468. Jenkins J.G. Dallenbach K.M. Obliviscence during sleep and waking //Amer. Joum. Psychol. 1924. V. 35. P. 605.
469. Jessell T.M., Kandel E.R. Synaptic transmission: a bidirectional and self-modifiable form of cell-cell communication //Cell 72/Neuron 10. Review suppl. 1993. January. P. 1.
470. Johnston T.D. Contrasting approaches to a theory of learning //Behav. Brain Sci. 1981. V. 4. № l.P. 125.
471. Jouvet M. Neurophysiology of the states sleep //Physiol.Rev. 1967. V. 47. № 2. P. 117.
472. Jouvet M. Neuromediateurs et facteurs hypnogenes //Rev. Neurol.(Paris). 1984. V. 140. P. 389.
473. Kaas J.H. The organization ofneocortex in mammals: implications for theories of brain function. Ann. Rev. Psychol. 1987V. 38 P. 129.
474. Kanfer F.H., Goldfoot D.A. Self-control and tolerance of noxious stimulation //Psychol. Reports. 1966. V. 18. P. 79.
475. Kanki J., Martin T.,Sinnamon H. Activity of neurons in the anteromedial cortex during rewardings brain stimulation, saccharin consumption and orienting behavior//Ibid. 1983. V. 8. № 1. P. 69.
476. Kaplan H.I., Sadock B.J., Grebb J.A. Kaplan and Sadock's synopsis of psychiatry. (Behavioral scinces. Clinical psychiatry. Seventh edition). Baltimore: Williams Wilkins, 1994. 1257р.
477. Katz R., Gelbart Y. Endogenous opiates and behavioral responses to environmental novelty//Behav. Biol.1978. V. 24. № 3. P. 338.
478. Kavaliers M. Novelty-induced opioid analgesia in the terrestrial snail //Ibid. 1988. V. 42. № l. P. 29.
479. Kavanau J.L. Memory, Sleep, and Dynamic Stabilization of Neural Circuitry: Evolutionary Perspectives //Neurosci.Behav.Rev.l996. V. 20. № 2. P. 289.
480. Kendrick К ., Baldwin В . Cells in temporal cortex of conscios sheep can respond preferrentially to the sight effaces //Science 1987 V. 236. № 5. p. 448-450.
481. Kendrick .M., Levy F., Keverne, E.B. Changes in the sensory processing of olfactory signals induced by birth in sheep //Science. 1992. V. 256. P. 833.
482. Kesner R.P., Conner H.S. Independence of short- and long-term memory: a neural system analysis //Science. 1972. V. 176. P. 432.
483. Kesner R.P., Conner H.S. Effect of electrical stimulation of the rat limbic system and midbraine reticular formation, upon short- and long-term memory//Physiol. Behav. 1974. V. 12. P. 5.
484. KlopfA.H. The hedonistic neuron. A theory of memory, learning, and intelligence. Washington. Hemisphere publ. Corporation. 1982.
485. Koffka. Principles ofgestalt psychology.N.Y. 1935.
486. Koppenaal R.J., Jagoda E. Cruce J.A.J. Recovery from ECS produced RA following a reminder//Psychonom. Sci. 1967. V. 9. P. 293.
487. Krubitzer L. The organization of neocortex in mammals: are species ces really so different? //Trends Neurosci. 1995 V. 18 № 9 P. 408.
488. Kugelberg E., Taverner D. A comparison between the voluntary and electrical activation of motor units in anterior horn cell diseases (On central synchronisations of motor units) //EEG.Clin. Neurophysiol. 1950. V. 2. P. 125.
489. Kulli J., Koch C. Does anesthesia cause loss of consciousness? //Trends in Neuroscience. 1991. V. 14. № 1. P. 6.
490. Kurosawa M., Sato A., Sato Y. Stimulation of nucleus basalis of Meynert increases acetylcholine release in the cerebral cortex in rats //Neurosci Lett. 1989. V. 98. P. 45.
491. Lebedev A.N. Cyclical neural codes of human memory and some quantitative regularities in experimental psychology //Psychophysical explorations of mental structures. Toronto: Hogrefe and Huber Pbl. 1990. P. 303.
492. Lebedev A.N. Imaginary dimensions of subjective spaces //Psychometric Methodology. Proc. 7th European Meeting Psychometr. Society in Trier. Stuttgart, N.Y.: Gustav Fischer Ferlag. 1993a. P. 258.
