Baars, B.J. (2005) “Global Workspace Theory of Consciousness: Toward a Cognitive Neuroscience of Human Experience”, Progress inBrain Research150: 45—53.
2.
Baddeley, A. (1992) “Working Memory”, Science255: 556—9.
3.
Baddeley, A. (2000) “The Episodic Buffer: A New Component of Working Memory?”, Trends inCognitive Science4: 417—23.
4.
Bechara, A., Tranel, D., Damasio, H., Adolphs, R., Rockland, C. and Damasio, A. (1995) “Double Dissociation of Conditioning and Declarative Knowledge Relative to the Amygdala and Hippocampus in Humans”, Science269: 1115—18.
5.
Berridge, K.C. (2004) “Motivation Concepts in Behavioral Neuroscience ”, Physiology and Behavior81: 179—209.
6.
Cannon, W. (1929) Bodily Changes in Pain, Hunger, Fear, and RageNew York: Appleton.
7.
Carter, R.M., O'Doherty, J., Seymour, B., Koch, C. and Dolan, R. (2006) “Contingency Awareness in Human Aversive Conditioning Involves the Middle Frontal Gyrus”, Neuroimage29: 1007—12.
8.
Critchley, H.D., Mathias, C. and Dolan, R. (2002) “Fear Conditioning in Humans: the Influence of Awareness and Autonomic Arousal on Functional Neuroanatomy”, Neuron33: 653—63.
9.
Critchley, H., Wiens, S., Rotshtein, P., Ohman, A. and Dolan, R.J. (2004) “Neural Systems Supporting Interoceptive Awareness”, Nature Neuroscience7: 189—95.
10.
Damasio, A. (1994) Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain. New York: Gosset/Putnam .
11.
Dehaene, S. and Naccache, L. (2001) “Towards a Cognitive Neuroscience of Consciousness: Basic Evidence and a Workspace Framework”, Cognition79: 1—37.
12.
Etkin, A., Klemenhagen, K., Dudman, J.T., Rogan, M., Hen, R., Kandel, E.R. and Hirsch, J. (2004) “Individual Differences in Trait Anxiety Predict the Response of the Basolateral Amygdala to Unconsciously Processed Fearful Faces”, Neuron44: 1043—55.
13.
Everitt, B., Cardinal, R., Parkinson, J. and Robbins, T.W. (2003) “Appetitive Behavior: Impact of Amygdala-Dependent Mechanisms of Emotional Learning”, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences985: 233—50.
14.
Gregg, T. and Siegel, A. (2001) “Brain Structures and Neurotransmitters Regulating Aggression in Cats: Implications for Human Aggression”, Progress in Neuropsychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry25: 91—140.
15.
Insel, T.R. and Young, L.J. (2001) “The Neurobiology of Attachment”, Nature Reviews Neuroscience2: 129—36.
16.
Johnson, M.K. (1991) “Reality Monitoring: Evidence from Confabulation in Organic Brain Disease Patients”, in G.P. Prigatano and D.L. Schacter (eds) Awareness of Deficit after Brain Injury, pp. 176—97. New York: Oxford University Press.
17.
Kotter, R. and Meyer, N. (1992) “The Limbic System: A Review of Its Empirical Foundation”, Behavioural Brain Research52: 105—27.
18.
LaBar, K.S., LeDoux, J.E., Spencer, DD and Phelps, E.A. (1995) “Impaired Fear Conditioning following Unilateral Temporal Lobectomy in Humans”, Journal of Neuroscience15: 6846—55.
19.
LeDoux, J.E. (1987) “Emotion”, in F. Plum (ed.) Handbook of Physiology, Part 1: The Nervous System, Vol. V: Higher Functions of the Brain, pp. 419—60. Bethesda: American Physiological Society.
20.
LeDoux, J.E. (1991) “Emotion and the Limbic System Concept”, Concepts in Neuroscience2: 169—99.
21.
LeDoux, J.E. (1996) The Emotional Brain. New York : Simon and Schuster.
22.
LeDoux, J.E. (2000) “Emotion Circuits in the Brain”, Annual Review of Neuroscience23: 155—84.
23.
MacLean, P.D. (1949) “Psychosomatic Disease and the `Visceral Brain': Recent Developments Bearing on the Papez Theory of Emotion”, Psychosomatic Medicine11: 338—53.
24.
MacLean, P.D. (1952) “Some Psychiatric Implications of Physiological Studies on Frontotemporal Portion of Limbic System (Visceral Brain)”, Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology4: 407—18.
25.
Miller, E.K. and Cohen, J.D. (2001) “An Integrative Theory of Prefrontal Cortex Function”, Annual Review of Neuroscience24: 167—202.
26.
Morris, J.S., Ohman, A., and Dolan, R.J. (1998) “Conscious and Unconscious Emotional Learning in the Human Amygdala”, Nature393: 467—70.
27.
Norman, D.A. and Shallice, T. (1980) “Attention to Action: Willed and Automatic Control of Behavior”, in R.J. Davidson , G.E. Schwartz and D. Shapiro (eds) Consciousness and Self-Regulation , pp. 1—18. New York: Plenum.
28.
Panksepp, J. (1998) Affective Neuroscience. New York: Oxford University Press.
29.
Papez, J.W. (1937) “A Proposed Mechanism of Emotion”, Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry79: 217—24.
30.
Pfaff, D. (1999) Drive: Neurobiological and Molecular Mechanisms of Sexual Motivation. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
31.
Phelps, E.A. (2006) “Emotion and Cognition: Insights from Studies of the Human Amygdala”, Annual Review ofPsychology57: 27—53.
32.
Phelps, E.A. and LeDoux, J.E. (2005) “Contributions of the Amygdala to Emotion Processing: From Animal Models to Human Behavior”, Neuron48: 175—87.
33.
Rees, G., Kreiman, G. and Koch, C. (2002) “Neural Correlates of Consciousness in Humans ”, Nature Reviews Neuroscience3: 261—70.
34.
Rolls, E.T. (1999) The Brain and Emotion. Oxford : Oxford University Press.
35.
Schulkin, J. (2003) “Allostasis: A Neural Behavioral Perspective ”, Hormones and Behavior43: 21—7; discussion 28—30.
36.
Schultz, W. (2006) “Behavioral Theories and the Neurophysiology of Reward”, Annual Review of Psychology57: 87—115.
37.
Smith, E.E. and Jonides, J. (1999) “Storage and Executive Processes in the Frontal Lobes”, Science283: 1657—61.
38.
Swanson, L.W. (1983) “The Hippocampus and the Concept of the Limbic System”, in W. Siefert (ed.) Neurobiology of the Hippocampus, pp. 3—19. London: Academic Press.
39.
Vuilleumier, P., Armony, J.L., Driver, J. and Dolan, R.J. (2001) “Effects of Attention and Emotion on Face Processing in the Human Brain: An Event-Related fMRI Study”, Neuron30: 829—41.
40.
Vuilleumier, P., Armony, J.L., Clarke, K., Husain, M., Driver, J. and Dolan, R.J. (2002) “Neural Response to Emotional Faces with and without Awareness: Event-Related fMRI in a Parietal Patient with Visual Extinction and Spatial Neglect”, Neuropsychologia40: 2156—66.
41.
Whalen, P., Rauch, S.L., Etcoff, N., McInerney, S.C., Lee, M.B. and Jenike, M.A. (1998) “Masked Presentations of Emotional Facial Expressions Modulate Amygdala Activity without Explicit Knowledge”, Journal of Neuroscience18: 411—18.