Edited by: Roberta Conlan, (Adapted from the original talks by J.
Allan Hobson, Jerome Kagan, Joseph LeDoux, Kay Redfield Jamison,
Steven Hyman, Eric Kandel, Bruce McEwen, Ester Sternberg at the
Smithsonian Associates-Dana Alliance for Brain Initiatives lecture
series, "Understanding the Human Psyche")
ISBN:
0-471-29963-4
Hardcover
Price: US$24.95
Published: Feb 1999
Copyright: 1999
"Most neuroscientists now argue that the biological organ
inside our skulls is both the source and repository of our elusive
identity, and of all aspects of cognition and emotion. The balance
of chemicals in our individual brains may predispose us to react to
life's ups and downs with a characteristic tranquility or agitation.
Disturbances of that chemical balance can trigger mood disorders and
mental illness. And burgeoning research into the connection between
the brain and the body is reinforcing the idea that the influence
flows in both directions—that is, our attitudes and emotions, once
regarded as purely a function of 'mind,' can affect the health of
the body, and vice versa. . . . As all of this research reaffirms,
the fundamental characteristic of human consciousness and identity
is that they are shaped and reshaped by a brain that is continually
adapting to the world around us. Whether we're reading or walking,
dreaming or talking, the particular impulses and pathways of the
brain's billions of neurons are storing experience, learning and
unlearning, and creating us anew in the process."—from the
Introduction.
States of Mind is a wonderfully accessible introduction to
the most important recent findings about how our health, behavior,
feelings, and identities are influenced by the workings of our
brains. Eight pioneering researchers present remarkable new insights
about how our inner lives—both of the mind and of the body—are
generated and regulated by the marvelous biology going on inside our
heads.
These preeminent scientists offer a new way of understanding
ourselves—of peering into the workings of our brains in order to
appreciate how our emotions and moods, our memories and dreams come
about. They also reveal a new understanding of health and illness
and how important the interconnections between our minds and bodies
are. Are we born to be shy? Why do we remember some events so
clearly and others not at all? Do our dreams really have deeper
meanings? Are creativity and depression somehow linked? How does
stress affect our vulnerability to illness? Whether discussing the
brain-body connection, the sources of emotion, or the ethereal world
of dreams, these top experts offer lively and stimulating
introductions to the most exciting findings, and a new way of
understanding our lives.
An all-star lineup of scientists takes you to the front lines of
brain research.
J. ALLAN HOBSON, author of the groundbreaking The Dreaming Brain,
leads us on a tour of dream states, the reasons we dream, and what
dream studies reveal about our minds. STEVEN HYMAN, director of the
National Institute of Mental Health, traces the links between nature
and nurture, particularly in addiction and mental illness, to
explain the relationship between inherited tendencies and the impact
of life experience. KAY REDFIELD JAMISON, bestselling author of An
Unquiet Mind, explains manic depression, its prevalence among gifted
artists, writers, and musicians, and the societal questions raised
by trying to eradicate the "depression gene." JEROME
KAGAN, director of Harvard's Mind-Brain-Behavior Initiative,
presents the latest findings on how a child's environment and inborn
biology combine to shape and reshape personality and temperament.
ERIC KANDEL, director of Columbia's Center for Neurobiology and
Behavior, takes us along the chain of biological events that create
long-term memories, revealing how we stand at the brink of helping
those who suffer from grave mental and memory disorders. JOSEPH
LEDOUX, author of the acclaimed The Emotional Brain, guides us
through the pathways of emotion and describes his pioneering work in
the biology of the emotion of fear. BRUCE MCEWEN, director of the
Laboratory of Neuroendocrinology at Rockefeller University, reports
on the growing problem of stress and reveals the damage it can
inflict on both biological health and cognitive abilities, such as
memory. ESTHER STERNBERG, chief of the section on neuroendocrine
immunology and behavior at the National Institute of Mental Health,
shares her findings in the study of the brain and disease,
demonstrating the substances at work in the nervous and immune
systems and the reaction of these systems to strong emotions.
States of Mind enables you to share in the thrill and wonder of
the very latest explorations into the nature and function of the
human mind.
ROBERTA CONLAN is a regular contributor to the publications of
the National Academy of Sciences.