12 found
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  1.  67
    A Passion of the Soul: An Introduction to Pain for Consciousness Researchers.C. Richard Chapman & Yoshio Nakamura - 1999 - Consciousness and Cognition 8 (4):391-422.
    Pain is an important focus for consciousness research because it is an avenue for exploring somatic awareness, emotion, and the genesis of subjectivity. In principle, pain is awareness of tissue trauma, but pain can occur in the absence of identifiable injury, and sometimes substantive tissue injury produces no pain. The purpose of this paper is to help bridge pain research and consciousness studies. It reviews the basic sensory neurophysiology associated with tissue injury, including transduction, transmission, modulation, and central representation. In (...)
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  2.  28
    Measuring pain: an introspective look at introspection.Yoshio Nakamura & C. Richard Chapman - 2002 - Consciousness and Cognition 11 (4):582-592.
    The measurement of pain depends upon subjective reports, but we know very little about how research subjects or pain patients produce self-reported judgments. Representationalist assumptions dominate the field of pain research and lead to the critical conjecture that the person in pain examines the contents of consciousness before making a report about the sensory or affective magnitude of pain experience as well as about its nature. Most studies to date have investigated what Fechner termed “outer psychophysics”: the relationship between characteristics (...)
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  3. Article ID ccog. 1999.0425, available online at http://www. idealibrary. com on.A. Bartels, Edoardo Bisiach, Michael Brecht, Larry Cahill, C. Richard Chapman, Garvin Chastain, MaryLou Cheal, J. Allan Cheyne, A. J. Clarke & Norman D. Cook - 1999 - Consciousness and Cognition 8:586.
     
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  4.  14
    A Constructivist Framework for Understanding Individual Differences in Pain.C. Richard Chapman, Yoshio Nakamura & Leticia Y. Flores - 2000 - In Robert G. Kunzendorf & Benjamin Wallace (eds.), Individual Differences in Conscious Experience. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. pp. 20--17.
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  5.  21
    Clinical implications of Bolles & Fanselow's pain/fear model.C. Richard Chapman & Gregg J. Gagliardi - 1980 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 3 (2):305-306.
  6.  28
    Modification of perception by classical conditioning procedures.C. Richard Chapman & Ben W. Feather - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 93 (2):338.
  7.  34
    On the neurobiological basis of suffering.C. Richard Chapman - 1990 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 (1):16-17.
  8.  18
    Positive contrast effects as a function of method of incentive presentation.C. Richard Chapman & Joseph Halpern - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 80 (3p1):548.
  9. Pain perception, affective mechanisms, and conscious experience.C. Richard Chapman - 2004 - In Thomas Hadjistavropoulos & Kenneth D. Craig (eds.), Pain: Psychological Perspectives. pp. 59-85.
  10.  40
    What role does intersubjectivity play in the facial expression of pain?C. Richard Chapman & Yoshio Nakamura - 2002 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (4):455-456.
    The facial expression of pain is the end product of a complex process that is, in part, emotional. The evolutionary study of facial expression must account for the social nature of human consciousness and should address the questions of why empathy exists, the adaptive importance of empathy, and whether facial expression is a mechanism of empathy and second-person consciousness.
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  11.  20
    Human incentive learning as a function of reinforcement schedule and experimental paradigm.Joseph Halpern & C. Richard Chapman - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 83 (3p1):514.
  12.  15
    Constructing pain: How pain hurts.Yoshio Nakamura & C. Richard Chapman - 2002 - In Kunio Yasue, Marj Jibu & Tarcisio Della Senta (eds.), No Matter, Never Mind. John Benjamins. pp. 193--206.