Authors: Dean Burnett
26
S. S. Shergill et al., “Functional anatomy of auditory verbal imagery in schizophrenic patients with auditory hallucinations,”
American Journal of Psychiatry
, 2000, 157(10), pp. 1691â3
27
P. Allen et al., “The hallucinating brain: a review of structural and
functional neuroimaging studies of hallucinations,”
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews
, 2008, 32(1), pp. 175â91
28
S.-J. Blakemore et al., “The perception of self-produced sensory stimuli in patients with auditory hallucinations and passivity experiences: evidence for a breakdown in self-monitoring,”
Psychological Medicine
, 2000, 30(05), pp. 1131â9
29
See n. 27, above
30
R. L. Buckner and D. C. Carroll, “Self-projection and the brain,”
Trends in Cognitive Sciences
, 2007, 11(2), pp. 49â57
31
A. W. Young, K. M. Leafhead and T. K. Szulecka, “The Capgras and Cotard delusions,”
Psychopathology
, 1994, 27(3â5), pp. 226â31
32
M. Coltheart, R. Langdon, and R. McKay, “Delusional belief,”
Annual Review of Psychology
, 2011, 62, pp. 271â98
33
P. Corlett et al., “Toward a neurobiology of delusions,”
Progress in Neurobiology
, 2010, 92(3), pp. 345â69
34
J. T. Coyle, “The glutamatergic dysfunction hypothesis for schizophrenia,”
Harvard Review of Psychiatry
, 1996, 3(5), pp. 241â53
Page numbers listed correspond to the print edition of this book. You can use your device's search function to locate particular terms in the text.
acetylcholine 285
action potentials 40
Adolf Hitler: My Part in His Downfall
(Milligan) 11â12
adrenalin 31, 32, 43, 91, 98
junkies 102 (
see also
fear: love of)
alcohol:
and depression 272
and memory 52â7
and social anxieties 86
Alzheimer's disease 69, 142, 146
n
(
see also
dementia; mental health)
amnesia,
see
memory
amygdala 29, 31, 89, 99, 156, 200, 203, 213, 219, 230, 243, 289, 296â7
anorexia 17
anterior cingulate cortex 243, 257, 270
anterior cingulate gyrus 182
anterior hippocampus 103
aphasia 225â6, 228
Broca's 225
Wernicke's 225â6
apophenia 79â80
appetite 12â14 (
see also
diet and eating)
artificial light 20
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) 142
auditory cortex 226
bodily movement 7
body temperature 20
braille 166
brain (
see also
nervous system):
and aphasia 225, 228
boosting power of 135â43 (
see also
intelligence)
and pharmaceuticals 141â2
and transcranial direct-current stimulation (tCDS) 142â3
and brainwaves 21 (
see also
sleep)
and control of others 231â9
door-in-face technique 234â5, 239
foot-in-door technique 233â4, 239
impression management 237
low-ball technique 235â6
reciprocity 239
and relationships 240â6
and delusions,
see
delusions
and drug addiction 283â91
and ego 58â66, 242
fight-or-flight response in 27â33, 75, 80, 91, 104, 107, 280 (
see also
fear)
and Gage 188â90
and group dynamics 246â54, 256â60
and bystander effect 251
and group polarization 252â3
and groupthink 251â2
and hallucinations,
see
hallucinations
and language processing 39, 124, 219, 224â7
and NLP 227â8
and London taxi drivers 140
and memory,
see
memory
and mental health,
see
mental health
motion sickness created by 8â12
lack of 11
at sea 11â12
and motivation's origin 213
neurons in,
see
neurons
and neuroplasticity 270, 301
and nutrition 147
observation by 152â87
attention 177â87
hearing 161â4, 166â7
proprioception 9, 153
smell 154â61
taste 159â61
touch 161â2, 164â7
vision 167â77
other people's influence on 222â62
