TY - GEN AU - Sapolsky,Robert Morris ED - Teaching Company TI - Biology and human behavior: the neurological origins of individuality T2 - The Great courses SN - 9781598030815 AV - LB 14.6 S241b 2005 U1 - 370 PY - 2005/// CY - Chantilly, Virginia PB - The Teaching Company KW - Education. KW - Teaching KW - Educación KW - Enseñanza KW - Conducta (Psicología) KW - Neurofisiología KW - Neuroquímica KW - Neuroanatomía KW - Cerebro KW - Anatomía N1 - Course no. 1597. Lecture transcripts cover twenty-four lectures by Robert Sapolsky, Professor of Neuroscience, Stanford University. Newly recorded and expanded update of course originally produced in 1998; "Lecture transcript and course guidebook"--Cover; Includes bibliographical references; [volume I]: Lecture 1. Biology and behavior-an introduction ; Lecture 2. The basic cells of the nervous system ; Lecture 3. How two neurons communicate ; Lecture 4. Learning and synaptic plasticity ; Lecture 5. The dynamics of interacting neurons ; Lecture 6. The limbic system ; Lecture 7. The autonomic nervous system (ANS) ; Lecture 8. The regulation of hormones by the brain ; Lecture 9. The regulation of the brain by hormones ; Lecture 10. The evolution of behavior ; Lecture 11. The evolution of behavior-some examples ; Lecture 12. Cooperation, competition, and neuroeconomics. [volume II]: Lecture 13. What do genes do? microevolution of genes ; Lecture 14. What do genes do? macroevolution of genes ; Lecture 15. Behavior genetics ; Lecture 16. Behavior Genetics and prenatal environment ; Lecture 17. An introduction to ethology ; Lecture 18. Neuroethology ; Lecture 19. The neurobiology of aggression I ; Lecture 20. The neurobiology of aggression II ; Lecture 21. Hormones and aggression ; Lecture 22. Early experience and evolution ; Lecture 23. Evolution, aggression and cooperation ; Lecture 24. A summary N2 - Biology and Human Behavior: The Neurological Origins of Individuality, is an interdisciplinary approach to the fascinating subject of behavioral biology, a field that explores interactions among the brain, mind, body, and environment that have a surprising influence on how we behave. In 24 lectures, you will investigate how the human brain is sculpted by evolution, constrained or freed by genes, shaped by early experience, modulated by hormones, and otherwise influenced to produce a wide range of behaviors, some of them abnormal. You will see that little can be explained by thinking about any one of these factors alone because some combination of influences is almost always at work ER -