Mind, Brain, Body, and Behavior
248 HAMBURG people in the stress groups have been studied on repeated occasions, and the elevated adrenocortical hormone levels ...
HAMBURG 249 the NIH to Stanford University in order to try to pursue a behavioral endocrine-genetic approach to stress problems ...
250 HAMBURG behavioral-endocrine-genetic approach to stress problems that I think still offers, much more so now than then with ...
HAMBURG 251 human behavior as the general way in which we responded to stress ful experience. So we asked whether there might b ...
252 HAMBURG for preparation, as in chronic diseases of slow onset, appears to have considerable utility, and where there is a ti ...
HAMBURG 253 success, and that opens up possibilities for disease prevention that have been pursued in recent years. For example, ...
254 HAMBURG movement, attention, and sleep loss have illuminated a variety of sleep disorders and symptoms of mental illness. Du ...
HAMBURG 255 work and its effect throughout the world. And there is today a distinct field of sleep medicine, thanks to such pion ...
256 HAMBURG The extraordinary success of basic research in the neurosciences, and also in genetics, provides a continuing flow o ...
KOHN 257 Mind, Brain, Body, and Behavior I. G. Farreras, C. Hannaway and V. A. Harden (Eds.) IOS Press, 2004 Reflections on the ...
258 KOHN of that particular laboratory, and my sense as a very junior member of the intramural research program at that time of ...
KOHN 259 in Washington, D.C., and in my case, being shipped off to Hagerstown, Maryland. My experience provides a glimpse of the ...
260 KOHN to get research underway before we had appropriate facilities, an ad ministrative structure, and a modicum of resource ...
KOHN 261 He hired a wide range of talented people, many of whom might not have done as well in securing university employment–in ...
262 KOHN laboratory or branch; second, in how they exercised their power and responsibility for “clearing” manuscripts for publi ...
KOHN 263 the institutional dynamics of mental hospitals, particularly as such hos pitals were affected by the introduction of p ...
264 KOHN self-concept that made him the leading figure in this field. Schooler, who in ensuing years was central to nearly all o ...
KOHN 265 because he or she was in the wrong component of the laboratory. I was in what formally was Kety’s “basic” jurisdiction ...
266 KOHN and support for the work of that discipline. The directors of the NIMH’s intramural research program, Cohen, Kety, and ...
KOPIN 267 Mind, Brain, Body, and Behavior I. G. Farreras, C. Hannaway and V. A. Harden (Eds.) IOS Press, 2004 Psychopharmacology ...
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