Brain & Behavior: An Introduction to Behavioral Neuroscience, 7th
Edition
By Bob Garrett
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, TABLE OF CONTENT
Chapter 1 What Is Behavioral Neuroscience?
Part I Neural Foundations of Behavior
Chapter 2 Communication Within the Nervous System
Chapter 3 The Organization and Functions of the Nervous System
Chapter 4 The Methods and Ethics of Research
Part II Motivation and Emotion
Chapter 5 Drugs, Addiction, and Reward
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Chapter 6 Motivation and the Regulation of Internal States
Chapter 7 The Biology of Sex and Gender
Chapter 8 Emotion and Health
Part III Interacting with the World
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Chapter 9 Hearing and Language
Chapter 10 Vision and Visual Perception
Chapter 11 The Body Senses and Movement
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Part IV Complex Behavior
Chapter 12 Learning and Memory
Chapter 13 Cognitive Functioning and Neurodiversity
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Chapter 14 Psychological Disorders
Chapter 15 Sleep and Consciousness
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Chapter 1
Multiple Choice (Correct answers delineated with *)
1. The decade of the 1990s was designated as the decade of:
a. The brain (*)
b. Behavior
c. Mind
d. Cognition
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2. If someone is interested in the relationships between behavior and the body, what area of
science do they work in?
a. Psychobiology
b. Biopsychology
c. Physiological psychology
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d. All of these areas are correct. (*)
3. Neuroscience is the multidisciplinary study of the and its role in behavior:
a. Brain
b. Nervous system (*)
c. Mind
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d. Human psyche
4. The annual costs of brain disorders and addictions in the United States is an estimated:
a. 100 trillion dollars
b. 500 billion dollars
c. 1 trillion dollars (*)
d. 5 trillion dollars
5. Psychologists use the term behavior to refer to:
a. Overt acts
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b. Learning
c. Emotions
d. All of the above (*)
6. Which of the following questions would a biopsychologist be least likely to study?
a. How does the brain’s activity result in consciousness? (*)
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b. What changes occur in the nervous system when a person learns?
c. How do people in different cultures view mental illness?
d. What is the physiological explanation for depression?
7. If you were able to build a time machine, and wanted to travel back to observe the first
psychology laboratory, where would you go?
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