House, Patrick K., Ajai Vyas, and Robert Sapolsky. “Predator Cat Odors Activate Sexual Arousal Pathways in Brains of Toxoplasma gondii Infected Rats.”
6 (2011): e23277.Hsiao, Elaine Y. “Gastrointestinal Issues in Autism Spectrum Disorder.”
22 (2014): 104–11.Human Microbiome Consortium. “A Framework for Human Microbiome Research.”
486 (2012): 215–21.Iwatsuki, Ken, R. Ichikawa, A. Uematsu, A. Kitamura, H. Uneyama, and K. Torii. “Detecting Sweet and Umami Tastes in the Gastrointestinal Tract.”
204 (2012): 169–77.Jaenig, Wilfrid.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006.Jasarevic, Eldin, Ali B. Rodgers, and Tracy L. Bale. “Alterations in the Vaginal Microbiome by Maternal Stress Are Associated with Metabolic Reprogramming of the Offspring Gut and Brain.”
156 (2015): 3265–76.— —. “A Novel Role for Maternal Stress and Microbial Transmission in Early Life Programming and Neurodevelopment.”
1 (2015): 81–88.Johnson, Pieter T. J., Jacobus C. de Roode, and Andy Fenton. “Why Infectious Disease Research Needs Community Ecology.”
349 (2015): 1259504.Jouanna, Jacques.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999.Karamanos, B., A. Thanopoulou, F. Angelico, S. Assaad-Khalil, A. Barbato, M. Del Ben, V. Dimitrijevic-Sreckovic, et al. “Nutritional Habits in the Mediterranean Basin: The Macronutrient Composition of Diet and Its Relation with the Traditional Mediterranean Diet: Multi-Centre Study of the Mediterranean Group for the Study of Diabetes (MGSD).”
56 (2002): 983–91.Kastorini, Christina-Maria, Haralampos J. Milionis, Katherine Esposito, Dario Giugliano, John A. Goudevenos, and Demosthenes B. Panagiotakos. “The Effect of Mediterranean Diet on Metabolic Syndrome and Its Components: A Meta-Analysis of 50 Studies and 534,906 Individuals.”
57 (2011): 1299–1313.Koenig, Jeremy E., Aymé Spor, Nicholas Scalfone, Ashwana D. Fricker, Jesse Stombaugh, Rob Knight, Largus T. Angenent, and Ruth E. Ley. “Succession of Microbial Consortia in the Developing Infant Gut Microbiome.”
108 Suppl 1 (2011): 4578–85.Krol, Kathleen M., Purva Rajhans, Manuela Missana, and Tobias Grossmann. “Duration of Exclusive Breastfeeding Is Associated with Differences in Infants’ Brain Responses to Emotional Body Expressions.”
8 (2015): 459.Le Doux, Joseph.
New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996.Ley, Ruth E., Catherine A. Lozupone, Micah Hamady, Rob Knight, and Jeffrey I. Gordon. “Worlds Within Worlds: Evolution of the Vertebrate Gut Microbiota.”
6 (2008): 776–88.Lizot, Jacques.
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991.Lopez-Legarrea, Patricia, Nicholas Robert Fuller, Maria Angeles Zulet, Jose Alfredo Martinez, and Ian Douglas Caterson. “The Influence of Mediterranean, Carbohydrate and High Protein Diets on Gut Microbiota Composition in the Treatment of Obesity and Associated Inflammatory State.”
23 (2014): 360–68.Lyte, Mark. “The Effect of Stress on Microbial Growth.”
15 (2014): 172–74.Mawe, Gary M., and Jill M. Hoffman. “Serotonin Signaling in the Gut: Functions, Dysfunctions, and Therapeutic Targets.”
10 (2013): 473–86.Mayer, Emeran A. “Gut Feelings: The Emerging Biology of Gut-Brain Communication.”
12 (2011): 453–66.— —. “The Neurobiology of Stress and Gastrointestinal Disease.”
47 (2000): 861–69.Mayer, Emeran A., and Pierre Baldi. “Can Regulatory Peptides Be Regarded as Words of a Biological Language.”
261 (1991): G171–84.Mayer, Emeran A., Rob Knight, Sarkis K. Mazmanian, John F. Cryan, and Kirsten Tillisch. “Gut Microbes and the Brain: Paradigm Shift in Neuroscience
34 (2014): 15490–6.Mayer, Emeran A., Bruce D. Naliboff, Lin Chang, and Santosh V. Coutinho. “V. Stress and Irritable Bowel Syndrome.”
280 (2001): G519–24.Mayer, Emeran A., Bruce D. Naliboff, and A. D. Craig. “Neuroimaging of the Brain-Gut Axis: From Basic Understanding to Treatment of Functional GI disorders.”
131 (2006): 1925–42.Mayer, Emeran A., David Padua, and Kirsten Tillisch. “Altered Brain-Gut Axis in Autism: Comorbidity or Causative Mechanisms?”
36 (2014): 933–39.Mayer, Emeran A., Kirsten Tillisch, and Arpana Gupta. “Gut/Brain Axis and the Microbiota.”
125 (2015): 926–38.