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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 20
Issue 3 |
| Sep 01, 1997 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 20 :
Issue 3
Table of Contents
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Controversies in Neuroscience V: Persistent pain: Neuronal mechanisms and clinical implications: Introduction

Bill Roberts, Paul Cordo and Stevan Harnad
Page 0-0
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Sex differences in pain

Karen J. Berkley
Page 371-380
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Are there fundamental differences in the peripheral mechanisms of visceral and somatic pain?

Stephen B. McMahon
Page 381-391
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Plasticity: Implications for opioid and other pharmacological interventions in specific pain states

Anthony H. Dickenson
Page 392-403
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Peripheral and central hyperexcitability: Differential signs and symptoms in persistent pain

Terence J. Coderre and Joel Katz
Page 404-419
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Central inhibitory dysfunctions: Mechanisms and clinical implications

Z. Wiesenfeld-Hallin, H. Aldskogius, G. Grant, J.-X. Hao, T. H;ouml;kfelt and X.-J. Xu
Page 420-425
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Sympathetic nervous system and pain: A clinical reappraisal

Helmut Blumberg, Ulrike Hoffmann, Mohsen Mohadjer and Rudolf Scheremet
Page 426-434
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The neural basis of chronic pain, its plasticity and modulation

Misha-Miroslav Backonja
Page 435-437
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Complex regional pain syndromes: Taxonomy, diagnostic criteria, mechanisms of vascular abnormalites, edema, and pain

Ralf Baron and Wilfrid J;auml;nig
Page 437-439
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The sensory and affective components of pain

Fabrizio Benedetti
Page 439-440
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Pain, pleasure, and the mind

Yitzchak M. Binik
Page 440-441
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A leg to stand on: Learning creates pain

Niels Birbaumer and Herta Flor
Page 441-442
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Vaginas yield far more pleasure than pain

Stuart Brody
Page 442-443
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More inhibition and less excitation needed in the fight against pain

Rob W. Clarke
Page 443-444
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Does central nervous system plasticity contribute to hyperalgesia?

Corey L. Cleland and G. F. Gebhart
Page 444-445
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Central versus peripheral substrates of persistent pain: Which contributes more?

Marshall Devor
Page 446-446
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Is reflex sympathetic dystrophy a valid concept?

Mikael Elam
Page 447-448
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On separating pain from the willingness to report it

Wolfgang Ellermeier
Page 448-449
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Persistent pain: Trim the branches or fell the tree?

Richard H. Gracely
Page 449-451
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Psychobiological sex differences in pain: Psychological as much as biological

K. Gijsbers and C. A. Niven
Page 449-449
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Cholecystokinin (CCK): Negative feedback control for opioid analgesia

Ji-Sheng Han
Page 451-451
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Pains are in the head, not the spine

Valerie Gray Hardcastle
Page 451-452
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Is learning involved in plasticity in nociceptive regulation?

Kjell Hole, Frode Svendsen and Arne Tj;oslash;lsen
Page 452-453
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Central excitation and inhibitory mechanisms and neuroplasticity are also manifested in trigeminal nociceptive pathways

James W. Hu and Barry J. Sessle
Page 453-454
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Role of capsaicin-sensitive afferent nerves in initiation and maintenance of pathological pain

Page 454-455
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Is there a sex difference in the balance of pain excitatory and pain inhibitory processes?

Stefan Lautenbacher
Page 456-457
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The requirements of a major biological hypothesis

Alberto Malliani
Page 457-457
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Experimental pain models and clinical chronic pain: Is plasticity enough to link them?

Paolo Marchettini, Marco Lacerenza and Fabio Formaglio
Page 458-459
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Visceral pain and gender differences in pain

D. Men;eacute;trey
Page 459-459
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Associative learning and pain? Why stop there?

Page 459-460
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Physiological antagonism between endogenous CCK and opioid: Clinical perspectives in the management of pain

Florence Noble, Rafa;euml;l Maldonado and Bernard P. Roques
Page 460-461
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Are intrinsic inhibitory systems activated or inhibited in pathological pain states?

K. Omote
Page 461-462
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Sympathetically maintained pain: Confusing classification, ill-defined diagnostic criteria, and puzzling pathophysiology

Srinivasa N. Raja and Ursula Wesselmann
Page 462-462
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Sympathetic nervous system and pain: Phenomenological diversity

William J. Roberts
Page 463-464
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Sex differences in pain do exist: The role of biological and psychosocial factors

Gary B. Rollman
Page 464-465
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Central inhibitory dysfunctions in neuropathic pain: What is the relationship between basic science and clinical practice?

Philip J. Siddall
Page 465-465
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Novel peripheral mechanisms of opioid analgesia

Christoph Stein and Michael Sch;auml;fer
Page 465-466
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Sex differences in descending pain modulatory pathways may clarify sex differences in pain

Wendy F. Sternberg
Page 466-467
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Sympathetic component of neuropathic pain: Animal models and clinical diagnosis

Laszlo A. Urban
Page 468-469
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Sensitization: A mechanism for somatization and subjective health complaints?

Holger Ursin
Page 469-469
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The case of the missing brain: Arguments for a role of brain-to-spinal cord pathways in pain facilitation

Linda R. Watkins and Steven F. Maier
Page 469-470
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Gender differences: Implications for pain management

Ursula Wesselmann
Page 470-471
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Female vulnerability to pain and the strength to deal with it

Karen J. Berkley
Page 473-479
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Pains, brains, and opium

Anthony H. Dickenson
Page 479-482
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What exactly is central to the role of central neuroplasticity in persistent pain?

Terence J. Coderre and Joel Katz
Page 483-486
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No brain, no pain

Zsuzsanna Wiesenfeld-Hallin
Page 486-487
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Sympathetic contribution to pain ; need for clarification

Helmut Blumberg, Ulrike Hoffman, Mohsen Mohadjer and Rudolf Scheremet
Page 487-489
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The fragility of the locality assumption: Comparative evidence

Philip J. Benson
Page 515-516
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Locality, modularity, and computational
neural networks

Horst Bischof
Page 516-517
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Neuropsychological inference using a microphrenological approach does not need a locality assumption

Wim E. Crusio
Page 517-518
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What is the locality assumption and how is it violated?

Vinod Goel, Paolo Nichelli and Jordan Grafman
Page 519-520
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ERPs and the modularity of cognitive processes

Valerie Gray Hardcastle
Page 520-521
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More interactions on the interactive brain

Martha J. Farah
Page 521-523
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Heritability estimates provide a crumbling foundation

Scott F. Stoltenberg
Page 525-525
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Simulation and the psychology of sociopathy

Joseph L. Hernandez Cruz
Page 525-527
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Sociopathy: Adaptation, abnormality, or both?

Don Joseph Stein
Page 527-527
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Heritability, theory of mind, and the nature of normality

Linda Mealey
Page 527-531
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Does controlling movement require intelligence?

Mark L. Latash and J. Greg Anson
Page 533-536
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Process based functionalism instead of structural functionalism is needed

Endre E. Kadar and M. T. Turvey
Page 533-533
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