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E-raamat: Affective Touch and the Neurophysiology of CT Afferents

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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Oct-2016
  • Kirjastus: Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781493964185
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • See e-raamat on mõeldud ainult isiklikuks kasutamiseks. E-raamatuid ei saa tagastada.
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Oct-2016
  • Kirjastus: Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781493964185

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CT afferents are receptors in mammalian hairy skin that fire action potentials when the skin is touched lightly which makes them particularly important in affective touch.  Traditionally neuroscientific research has focused on more discriminative and haptic properties of touch that are mediated by large myelinated afferents and the coding properties and functional organization of unmyelinated CT afferents have been studied much less.  The proposed volume will draw together existing knowledge in this nascent field. Separate sections will address (1) how we can measure affective touch, (2) CT structure and physiology, (3) CT processing, (4) the contribution of CTs to sexual behavior, (5) clinical relevance, (6) commercial relevance, and (7) future research considerations.?

Arvustused

This is a good book concerning the neurophysiology and psychophysics of somatosensation in animal models and humans. The role of sensory processing in neuropsychiatric conditions such as depression, obsessive compulsive disorders, and schizophrenia is complete. The cortical mapping using EEG, population recordings with fMRI, and grids is detailed. I recommend this book to neurophysiologists, psychiatrists, and psychophysicists especially. Students and sensory researchers will use this book in their work including human/animal experimentation. (Joseph J. Grenier, Amazon.com, February, 2017)

1 Sensual Touch: A Slow Touch System Revealed with Microneurography
1(30)
Ake Vallbo
Line Loken
Johan Wessberg
2 Functional Properties of C-Low Threshold Mechanoreceptors (C-LTMRs) in Nonhuman Mammals
31(18)
Mark Pitcher
Claire Le Pichon
Alexander Chesler
3 Cell Biology of Tactile Afferents
49(12)
Rebecca P. Seal
Ellen A. Lumpkin
4 Visualization of the Cutaneous Axonal Endings of CLTMs
61(8)
Vincenzo Donadio
5 The Peripheral Processing of Pleasant Touch in Mice
69(16)
Sophia Vrontou
6 The Touch Landscape
85(26)
Rochelle Ackerley
Helena Backlund Wasling
Francis McGlone
7 Some Historical Aspects of Cutaneous Psychophysics
111(18)
Ulf Norrsell
8 Psychophysical Assessment of the Sensory and Affective Components of Touch
129(30)
Steve Guest
Greg K. Essick
9 Processing of C-Tactile Information in the Spinal Cord
159(16)
David Andrew
A.D. Bud Craig
10 Insights from A-Beta or C-Fibre Denervated Subjects
175(12)
Jonathan Cole
India Morrison
Irene Perini
Hakan Olausson
11 Brain Processing of CT-Targeted Stimulation
187(8)
Malin Bjornsdotter
12 CT Afferent-Mediated Affective Touch: Brain Networks and Functional Hypotheses
195(14)
India Morrison
13 Brain Processing of Reward for Touch, Temperature, and Oral Texture
209(18)
Edmund T. Rolls
14 Social Touch
227(12)
Alberto Gallace
Charles Spence
15 The Neurochemical Basis of Motivation for Affiliative Touch
239(26)
Guro Løseth
Siri Leknes
Dan-Mikael Ellingsen
16 Affective Touch and Human Grooming Behaviours: Feeling Good and Looking Good
265(18)
Francis McGlone
Susannah Walker
Rochelle Ackerley
17 The Midas Effect: How Somatosensory Impressions Shape Affect and Other-Concern
283(18)
Annett Schirmer
Maria Teresa Wijaya
Siwei Liu
18 Intimacy and the Brain: Lessons from Genital and Sexual Touch
301(22)
Janniko R. Georgiadis
Morten L. Kringelbach
19 Affective Touch from a Philosophical Standpoint
323(18)
Matthew Fulkerson
20 The Effects of Touch
341(14)
Erin Hope Thompson
21 The Touched Self: Affective Touch and Body Awareness in Health and Disease
355(30)
Antje Gentsch
Laura Crucianelli
Paul Jenkinson
Aikaterini Fotopoulou
22 Moderate Pressure Massage Therapy
385(12)
Tiffany Field
23 Psychiatric Conditions and Touch
397(12)
Carissa J. Cascio
24 Pain and Touch: Roles for C-Tactile Afferents in Pain Inhibition and Tactile Allodynia
409(12)
Jaquette Liljencrantz
Mark Pitcher
M. Catherine Bushnell
Hakan Olausson
Index 421
Håkan Olausson is a Consultant in Clinical Neurophysiology at the Linköping University Hospital and Professor in Clinical Neuroscience at the University of Linköping, Sweden. He acquired his PhD at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden and his postdoc training at McGill University, Montreal, Canada. He is the author of more than 70 publications in the field of somatosensation, and he is a member of the board of the Swedish Society for Clinical Neurophysiology and the International Association for the Study of Affective Touch.

Johan Wessberg is Professor in Neurophysiology at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. He obtained his PhD in physiology under the supervision of Prof. Ake Vallbo, with a thesis on human hand motor control and proprioception. He then worked as a Research Associate at the lab of Prof. Miguel Nicolelis at Duke University, USA, pioneering work on brain-machine interfaces in monkeys. Currently, his research focuseson the human sense of touch, neural interfaces, and prosthetic touch. He combines single afferent recording using microneurography, psychophysics, and brain imaging using fMRI, EEG and MEG. 

India Morrison is a senior lecturer at Linköping University, Sweden. Her research interests include the mechanisms of the central nervous system in relation to pain as well as human affective touch. Her area of expertise is concentrated within human brain processing and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Francis McGlone is Professor in Neuroscience at Liverpool John Moores University and Visiting Professor at the University of Liverpool. He obtained his BSc in Neurobiology and PhD in sensory neuroscience from the University of Sussex, and has maintained a research career in many aspects of somatosensation, working in academia and industry. He has over 120 publications spanning single unit properties of somatosensory afferents recorded with microneurography out to cortical mapping of somatosensory stimulation using ultra-high field fMRI. He is a founder member of the International Association for the Study of Affective Touch.