35
3. Sarah Brookhart, personal communication with the author.
36
1. D. Felmlee, “From Appealing to Appalling: Disenchantment with a Romantic Partner,”
37
2. R. S. Miller, “We Always Hurt the Ones We Love: Aversive Interactions in Close Relationships,” in R. M. Kowalski, ed.,
38
1. Catherine Lutz,
39
2. Reuters Life! “Quiet Please! Noise Irks Japan’s Commuters the Most,” January 15, 2010, http://in.reuters.com/article/idINIndia- 45415320100115.
40
3. Michael Ross and Qi Wang, “Why We Remember and What We Remember: Culture and Autobiographical Memory,”
41
4. Robert V. Levine,
42
5. Ibid., 6.
43
6. Edward T. Hall,
44
1. Camille L. Julien, Jennifer C. Thompson, Sue Wild, et al., “Psychiatric Disorders in Preclinical Huntington’s Disease,”
45
2. J. S. Snowden, Z. C. Gibbons, A. Blackshaw, et al., “Social Cognition in Frontotemporal Dementia and Huntington’s Disease,”
46
3. J. S. Snowden, N. A. Austin, S. Sembi, J. C. Thompson, D. Craufurd, and D. Neary “Emotion Recognition in Huntington’s Disease and Frontotemporal Dementia.”
47
4. S. Kloppel, C. M. Stonnington, P. Petrovic, et al., “Irritability in Pre-Clinical Huntington’s Disease.”
48
1. Dana and David Dornslife, Cognitive Neuroscience Imaging Center, http://brainimaging.usc.edu/index.php? topic=forsubjects.