Pleasure is fundamental to well-being and the quality of life, but until recently, was barely explored by science. Current research on pleasure has brought about ground-breaking developments on several fronts, and new data on pleasure and the brain have begun to converge from many disparate fields. The time is ripe to present these important findings in a single volume, and so Morten Kringelbach and Kent Berridge have brought together the leading researchers to provides acomprehensive review of our current scientific understanding of pleasure. The authors present their latest neuroscientific research into pleasure, describing studies on the brains role in pleasure and reward in animals and humans, including brain mechanisms, neuroimaging data, and psychological analyses, aswell as how their findings have been applied to clinical problems, such as depression and other disorders of hedonic well-being. To clarify the differences between their views, the researchers also provide short answers to a set of fundamental questions about pleasure and its relation to the brain. This book is intended to serve as both a starting point for readers new to the field, and as a reference for more experienced graduate students and scientists from fields such as neuroscience,psychology, psychiatry, neurology, and neurosurgery.
Introduction: The Many Faces of PleasureMorten L. Kringelbach & Kent C. Berridge; I. Animal Pleasures; Hedonic Hotspots: Generating Sensory Pleasure in the BrainKyle S. Smith, Stephen V. Mahler, Susana Pecina, Kent C. Berridge (Michigan, USA); Conditioned Reinforcement and the Specialized Role of Corticolimbic Circuits in the Pursuit of Happiness and Other More Specific RewardsKathryn A. Burke, Theresa Franz, Danielle Miller, & Geoffrey Schoenbaum (University of Maryland, USA); Neural Coding of Pleasure: Rose-tinted Glasses of the Ventral PallidumJ. Wayne Aldridge & Kent C. Berridge (Michigan, USA); Hedonics: The Cognitive-Motivational InterfaceAnthony Dickinson & Bernard Balleine (Cambridge, UK and UCLA, USA); Neuroethology of PleasureKarli K. Watson, Stephen V. Sheperd & Michael L. Platt (Duke University, USA); II. Human Pleasures; On the Nature and Function of PleasureNico Frijda (Amsterdam, Holland); The Dialectics of PleasureMichel Cabanac (Laval, Canada); Neuroimaging of OlfactionJay Gottfried (Northwestern, USA); The Pleasure of Taste, Flavor and FoodMaria Veldhuizen, Kristin Rudenga & Dana Small (Yale, USA); Sexual PleasureBarry R. Komisaruk, Beverly Whipple & Carlos Beyer (Rutgers, USA); The Sweetest Taboo: Functional Neurobiology of Human Sexuality in relation to PleasureJanniko R. Georgiadis & Rudie Kortekaas (University of Groningen, Holland); The Hedonic Brain: A Functional Neuroanatomy of Human PleasureMorten L. Kringelbach (Oxford, UK); The Neurobiology of Desire: Dopamine and the Regulation of Mood and Motivational States in HumansMarco Leyton (McGill, Canada); To Be Happy and To Know It: The Meta-awareness of PleasureJonathan Schooler & Iris Mauss (University of California, Santa Barbara); The Pleasure of MusicPeter Vuust & Morten Kringelbach (Aarhus University, Denmark and Oxford, UK); NeuroaestheticsMartin Skov (University of Copenhagen, Denmark); III. Clinical Applications; Placebo Analgesia and the BrainPregrag Petrovic (Karolinska, Sweden); Deep Brain Stimulation and PleasureAlex Green, Erlick Pereira & Tipu Aziz (Oxford, UK); Pleasure and Pain: Masters of MankindSiri Leknes & Irene Tracey (Oxford, UK);
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