The Mind Within the Brain: How We Make Decisions and How those Decisions Go Wrong

Author:   A. David Redish (Distinguished McKnight University Professor, Distinguished McKnight University Professor, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780199891887


Pages:   392
Publication Date:   01 August 2013
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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The Mind Within the Brain: How We Make Decisions and How those Decisions Go Wrong


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Author:   A. David Redish (Distinguished McKnight University Professor, Distinguished McKnight University Professor, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 16.00cm , Height: 3.10cm , Length: 23.60cm
Weight:   0.658kg
ISBN:  

9780199891887


ISBN 10:   0199891885
Pages:   392
Publication Date:   01 August 2013
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Decisions and the brain 1 What is a decision? 2 The tale of the thermostat 3 The definition of value 4 Value, euphoria, and the do-it-again signal 5 Risk and reward The decision-making system 6 Multiple Decision-making systems 7 Reflexes 8 Emotion and the Pavlovian action-selection system 9 Deliberation 10 The habits of our lives 11 Integrating Information 12 The stories we tell 13 Motivation 14 The tradeoff between exploration and exploitation 15 Self-control The brain with a mind of its own 16 The physical mind 17 Imagination 18 Addiction 19 Gambling and behavioral addictions 20 PTSD 21 Computational psychiatry The human condition 22 What makes us human? 23 The science of morality 24 The conundrum of robotics Epilogue Appendix A Information processing in neurons B Gleaning information from the brain C Content-addressable memory Bibliography

Reviews

From drinking that fifth Martini to choosing a career, decisions shape our lives. In his study of the science of decision-making, neuroscientist David Redish keeps a cool head in an overheated theoretical arena. Synthesizing findings in psychology, robotics and more, he takes us from brain physiology to aspects of mind. His own decision-making model involves multiple action-selection systems, failures in which can lead to behaviours such as compulsive gambling. Well researched and delivered with a light touch. Nature, August 2013


The Mind Within the Brain is a very valuable introduction to the neuroscientific paradigm and to understanding how we make choices. It is an enjoyable read, easy to relate to and very educational... is ambitious in its scope and style; not only does he want to explain how action-selection systems work in the brain, but also how they malfunction whilst delving into the philosophical and ethical consequences of analysing the mind in such a manner. -- Jodie Russell (University of Edinburgh), British Society for Literature and Science I think it is accurate that there is not another book out there with the scope of this one, and I imagine it will attract a great deal of interest from lay audience and academics alike. Redish's writing is very engaging, sprinkling in examples of real-world phenomena that every reader can relate to. He does this with humor and with several entertaining footnotes.... He also describes his own contributions to this literature, making it clear that his lab has made substantive contributions to our understanding but again discussed in a way that should be appreciated -- striking a nice balance between simple but not overly simplistic or distorted as is all too often the case in science writings for non-scientists. -- Michael J. Frank, PhD, Laboratory for Neural Computation and Cognition, Brown University Dr. David Redish is a known well-respected scientist. He's made his mark on the mathematical modeling of decision-making. The three chapters provided to the reviewer evidence a nice, easy read. The concepts are in general well-explained... It seems that the idea of the book came from interacting with individuals who really seem to crave this kind of information. I am not sure of the existence of a similar manual. There is a book on neuroeconomics by Peter Politser from your group, but it is more complex, and does not have the broad perspective proposed by David Redish.... this book would have a place as a source of dissemination of knowledge recently gained on brain function and ways in which impairment in brain function can lead to disorders such as addiction. I believe that a large audience would be interested in this manual, including scientists. -- Monique Ernst, MD, PhD, Head of Neurodevelopment of Reward Systems, Emotional Development and Affective Neuroscience Branch (EDAN), NIMH Well researched and delivered with a light touch. - Nature Redish's multiple-system analysis is intriguing and instructive. --PsycCRITIQUES


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Department of NeuroscienceUniversity of Minnesota

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