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Teitelbaum, Philip; Stricker, Edward M. – Psychological Review, 1994
The 1954 article by Eliot Stellar provided the theoretical focus for a great deal of research on the biological bases of human behavior. Future attention to the infrastructure of behaviors being studied, combined with reductionistic studies of neurons, will fulfill the potential contribution to behavioral neuroscience implicit in Stellar's…
Descriptors: Behavior, Biological Influences, Motivation, Neuropsychology
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Galef, Bennett G., Jr. – Psychological Review, 1991
It is argued that animals, whether nutritionally replete or nutrient deprived, are not particularly adept at selecting a balanced diet when offered a number of alternatives of varying nutritive value and that the data have never actually indicated otherwise in spite of opinions to the contrary. (SLD)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Dietetics, Eating Habits, Food
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Turkheimer, Eric – Psychological Review, 1998
Explores the role of biological causation in the development of behavioral outcomes. Genes and other biological structures constitute complex behavior, but the behavior of complex organisms cannot be derived from the biogenetic units of which it is composed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Biological Influences, Genetics, Heredity
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Nakayama, Ken – Psychological Review, 1994
Placing psychology in a biological and physical context, James J. Gibson performed prophetic work on visual motion, inspiring more recent studies on higher order aspects of motion encoding. Although not always fully acknowledged, Gibson's work is very important to the development of perceptual psychology. (SLD)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Encoding (Psychology), Motion, Psychological Studies
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Ortony, Andrew; Turner, Terence J. – Psychological Review, 1990
The content of claims that basic emotions are the primitive building blocks of other nonbasic emotions is examined. It is suggested that the concept of basic emotions as elementary psychological primitives which explain other emotions is a false concept. An alternative approach is proposed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Biological Influences, Emotional Experience, Emotional Response
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Gottlieb, Gilbert – Psychological Review, 1998
Attempts to show how genes and environments cooperate in the construction of organisms, focusing on how genes require environmental and behavioral inputs to function appropriately during the normal course of human development. The discussion is related to a model of probabilistic epigenesis. (SLD)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Environmental Influences, Genetics, Heredity
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Corballis, Michael C. – Psychological Review, 2004
Although Homo sapiens emerged in Africa some 170,000 years ago, the origins of "modern" behavior, as expressed in technology and art, are attributed to people who migrated out of Africa around 50,000 years ago, creating what has been called a human revolution in Europe and Asia. There is recent evidence that a mutation of the FOXP2 gene (forkhead…
Descriptors: History, Anatomy, Human Body, Speech
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Grossberg, Stephen; Rudd, Michael E. – Psychological Review, 1992
A large body of data is reviewed to support a new theory of motion perception described by S. Grossberg and M. E. Rudd (1989). The Motion Boundary Contour System is used to explain classical and recent data about motion perception that have not been explained by other models. (SLD)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Cognitive Processes, Epistemology, Equations (Mathematics)
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Cohen, Jonathan D.; Servan-Schreiber, David – Psychological Review, 1992
Using a connectionist framework, it is possible to develop models exploring effects of biologically relevant variables on behavior. The ability of such models to explain schizophrenic behavior in terms of biological disturbances is considered, and computer models are presented that simulate normal and schizophrenic behavior in an attentional task.…
Descriptors: Attention, Behavior Patterns, Biological Influences, Cognitive Processes