Features
- Cover Type: Hard Cover with 232 pages
- Published by: University Of Chicago Press March 15, 1993
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 0226176002
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-0226176000
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Book Dimensions:
9.3 x 6.2 x 0.8 inches
- Weighs: 1.4 pounds
Product Description
Since Pavlov, physiologists have explained homeostasis—the regulation of bodily functions—as the action of fixed negative feedback networks within individual organ systems. However, these standard explanations largely ignore the mechanisms of conditioning and learning. Drawing on the work of Western, East European, and Russian physiologists, Barry R. Dworkin challenges traditional concepts and argues that learning mechanisms of the nervous system are essential to regulation. Dworkin shows how, through experience, learning mechanisms determine dynamic stability and the long-term regulation of heart rate, blood pressure, glucose, electrolytes, and temperature. He argues that "hard wired" mechanisms do not adequately account for the speed and accuracy of physiological adjustments, and supports his contention with detailed analyses and mathematical models of how conditioned and unconditioned reflexes interact. Dworkin reviews a wealth of research on interoceptive conditioning, conditioned drug responses, and visceral adjustment. Combining physiological and behavioral data with mathematical analysis and computer models, he synthesizes the work of Pavlov and W. B. Cannon in a quantitative theory of physiological regulation that will interest researchers and theorists in medicine, physiology, neuroscience, and biopsychology.
About The Author
Barry R. Dworkin is associate professor in the Departments of Behavioral Science and Psychology and a member of the Neuroscience Program at Pennsylvania State University.
Reader Reviews
Professor Dworkin's monograph is a thought provoking presentation of concepts that are of cross-cutting importance throughout the life sciences.
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