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Edition by Bryan Kolb, Ian Q. Whishaw,
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Chapters 1 - 16, Complete Newest Version
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,Table of Contents
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Chapter 1 What Are the Origins of Brain and Behavior? Chapter 2
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m What Is the Nervous System’s Functional Anatomy?Chapter 3
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m What Are the Nervous System’s Functional Units?
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Chapter 4 How Do Neurons Use Electrical Signals to Transmit Information?Chapter 5
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m How Do Neurons Communicate and Adapt?
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Chapter 6 How Do Drugs and Hormones Influence the Brain and Behavior?Chapter 7
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m How Do We Studythe Brain’s Structures and Functions?
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Chapter 8 How Does the Nervous System Develop and
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Adapt?Chapter 9 How Do We Sense, Perceive, and See the
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World?
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Chapter 10 How Do We Hear, Speak, and Make Music?
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Chapter 11 How Does the Nervous System Respond to Stimulation and Produce
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Movement?Chapter 12 What Causes Emotional and Motivated Behavior?
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Chapter 13 Why Do We Sleep and Dream?
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m Chapter 14 How Do We Learn and
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Remember?Chapter 15 How Does the Brain
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m Think?
Chapter 16 What Happens When the Brain Misbehaves?
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,Chapter1 – What are the origins of Brain and Behaviour?
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1. Brain abnormalities can be related to:
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A) 500 disorders. m
B) 1000 disorders. m
C) 1500 disorders. m
D) more than 2,000 disorders. m m m
2. All the nerve processes radiating out beyond the brain and spinal cord as well as all
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theneurons outside the brain and spinal cord constitute the:
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A) nervous system. m
B) central nervous system. m m
C) peripheral nervous system. m m
D) external nervous system. m m
3. Which is NOTpart of the peripheral nervous system?
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A) sensory receptors in the skin m m m m
B) connections to motor neurons m m m
C) sensory and motor connections to internal organs (e.g., the stomach)
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D) the spinal cord m m
4. The set of brain structures responsible for most of our unconscious behaviors is called:
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A) the cerebral hemisphere. m m
B) the brainstem. m
C) the cerebrum. m
D) the cerebellum. m
5. The postulation that we make subliminal movements of our larynx and muscles whenwe
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imagine was expounded by:
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A) D. O. Hebb. m m
B) Edmond Jacobson. m
C) Irenäus Eibl-Eibesfeldt. m
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, D) Fred Linge. m
6. ―Behavior consists of patterns in time‖ is a definition of behavior expounded by:
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A) D. O. Hebb. m m
B) Edmond Jacobson. m
C) Irenäus Eibl-Eibesfeldt. m
D) Fred Linge. m
7. Patterns in time can be made up of:
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A) movements.
B) thinking.
C) both movements and thinking.
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D) neither movements nor thinking. m m m
8. Animals with smaller brains and simpler nervous systems have mostly
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behaviors,whereas animals with larger brains and more complex nervous systems have
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mostly
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m behaviors.
A) learned; inherited m
B) inherited; learned m
C) innate; inherited m
D) learned; innate m
9. Crossbill birds have a beak that is designed to eat pine cones. If we trim the beak,
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thebehavior disappears. This example illustrates:
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A) fixed behavior. m
B) flexiblebehavior. m
C) learnedbehavior. m
D) adaptivebehavior. m
10. The sucking response observed in newborn human infants is an example of a(n):
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A) learned response. m
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