493. Lebedev A.N. Derivation of Stevens's exponent from neurophysiological data//Behav. and Brain Sciences. 1993b. V. 16. N1. P. 152.
494. Lee G., Reed M., Meador K., Smith Т ., Loring D . Is the amygdala crucial for cross-modal association in humans? //Neuropsychology. 1995. V. 9. № 2. P. 236.
495. Lemoine P., Allain H. Induction of Sleep //Sleep. 1996. V. 19. P. 1.
496. Libet В . Conscious functions and brain processes //Behav. and Brain Sci. 1991. V. 14. №4. P. 685.
497. Libet В ., Alberts W.W. Responses of human somatosensory cortex to stimuli for conscious sensation //Science. 1967. V. 158. P. 1597.
498. Link S.W. The wave theory of difference and similarity. Hillsdale: Lawrence Eribaum ass. Publ.1992. 373 p.
499. Llinas R.R. The intrinsic electrophysiological properties of mammalian neurons: insights into central nervous system function //Science. 1988. V. 242. P. 1654.
500. Lynch G., Baudry M. The biochemistry of memory: a new and specific hypothesis//Science. 1984.V. 224.P. 1057.
501. Lynn R. Attention, arousal and orientation reaction. N.Y.: Pergamon Press. 1966. 118р.
502. Mactatus C.F., Riccio D.C., Ferek J.M. RA for old (reactivated) memory: some anomalous characteristics //Science. 1979. V. 204. P. 1319.
503. Maltzman I. Orienting reflexes and significance: F reply to O'Gorman. // Psychophysiology. 1979. V. 16. P. 274.
504. Mangan G.L. The biology of human conduct: East-West models of temperament and personality. Oxford: Pergamon. 1982.
505. Mangina C.A. Developmental psychophysiology of learning abilities and disabilities: effective diagnosis and treatment. //Inter. Journ. Psychophysiol. 1989. V. 7. № 2-4. P. 305.
506. Markowitsch H. The amygdala,s contribution to memory – a study on two patients with Urbach-Wiethe disease //Neuroreport 1994. V. 5. № 11. P. 1349.
507. Marshall J.C., Halligan P. W. Seeing the forest but only half the trees? // Nature. 1995. V. 373. № 6514. P. 521.
508. McGaugh J.L., Gold P. E. Modulation of memory by electrical stimulation of the brain //Neural mechanisms in learning and memory. Cambridge. Mass. 1976. P. 46.
509. McGinnies E. Emotionality and perceptual defence //Psychol. Rev. 1949. V. 56. P.244.
510. McGlinchey-Beroth R., Milberg W., Verfaellie M., Alexander M., Kilduff P. Semantic processing in the neglect field: evidence from a lexical decision task//Cogn. Neuropsych. 1993. V. 10. № 1. P. 79.
511. McLean P. D. Cerebral evolution of Emotion //Handbook of emotion. 1993. P. 67.
512. Metherate R., Asht J.H. Nucleus basal stimulation fasilitates thalamocortical synaptic transmission in the rat auditory cortex //Synapse. 1993. V. 14. P.132.
513. Milberg W.P., McGlinchey-Berroth R., Grande L. Comparison of cross-field matching and forced-choice identification in hemispatial neglect // Neuropsychology. 1995. V. 9. № 4. P. 427.
514. Miller G.A. The magical number seven, plus or minus two: Some limits in our capacity for processing information //Psychol. Rev. 1956. V. 63. P. 81.
515. Miller R.R., Misanin J.R., Levis D.J. Amnesia as function of events during the learning - ECS interval //Journ.Сотр. Physiol. Psychol. 1969. V. 67. P. 145.
516. Milner В . Frontal lobe contributions to memory processes //Abstr. XXXII Congr. Intern. Union Physiol.Sci. Glazgov. 1993. P. 73.
517. Mishkin M. What is recognition memory and what neural circuits are involved? //Abstr. XXXII CongrJntern. Union Physiol.Sci. Glazgov. 1993. P. 42.
518. Mishkin M., Horn G., Schacter D. Cerebral memory systems //Third IBRO Congress of Neuroscience. Montreal, Canada. 1991. Abstracts. S19. P. 4.
Читать дальше