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International Journal of Neuroscience



Subject: International Journal of Neuroscience
Date: Mon, 31 Aug 1998 13:13:40 -0400 (EDT)

International Journal of Neuroscience

http://biomednet.com/library/148
(Link inactive 4 August 2004)

http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/00207454.html
(Link active 4 August 2004)

ISSN: 0020-7454
4 issues per volume
Gordon and Breach

AIMS AND SCOPE

The International Journal of Neuroscience publishes papers, reviews,
letters to the editor, comments and notes concerned with problems of
nervous tissue, the nervous system, and behavior. It deals not only with
the obvious areas of neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, neurochemistry,
neuropharmacology, and neuroendocrinology, but all impinging and related
areas of mathematics, physics, physical chemistry, biochemistry,
biophysics, bioengineering, communication and information, learning,
memory, conditioning, and higher behavioral considerations. Both
theoretical and experimental approaches are adopted, in particular those
leading toward clarification of existing data, formation of new concepts
and development of new tools for investigation (such as new mathematics,
new theories of thermodynamics, etc.). In addition, the journal includes
announcements and notes of events occurring in various parts of the world
of significance to neuroscience.

A Selection of Papers

Clinical Case Report: Efficacy of Yogic Techniques in the Treatment of
Obsessive Compulsive Disorders, David S.  Shannahoff-Khalsa and Liana R.
Beckett * Variations in Sleep Mentation as a Function of Time of Night,
Maria Casagrande, Cristiano Violani, Fabio Lucidi, Elena Buttinelli and
Mario Bertini * Eeg After Prolonged Mental Activity, V. N. Kirov, L. V.
Warsawskaya and V. B. Voynov * Effect of Repeated Visual Traumatic Stimuli
on the Event Related P3 Brain Potential in Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder,
Avi Bleich, Joseph Attias and Vladimir Furman * Auditory Event- Related
Potentials While Ignoring Tone Stimuli: Attentional Differences Reflected
in Stimulus Intensity and Latency Responses in Low and Highly Hypnotizable
Persons, Helen J. Crawford, James C. Corby and Burt S. Kopell * The
Endogenous Eyeblink and Hypnotic Susceptibility in a Real-Simulator
Design, Beverly J. Field, Richard M. Kurtz and John A. Stern * Weak
Electromagnetic Fields Increase the Amplitude of the Pattern Reversal Vep
Response in Patients with Multiple Sclerosis, Reuven Sandyk

Contact:

info@biomednet.com


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