facial expression 223â4, 228â31
non-verbal communication 223â4, 228â31
pattern recognition by 78â9, 80
and personality types 195 (
see also
personality)
and pronounced locus of control 82â3
redundancy built into 189
scans 38, 84, 103, 115, 121, 124, 136, 236
n
“selves” within 212
size of 147â8
and sleep,
see
sleep
structure of:
amygdala 29, 31, 89, 99, 156, 200, 203, 213, 219, 230, 243, 289, 296â7
anterior cingulate cortex 243, 257, 270
anterior cingulate gyrus 182
anterior hippocampus 103
auditory cortex 226
brainstem 6, 28
Broca's area 39, 124, 224â6
caudate nucleus 243
cerebrum 6, 230
corpus callosum 138
dorsal cingulate cortex 257
frontal cortex 49, 202, 213, 219
frontal lobe 38, 134, 226
fusiform gyrus 259
hippocampus 41â2, 55, 70, 74, 83, 99, 103, 140, 147, 156, 194, 200, 203, 219, 296
hormone-regulating areas 106
hypothalamicâpituitaryâadrenal (HPA) axis 106â7, 270, 276
hypothalamus 29
inferior frontal gyrus 226
inferior temporal gyrus 85
limbic system 156â7, 230
lingual gyrus 259
medial insula 243
mesolymbic (“reward”) pathway 96, 97, 98â9, 103, 219, 284â5, 289
mid-cingulate gyrus 194
middle temporal gyrus 226
motor cortex 21, 139, 230
neocortex 6, 14, 231
nucleus accumbens 96â7
occipital lobe 173, 295
orbitofrontal cortex 194, 201, 203
parietal lobe 124, 139, 182, 183, 219, 259
periaqueductal gray 200
pineal gland 19
posterior cingulate gyrus 243
posterior hippocampus 194
posterior parietal cortex 184
prefrontal cortex 38, 121, 123, 124, 134, 137, 147, 181â2, 194, 237, 243, 257, 259, 287, 296
pulvinar nucleus 184
putamen 226, 230, 243
“reptile” brain 6, 14, 28
sensory cortex 295, 297
somatosensory cortex 164, 165, 166
substantia nigra 263
superior colliculus 184
superior temporal gyrus 226
supramarginal gyrus 124
temporal lobes 41, 71, 182, 194, 226, 295
thalamus 28â9, 171, 294
vagus nerve 11
ventral tegumental area 96â7
visual cortex 173â4, 229
Wernicke's area 39, 224â6
superior intelligence of, in humans,
see
intelligence
surgery on 71
of taxi drivers 42
and treating others badly 254â62
Milgram experiment concerning 255â6
white matter in 138, 140, 141
brainstem 6, 28
Broca, Pierre Paul 224
Broca's area 39, 124, 224â6
bulimia 17
Burke, Edmund 254
Bush, George W. 130
bystander effect 251
cannabis 251â2
caudate nucleus 243
cerebrum 6, 230
Challenger
shuttle 26
change blindness 186
circadian rhythms 19
cochlea 162â3
cocktail-party effect 179, 182
comfort eating 16
compliments,
see
criticism vs praise
confirmation bias 109
conspiracy theories 77â84, 85
corpus callosum 138
cortisol 83, 106, 107â8, 201, 202, 278
counterfactual thinking 64, 102
covert and overt orientation 183
creationism 168
n
criticism vs praise 104â11
deindividuation 254
delusions 292, 297â301
Capgras 298â9
forms of 297
dementia 69, 74, 134, 142, 146
n
, 292 (
see also
mental health)
and depression 271
dichotic listening 178â9
diet and eating 12â17
and appetite 12â14
for comfort 16
cooked vs raw 12â13
n
disorders concerning 17
habits 15â16
and learned associations 14â15
and taste vs vision 15
dopamine 52, 96, 103, 243, 269, 282, 285
dorsal cingulate cortex 257
driving, and attention 180â1
dualism 188, 189
DunningâKruger effect 131â2, 133
eardrum 163
ego 58â66, 242
Einstein, Albert 116â17, 129
endaural phenomena 163
endorphins 208
n
, 288
epilepsy 24, 71, 182
n
, 277â8
exploding head syndrome 164
extra-ocular muscles 11 (
see also
vision)
Eysenck, Hans J. 193
