- Disorders of volition in substance abuse
- Broken willpower: impaired mechanisms of decision making and impulse control in substance abusers
- Craving, cognition, and the self-regulation of cigarette smoking
- Dynamic model of the will with an application to alcohol-intoxicated behavior.