Reference
Library
SDI Products Used for Scientific Research
Cage Rack 7 Photobeam
Locomotor
Activity and Occupancy of Brain Cannabinoid CB1 Receptors by the Antagonist/Inverse
Agonist AM281.
This study examined the relationship between intraveneous doses of cannabinoid
CB1 receptor antagonist AM281 and the degree of occupancy of this receptor,
and to relate occupancy to the ability of this compound to antagonize
the sedative effects of the cannabinoid receptor against WIN55, 212-2.
Occupancy was determined by measuring the ability of intravenous doses
of AM281 to inhibit in vivo binding of AM281 in brain areas, and locomotor
activity was assessed by measuring the rate of beam crossings in a photocell
apparatus.
"Activity monitors
were obtained from San Diego Instruments and two mice were placed in
each of the four chambers available in order to increase the number
of beam crossings recorded."
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Consenza, Melissa,
Gifford, Andrew, Gatlely, S. John, Pyatt, Beatrice, Liu, Qian, Makriyannis,
Alexandros and Volkow, Nora D.
Synapse 38:477-482 (2000)
Dose-Response
Curves and Time-Course Effects of Selected Anticholinergics on Locomotor
Activity in Rats.
In order to facilitate direct comparisons of anticholinergic drug effects
on activity, nine drugs were tested in one laboratory using a standardized
procedure. Both fine motor activity (reflecting smaller movements) and
ambulatory activity (reflecting larger movements) were recorded for
23 hours following drug administration in food-restricted rats.
“Activity
was monitored using a Photobeam Activity System (San Diego Instruments)
with 12 home cage activity units attached. Each home cage unit consisted
of an animal’s home cage that was place within a frame containing
four photobeams (spaced approximately 8.5 cm apart). Photobeams were
adjusted individually by targeting each rat’s body at mid flank.
The frames were connected to an interface and control board that was
coupled to a personal computer. The personal computer served as the
control unit, ran activity software and collected data.”
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Sipos, Maurice L.,
Burchnell, Vanessa, Galbicka, Gregory
Psychopharmacology (1999) 147: 250-256
Automated
Measurement of Age-Related Changes in the Locomotor Response to Environmental
Novelty and Home-Cage Activity.
The likelihood to explore in an open field environment decreases with
age. Older animals tend to be less active and explore less both in novel
and home-cage environments. The locomotor performance (fine movements,
ambulatory movements and rearing) of mail rats that were 6 or 22 months
of age was evaluated by continuous automated counting of Photobeam interruptions,
every 30 minutes, during 60 consecutive hours, in standard polycarbonate
cages. Novel environment performance was determined by Photobeam interruption
counting during the first hour in the new cage. The remaining 59 hours
were evaluated as home-cage activity.
“All subjects
were placed into standard polycarbonate cages….Each cage was set
in an infrared photocell activity monitor (San Diego Instruments) interfaced
with an IBM compatible computer. The photocell activity monitor had
a set of photobeams 3.8 cm above the floor, spaced 5 cm apart (activity
beams), and another set 10.3 cm above the floor, spaced 3 cm apart (rearing
beams). Locomotor activity was subdivided into number of fine and ambulatory
movements, as well as total number of rearings.”
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Casadesus, Gemma,
Shukitt-Hale, Barbara and Joseph, James A.
Mechanisms of Ageing and Development 122 (2001) 1887-1897
Circadian Differences in Behavioral Sensitization to Cocaine:
Putative Role of Arylalkylamine N-Acetyltransferase.
Chronopharmacology has identified numerous drugs whose effects depend
upon circadian rhythms. In humans, use of cocaine appears to be diurnally
affected; most abuse occurs during the afternoon and cocaine-caused
health problems peak soon thereafter. In experimental animals, pyschostimulants,
such as cocaine and amphetamine present circadian rhythmicity in their
behavioral and neurophysiological effects such as feed and locomotor
activity. In this study, male mice that hadn’t been exposed to
the testing monitors were placed in activity cages for a 30 minute adaptation
period. After this period, locomotor activity was measured for 30 minutes
using the Cage Rack Photobeam Activity Measurement System (San Diego
Instruments) equipped with computer monitored Photobeam frames. Immediately
after the 30 minute interval, animals were injected with saline or 10
or 20 mg/kg free-base cocaine and returned to the activity cages; and
recording continued for an additional 30 minutes. The movement of each
mouse was recorded as the number of beam interruptions and reported
as locomotor activity (ambulation). To measure locomotor sensitization,
the same procedure was repeated for 3 consecutive nights.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Uz, Tolga, Javaid
I. .Javaid and Manev, Hari
Life Sciences 70 (2002) 3069-3075
Dissociation of Conditioned Locomotion and Fos Induction
in Response to Stimuli Formerly paired with Cocaine.
For information on this study, please refer to:
Hotsenpiller, Gregory,
Horak, Bradley T., Wolf, Marina E.
Behavioral Neuroscience 2002, Vol. 116, No. 4, 634-645
Alterations
in Behavior and Glutamate Transmission Following Presentation of Stimuli
Previously Associated with Cocaine Exposure.
For information on this study, please refer to:
Hotsenpiller, Gregory,
Giorgetti, Marco, and Wolf, Marina E.