fear 27â8, 29, 75â111
and conspiracy theories 77â84, 85
and horror movies 96, 100
love of 95â104
passim
and panic attacks 92â3
and phobias/social anxieties 86â95
and social anxieties/phobias 86â95
parenting's contribution to 94
and superstition 78â85
and video games 99â100, 201
fight-or-flight response 27â33, 75, 80, 91, 104, 107, 280 (
see also
fear)
fingerprints 191â2
Flynn effect 150
fovea 170â1, 184
Freud, Sigmund 207, 208, 217
frontal cortex 49, 202, 213, 219
frontal lobe 38, 134, 226
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) 84, 136
fusiform gyrus 259
Genovese, Kitty 250â1
ghrelin 13
glutamate 300
goal orientation 183
groupthink 251â2
Guardian
, comments on website of 77â8
hallucinations 23, 292â7
auditory 164, 293
and illusions 158
n
olfactory 158
Hawking, Stephen 116â17
hedonic principle 207
hibernation 20
hippocampus 41â2, 55, 70, 74, 83, 99, 103, 140, 147, 156, 194, 200, 203, 219, 296
hormone-regulating areas 106
hypothalamicâpituitaryâadrenal (HPA) axis 106â7, 270, 276
hypothalamus 29
“In the Face of Fear” 76â7 (
see also
fear)
illusions:
and hallucinations 158
n
olfactory 157â8
inferior frontal gyrus 226
inferior temporal gyrus 85
inner ear 9
intelligence 112â51
boosting 135â43
and pharmaceuticals 141â2
and transcranial direct-current stimulation (tCDS) 142
and brain size 147â8
counterintuitive nature of 128â35, 136
crystallized 122â4, 127, 139
and culture 148â9
and factor analysis 119â20, 126, 195
fluid 122â4, 127, 137, 139
“fixing” of 141
heritability of 144â8
and impostor syndrome 128â9
and IQ 114, 115â18, 121, 214
and physical height 144
Spearman's analysis of 120
and manipulation of information 114â15
measuring 113â18
and metacognitive ability 134
and nutrition 147
and physical height 143, 146â7, 150
and preconceptions 149
Primary Mental Abilities of 125â6
and savants 125
in soccer players 124â5
and Spearman's
g
119â21, 127
types of 119â27
worldwide growth of 150
Internet 7, 78, 246, 258
Introduction to Personality
(Phares, Chaplin) 190
jet-lag 19
jobs, types and nature of 7
“just world” hypothesis 261
Kingston, Miles 124
Koontz, Dean 95â6
Kpelle tribe 148â9
leptin 13
limbic system 156â7, 230
lingual gyrus 259
The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat
(Sacks) 228
Maslow, Abraham 209â10
medial insula 243
melatonin 19
memory 34â74
alcohol as aid to 52â7
brain edits 66
computer memory contrasted with 34â5
and ego-bias 58â66
and encoding 41
episodic/autobiographical 44â5
of faces vs names 45â51
false 67â9
“flashbulb,” after trauma 43â4, 279
going wrong 66â74
and hindsight 61â2
long-term, short-term versus 35â45, 48
primacy effect of 48
recall threshold of 51
recency effect of 48
semantic 45
short-term (“working”) 121, 180
long-term versus 35â45, 48
and sleep 24â5
and smell 156â7
and stroke 70â1
mental health 263â302 (
see also
dementia)
and antidepressants 269, 270
and death 266â7, 278
and depression 266â75, 300
and downward spiral 271â2
and sleep 269â70
and suicide 267
and disorders:
controversy surrounding 265
defined 264
and life-change units 278â9
nervous breakdowns 275â83
and post-traumatic stress disorder 280
and stress 1, 26, 106, 201, 276â83
mesolymbic (“reward”) pathway 96, 97, 98â9, 103, 219, 284â5, 289
“Mexican brainwave” 21
mid-cingulate gyrus 194
middle temporal gyrus 226
Milgram, Stanley 255â6
Miller's law 37
Milligan, Spike 11â12
monoamine hypothesis 269
Monty Python's Flying Circus
252
n