Circuits regulating pleasure and happiness: the evolution of reward-seeking and misery-fleeing behavioral mechanisms in vertebrates; Frontiers in Neuroscience; Vol. 9, Oct.

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Parent link:Frontiers in Neuroscience.— , 2007-
Vol. 9, Oct..— 2015.— [6 p.]
Hlavní autor: Loonen A. J. M. Anton
Korporativní autor: Национальный исследовательский Томский политехнический университет Институт неразрушающего контроля Кафедра экологии и безопасности жизнедеятельности
Další autoři: Ivanova S. A. Svetlana Aleksandrovna
Shrnutí:Title screen
The very first free-moving animals in the oceans over 540 million years ago must have been able to obtain food, territory, and shelter, as well as reproduce. Therefore, they would have needed regulatory mechanisms to induce movements enabling achievement of these prerequisites for survival. It can be useful to consider these mechanisms in primitive chordates, which represent our earliest ancestors, to develop hypotheses addressing how these essential parts of human behavior are regulated and relate to more sophisticated behavioral manifestations such as mood.
Режим доступа: по договору с организацией-держателем ресурса
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: 2015
Témata:
On-line přístup:http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2015.00394
Médium: Elektronický zdroj Kapitola
KOHA link:https://koha.lib.tpu.ru/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=649824

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