Page 75 - Mind Games The Aging Brain and How to Keep it Healthy
P. 75
The Intelligent Mind • 59
REFERENCES:
1. Peter S. Eriksson et al. “Neurogenesis in the Adult Hu-
man Hippocampus,” Nature Medicine (November 1998,
4 Number 11): 1313—1317.
2. J. Madeline Nash, “Special Report: Fertile Minds From
Birth, A Baby’s Cells Proliferate Wildly, Making Con-
nections That May Shape a Lifetime of Experience,”
Time, 3 (February 1997): 48.
3. Robert Kunzig, “Climbing Through the Brain,” Discover
Magazine, 1 (August 1998): 60.
4. “Neuron Migration and Brain Disorders,” Brain Brief-
ings (January 1995); Marcia Barinaga, “Neurobiology:
Researchers Find Signals that Guide Young Brain Neu-
rons,” Science, 17 (October 1997); Sharon Begley, “Your
Child’s Brain,” Newsweek, 19 (February 1996): 55.
5. Kunzig, “Climbing Through the Brain.”
6. Carla Shatz, “The Developing Brain,” Scientific Ameri-
can (September 1992): 61.
7. “Neuron Migration and Brain Disorders,” Brain Brief-
ings (January 1995).
8. J. Madeline Nash, “Special Report: Fertile Minds From
Birth, A Baby’s Cells Proliferate Wildly, Making Con-
nections That May Shape a Lifetime of Experience,”
Time, 3 (February 1997): 48.
9. Joel Davis, Mapping the Mind. The Secrets of the Human
Brain and How it Works (Secaucus: Birch Lane Press,
1997); Carla Shatz, “The Developing Brain,” Scientific
American (September 1992): 61.
10. Sandra Ackerman, Discovering the Brain (Washington:
National Academy Press, 1992).
11. Silvia Cardoso, “Neurons: Our Internal Galaxy,” Brain
and Mind (November 1998).
12. Sally P. Springer and Georg Deutsch, Left Brain. Right
Brain. Perspectives from Cognitive Neuroscience (New
York: W.H. Freeman and Company, 1998).