R. Adolphs, D. Tranel, H. Damasio, A. Damasio (1994). "Impaired Recognition of Emotion in Facial Expressions Following Bilateral Damage to the Human Amygdala". Nature 372: 669-672.
R. Adolphs, D. Tranel, A.R. Damasio (1998). "The Human Amygdala in Social Judgment." Nature 393: 470-474.
R. Adolphs, J.A. Russell, and D. Tranel (1999). "A Role for the Human Amygdala in Recognizing Emotional Arousal from Unpleasant Stimuli." Psychological Science 10: 167-171.
R. Adolphs (1999). "Social Cognition and the Human Brain." Trends in Cognitive Sciences 3: 469-479.
R. Adolphs, H. Damasio, D.Tranel, G.Cooper and A.R. Damasio (2000). "A Role for Somatosensory Cortices in the Visual Recognition of Emotion as Revealed by 3-D Lesion Mapping." The Journal of Neuroscience 20: 2683-2690.
R. Adolphs (2001). "The Neurobiology of Social Cognition." Current Opinion in Neurobiology 11: 231-239.
H. Kawasaki, R. Adolphs, O. Kaufman, H. Damasio, A.R. Damasio, M. Granner, H. Bakken, T. Hori and M.A. Howard (2001). "Single-unit responses to emotional visual stimuli recorded in human ventral prefrontal cortex." Nature Neuroscience 4:15-16.
R. Adolphs (2002). "Recognizing Emotion From Facial Expressions: Psychological and Neurological Mechanisms." Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Reviews 1: 21-61.
R. Adolphs, D. Tranel, H. Damasio (2002). "Neural Systems for Recognizing Emotion from Prosody." Emotion 2: 23-51.
R. Adolphs (2003). "Cognitive Neuroscience of Human Social Behavior." Nature Reviews Neuroscience 4: 165-178.
R. Adolphs (2003). "Investigating the Cognitive Neuroscience of Social Behavior." Neuropsychologia 41:119-126.
R. Adolphs, F. Gosselin, T. Buchanan, D. Tranel, P. Schyns, A. Damasio (2005). "A mechanism for impaired fear recognition after amygdala damage." Nature 433: 68-72.
R. Adolphs, T.W. Buchanan, D. Tranel (2005). "Amygdala damage impairs emotional memory gist but not details of complex stimuli." Nature Neuroscience 8:512-519.
R. Adolphs, D. Tranel, M. Koenigs, A.R. Damasio (2005). "Preferring one taste over another without recognizing either." Nature Neuroscience 8: 860-861.
Complete archive: http://www.emotion.caltech.edu
Last updated: August 13, 2008 14:06
