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Hormones, Brain and Behavior
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Updated and substantially restructured version of the authoritative reference on hormonally-mediated behaviors in insects, amphibians, fish, rodents, and more

Table of Contents

Chapters included in five main topic areas:
Mammalian hormone-behavior systems
Non-mammalian hormone-behavior systems
Molecular and cellular systems
Clinically important hormone effects on brain and behavior
Development of hormone-behavior relationships

Individual titles include:
Male sexual behavior
Female sexual behavior
Parental behavior
Social affiliation and pair-bonding
Hormones and aggressive behavior
Reproductive Plasticity in Fish: Evolutionary Lability in the Patterning of Neuroendocrine and Behavioral Traits Underlying Divergent Sexual Phenotypes
Weakly Electric Fish: Behavior, Neurobiology, and Neuroendocrinology
Hormonal and Pheromonal control of Behavior in Fish
Social Regulation of Reproduction: What Changes and Why?
Sex changing fishes
Hormones and behavioral caste in bumble bees
Rapid membrane effects of estrogens  in the central nervous system
Estrogen regulation of neurotransmitters and growth factor signaling  
Genetic mechanisms in neural and hormonal controls over female reproductive behaviors 
Model systems for the study of androgen-regulated gene expression in the central nervous system
The Gonadal Axis: A life perspective
The Gonadal Axis: Genetic defects - Male
The Gonadal Axis: Genetic defects - Female
The Gonadal Axis: Kallmans
Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis: CAH
Sexual differentiation of the brain- mode, mechanisms, and meaning
Genetic contribution to sex differences in brain and behavior
Epigenetic contribution to sex differences in brain and behavior
Environmental Endocrine Disruption of Brain and Behavior
Sexual differentiation of neurotransmitters and neuromodulators

About the Author

Donald W. Pfaff heads the Laboratory of Neurobiology and Behavior at The Rockefeller University. He received his scientific training at Harvard College and MIT. He is a Member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Pfaff's laboratory focuses on steroid hormones and brain function, genes influencing neuronal functions, and generalized CNS arousal. He is the author or coauthor of over 10 books and more than 900 research publications. Marian Joëls obtained her PhD degree in Utrecht (1984) with David de Wied. She carried out postdoctoral research at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston and at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla California. Between 1991 and 2009 she was appointed at the University of Amsterdam, first as associate professor and subsequently as full professor in neurobiology. Since 2009 she is (full) professor of neuroscience in Utrecht. Currently she is scientific director of the Brain Center Rudolf Magnus. Her research focuses on the effects of stress in the brain. With patch clamp technology, she studies how corticosteroid hormones change cellular function of limbic neurons. This is linked to the underlying molecular mechanism and the consequences at the circuit level. As a final step, the effects of stress on functional connectivity and behavioral outcome are studied, both in rodents and humans. In her work, she pays particular attention to the influence of stress during early life and the result of prolonged periods of stress in adulthood. The relevance of such critical periods of stress -in interaction with a vulnerable genetic background- for the development of brain disorders are investigated in various patient cohorts. Her work was published in >275 publications and to date has been cited >15,000 times. Marian Joëls was elected as a member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2002. She served as President of the Federation of European Neuroscience Societies between 2012 and 2014.

Reviews

"Researchers specializing in the mechanisms of neuroendocrinological systems will find this to be an invaluable reference...The introductory background information and figures also make this a great reference for students in research or clinical endocrinology. Overall, This is a comprehensive, up-to-date reference on the current state of knowledge in the field. Score: 95 - 4 Stars!" --Doody's

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