Controversies in Neuroscience V: Persistent pain
Open Peer Commentary
Sympathetic component of neuropathic pain: Animal models and clinical diagnosis
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 468-469
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Sensitization: A mechanism for somatization and subjective health complaints?
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- 01 September 1997, p. 469
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The case of the missing brain: Arguments for a role of brain-to-spinal cord pathways in pain facilitation
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 469-470
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Central sensitization following intradermal injection of capsaicin
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- 01 September 1997, p. 471
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Gender differences: Implications for pain management
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 470-471
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Author's Response
Female vulnerability to pain and the strength to deal with it
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 473-479
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Pains, brains, and opium
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 479-482
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What exactly is central to the role of central neuroplasticity in persistent pain?
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 483-486
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No brain, no pain
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 486-487
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Sympathetic contribution to pain – need for clarification
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 487-489
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Martha J. Farah (1994). Neuropsychological inference with an interactive brain: A critique of the “locality” assumption. BBS 17:43–104.
Continuing Commentary
The fragility of the locality assumption: Comparative evidence
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 515-516
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Locality, modularity, and computational neural networks
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 516-517
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Neuropsychological inference using a microphrenological approach does not need a locality assumption
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 517-518
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The “locality assumption”: Lessons from history and neuroscience?
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 518-519
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What is the locality assumption and how is it violated?
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 519-520
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ERPs and the modularity of cognitive processes
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 520-521
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Linda Mealey (1995). The sociobiology of sociopathy: An integrated evolutionary model. BBS 18:523–599.
Authors' Response
More interactions on the interactive brain
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 521-523
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Continuing Commentary
Heritability estimates provide a crumbling foundation
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- 01 September 1997, p. 525
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Simulation and the psychology of sociopathy
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- 01 September 1997, pp. 525-527
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Sociopathy: Adaptation, abnormality, or both?
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- 01 September 1997, p. 527
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