Human Behavior, Learning, and the Developing Brain: Atypical development

Voorkant
Donna Coch, Geraldine Dawson, Kurt W. Fischer
Guilford Press, 1 feb 2007 - 378 pagina's
"Synthesizing the breadth of current knowledge on brain-behavior relationships in atypically developing children, this important volume integrates theories and data from multiple disciplines. Leading authorities present their latest research on specific clinical problems, including autism, Williams syndrome, learning and language disabilities, ADHD, and issues facing infants of diabetic mothers. In addition, the effects of social stress and maltreatment on brain development and behavior are thoroughly reviewed. Illustrating the uses of cutting-edge methods from developmental neuroscience, deve
 

Inhoudsopgave

The Role of Neuroscience in Historical
3
Some Ways in Which Neuroscientific Research
30
The Structural Development of the Human Brain
50
Dynamic Development of Hemispheric Biases
74
The Developing Brain and Behavior
113
BrainBehavior Relations from 0 to 3
138
Experience and Developmental Changes
183
Temperament and Biology
219
The Developing Brain and Behavior
277
Development of Verbal Working Memory
301
Emotion Processing and the Developing Brain
329
Brain Development and Adolescent Behavior
362
Index
397
Copyright

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Populaire passages

Pagina 386 - Bechara, A., Damasio, H., & Damasio, AR (2000). Emotion, decision making and the orbitofrontal cortex. Cerebral Cortex, 10, 295-307.

Over de auteur (2007)

Donna Coch, EdD, is Assistant Professor in the Department of Education at Dartmouth College. She earned a doctoral degree from the Harvard University Graduate School of Education and conducted postdoctoral research at the University of Oregon. Dr. Coch?s research focuses on what happens in the brain as children learn how to read, particularly in terms of phonological and orthographic processing. A goal of both her research and teaching is to make meaningful connections between the fields of developmental cognitive neuroscience and education.
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Geraldine Dawson, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the University of Washington, where she is also Director of the Autism Center. She is internationally recognized for her pioneering research on early diagnosis and brain function in autism and early biological risk factors for psychopathology. Dr. Dawson has published over 125 scientific articles and chapters and a number of books, and has been the recipient of continuous research funding from the National Institutes of Health for her studies on autism and child psychopathology.
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Kurt W. Fischer, PhD, is Charles Bigelow Professor of Education and Human Development at the Harvard University Graduate School of Education and founder and director of the program in Mind, Brain, and Education. He studies cognitive and emotional development from birth through adulthood, combining analysis of the commonalities across people with the diversity of pathways of learning and development. Dr. Fischer is the author of several books and over 200 scientific articles, and is founding president of the International Mind, Brain, and Education Society and editor of its journal Mind, Brain, and Education.

Bibliografische gegevens