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Behaviour Under Control: the Malign Misuse of Neuroscience

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Controlling Biochemical Weapons

Part of the book series: Global Issues Series ((GLOISS))

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Abstract

Only in the last few centuries has the link between the brain and behaviour become clear, and only at the end of the nineteenth century was it demonstrated that the nervous system was made up of billions of separate nerve cells or neurons. We now know that during evolution complex networks of such neurons have developed in order to effect certain behaviours. Whilst the neurons of the central, peripheral and autonomic nervous systems vary enormously in form and function, they can be classed into three broad groups: sensory neurons which convey information into the central nervous system; effector neurons which carry information out of the central nervous system to muscles and other effector organs; and interneurons within the central nervous system which link the sensory and effector neurons and also have links with one another.

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© 2006 Alexander Kelle, Kathryn Nixdorff and Malcolm Dando

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Kelle, A., Nixdorff, K., Dando, M. (2006). Behaviour Under Control: the Malign Misuse of Neuroscience. In: Controlling Biochemical Weapons. Global Issues Series. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230503496_5

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