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Contents: Volume 8, Number S1
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The biology of behaviour: scientific and ethical implications.
Halldór Stefánsson
EMBO reports 8, S1, S1–S2 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7401012 |
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Beyond susceptibility. Behavioural genetics can advance our understanding of psychiatric disorders, but might not meet the expectations for new cures.
Giovanni Frazzetto & Cornelius Gross
EMBO reports 8, S1, S3–S6 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7401013 |
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From DNA to mind. The decline of causality as a general rule for living matter.
Pierre L. Roubertoux & Michèle Carlier
EMBO reports 8, S1, S7–S11 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7400991 |
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How to house a mind inside a brain. Lessons from history.
Anne Harrington
EMBO reports 8, S1, S12–S15 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7400974 |
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Understanding the brain. How can our intuition fail so fundamentally when it comes to studying the organ to which it owes its existence?
Wolf Singer
EMBO reports 8, S1, S16–S19 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7400994 |
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Clock genes running amok. Clock genes and their role in drug addiction and depression.
Stéphanie Perreau-Lenz, Tarek Zghoul & Rainer Spanagel
EMBO reports 8, S1, S20–S23 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7401016 |
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Linking emotion to the social brain. The role of the serotonin transporter in human social behaviour.
Klaus-Peter Lesch
EMBO reports 8, S1, S24–S29 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7401008 |
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The emergence of genomic psychology. Insights from genomic analyses might allow psychologists to understand, predict and modify human behaviour.
Turhan Canli
EMBO reports 8, S1, S30–S34 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7400938 |
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Capacity and competence in children as research participants. Researchers have been reluctant to include children in health research on the basis of potentially naive assumptions.
Ilina Singh
EMBO reports 8, S1, S35–S39 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7401018 |
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Thinking inside the box. To cope with an increasing disease burden, drug discovery needs biologically relevant and predictive testing systems.
Lars E. Sundstrom
EMBO reports 8, S1, S40–S43 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7400939 |
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Trust in the brain. Neurobiological determinants of human social behaviour.
Michael Kosfeld
EMBO reports 8, S1, S44–S47 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7400975 |
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Towards a philosophy for neuroethics. An informed materialist view of the brain might help to develop theoretical frameworks for applied neuroethics.
Kathinka Evers
EMBO reports 8, S1, S48–S51 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7401014 |
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Neuroethics beyond genethics. Despite the overlap between the ethics of neuroscience and genetics, there are important areas where the two diverge.
Adina L. Roskies
EMBO reports 8, S1, S52–S56 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7401009 |
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Empirical neuroethics. Can brain imaging visualize human thought? Why is neuroethics interested in such a possibility?
Judy Illes
EMBO reports 8, S1, S57–S60 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7401007 |
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Does it make sense to speak of neuroethics? Three problems with keying ethics to hot new science and technology.
Erik Parens & Josephine Johnston
EMBO reports 8, S1, S61–S64 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7400992 |
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Who will guard the guardians of neuroscience? Firing the neuroethical imagination.
Raymond De Vries
EMBO reports 8, S1, S65–S69 (2007). | Full Text | PDF |
doi:10.1038/sj.embor.7401010 |
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