Handbook of PsychophysiologyJohn T. Cacioppo, Louis G. Tassinary, Gary G. Berntson The Handbook of Psychophysiology has been the authoritative resource for more than a quarter of a century. Since the third edition was published a decade ago, the field of psychophysiological science has seen significant advances, both in traditional measures such as electroencephalography, event-related brain potentials, and cardiovascular assessments, and in novel approaches and methods in behavioural epigenetics, neuroimaging, psychoneuroimmunology, psychoneuroendocrinology, neuropsychology, behavioural genetics, connectivity analyses, and non-contact sensors. At the same time, a thoroughgoing interdisciplinary focus has emerged as essential to scientific progress. Emphasizing the need for multiple measures, careful experimental design, and logical inference, the fourth edition of the Handbook provides updated and expanded coverage of approaches, methods, and analyses in the field. With state-of-the-art reviews of research in topical areas such as stress, emotion, development, language, psychopathology, and behavioural medicine, the Handbook remains the essential reference for students and scientists in the behavioural, cognitive, and biological sciences. |
From inside the book
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... experimental design begins with an experimental and a control condition. The experimental condition represents the presence of some factor, and the control condition represents the absence of this factor. The experimental factor might ...
... experimental design begins with an experimental and a control condition. The experimental condition represents the presence of some factor, and the control condition represents the absence of this factor. The experimental factor might ...
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... experimental design) makes it possible to deduce the physiological signature of each of the constituent stages underlying some psychological or behavioral response. For instance, if the experimental task (n + 1 stages) is characterized ...
... experimental design) makes it possible to deduce the physiological signature of each of the constituent stages underlying some psychological or behavioral response. For instance, if the experimental task (n + 1 stages) is characterized ...
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... experimental design allows theoretical inferences to be drawn based on psychophysiological outcomes alone. That is ... experiment is likely to convince the adherents of both theories. If multiple operationalizations of the theoretical ...
... experimental design allows theoretical inferences to be drawn based on psychophysiological outcomes alone. That is ... experiment is likely to convince the adherents of both theories. If multiple operationalizations of the theoretical ...
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... experimental design, and logical inference. The fourth edition of the Handbook has a significant role to play in this regard. There have been major advances in methodology and important updates to the guideline for various methods. In a ...
... experimental design, and logical inference. The fourth edition of the Handbook has a significant role to play in this regard. There have been major advances in methodology and important updates to the guideline for various methods. In a ...
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... Experimental and QuasiExperimental Designs for Generalized Causal Inference. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin. Stern, J. A. (1964). Toward a definition of psychophysiology. Psychophysiology, 1: 90–91. Stevens, S. S. (1951). Handbook of ...
... Experimental and QuasiExperimental Designs for Generalized Causal Inference. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin. Stern, J. A. (1964). Toward a definition of psychophysiology. Psychophysiology, 1: 90–91. Stevens, S. S. (1951). Handbook of ...
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amplitude amygdala analysis artifacts autonomic autonomic nervous system average baroreflex baseline behavior Berntson blood pressure brain activity brain microstates brain stimulation breathing Cacioppo cardiac cardiovascular changes Clinical Neurophysiology cognitive coil components contraction correlated cortical effects electric field electrodermal activity electrodes electromyography EMG activity emotional ERP waveform eventÂrelated example experimental facial factors Figure fMRI frequency function gastric heart period heart rate human imaging impedance cardiography increases inference interval Journal measures methods microstate motoneurons motor cortex movements muscle nervous system neural NeuroImage neurons Neuroscience onset output parasympathetic peak performance phosphenes physiological potential prefrontal cortex processes psychological Psychophysiology receptors recording reflex regions relationship respiratory response RMSE rTMS scalp schizophrenia signal skin conductance spatial specific studies subjects surface EMG sympathetic target task Tassinary tDCS techniques temporal TMS pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation typically variability visual voltage voxels wave waveform