European Journal of Neuroscience, Vol. 14, pp. 1843-1855, 2001
Pharmacological
Reversal of Behavioral and Cellular Indices of Cocaine Sensitization
in the Rat
For information on this study, please refer to:
Li, Yong; White,
Francis J.; Wolf, Marina E.
Psychopharmacology (2000) 151: 175-183
Regression
Modeling of Rodent Locomotion Data
“Locomotion was monitored with a 16 x 16 photobeam array (San
Diego Instruments). The RACs were used as home cages throughout the
course of all experiments.” “Locomotor activity, expressed
as crossovers (defined as the number of times the animal crossed over
into any of four quadrants subdividing the enclosure) was calculated
from the raw data Photobeam count files by Flex-Field software (San
Diego Instruments) and verified by comparison with videotape. Crossovers
were automatically collected by computer into 3-min time interval bins.”
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Welge, Jeffrey A.;
Richtand, Neil M.
Behavioral Brain Research 128 (2002) 61-69
Photobeam
Activity System - Open Field
Conformationally
restricted analogs of BD1008 and an antisense oligodeoxynucleotide targeting
receptors s produce anti-cocaine effects in mice.
In this study, three conformationally restricted analogs of BD1008 were
tested for their ability to attenuate the convulsive, lethal and locomotor
stimulatory effects of cocaine: BD1018, BD1063 and LR132. To measure
the locomotor stimulatory effects of cocaine, mice were first acclimated
for 30 min to the plexiglass enclosures of an automated activity monitor
(San Diego Instruments). The mice were then administered cocaine. Horizontal
locomotor activity was quantified for the subsequent 30 min as disruptions
in the 4 x 4 photobeam array that circumscribed each plexiglass enclosure.
For more information,
refer to:
Matsumoto, Rae R.,
McCracken, Kari A., Friedman, Michele J., Pouw, Buddy, DeCosta, Brian
R., Bowen, Wayne D.
European Journal of Pharmacology 419 (2001) 163-174
Freeze
Monitor™
Automated
Measurement of Mouse Freezing Behavior and its Use for Quantitative
Trait Locus Analysis of Contextual Fear Conditioning in (BALB/cJ x C57BL/6J)F2
Mice
The most commonly measured mouse behavior in fear conditioning tests
is freezing. A technical limitation, particularly for genetic studies,
is the method of direct observation used for quantifying this response,
with the potential for bias or inconsistencies. We report the use of
a computerized method based on latency between Photobeam interruption
measures as a reliable scoring criterion in mice. The Freeze Monitor
(San Diego Instruments) consisted of a transparent acrylic conditioning
chamber. A grid floor made of stainless steel rods was connected to
a shock generator (Coulberg). A frame with 16 infrared photobeams in
the horizontal plane surrounded the chamber. The Freeze Monitor software
controlled the shock generator and recorded data from the photobeams.
For information
on this study, please refer to:
Valentinuzzi; Kolker;
Vitaterna; Shimomur; Whiteley; Low-Zeddies; Turek; Ferrari; Paylor and
Takahashi.
Learning & Memory 5:391-403 1998
Automated
Assessment of Conditioning Parmeters for Context and Cued Fear in Mice
One often used behavioral technique to assess learning and memory abilities
of rats and mice is the fear conditioning paradigm (Wehner and Silva
1996). To date, most fear conditioning studies have quantified freezing
behavior in tedious and labor-intensive visual observation methods of
recording. The present work was performed to examine the ability of
an automated Freeze Monitor system to reliably record immobility behavior
displayed by mice subjected to a variety of experimental manipulations.
The fear conditioning apparatus consisted of a transparent acrylic chamber
(San Diego Instruments). The floor was made of stainless steel rods
and was connected to a shock generator (San Diego Instruments). The
chamber was surrounded by a frame with 16 infrared photobeams. A computer
controlled the administration of the foot shock and auditory tone and
recorded beam interruptions and latencies to beam interruption.For information
on this study, please refer to:Contarino; Baca,
Kennelly and Gold, Lisa H.
Learning & Memory 9:89-96 2002
Gemini™
Developmental
Neurotoxicity Evaluation of the Avermectin Pesticide, Emamectin Benzoate,
in Sprague-Dawley Rats.
“The tests were performed in a room with normal illumination and
background white noise. Computer-controlled two-compartment shuttleboxes
(San Diego Instruments, Inc.) were used.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Wise, L. David;
Allen, Henry L.; Hoe, Chao-Min L.; Verbeke, David R.; Gerson, Ronald
J.
Neurotoxicology and Teratology, Vol. 19, No. 4 pp. 315-326, 1997
Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Produces Antidepressant
Effects in Behavioral Models of Depression
“Learned helplessness behavioral tests were performed with the
Gemini avoidance system (San Diego Instruments). This apparatus was
divided into two compartments by a retractable door.”
For information
on this study, please refer to:
Shirayama, Yukihiko;
Chen, Andrew C.; Nakagawa, Shin; Russel, David S.; Duman, Ronald S.
The Journal of Neuroscience, April 15, 2002, 22(8):3251-3261
Effects of Histamine H3 Receptor Ligand GT-2331 and Ciproxifan
in a Repeated Acquisition Avoidance Response in the Spontaneously Hypertensive
Rat Pup
“Histamine H3 receptor antagonists have been proposed as potentially
useful therapeutic agents for the treatment of several disorders including
attention deficit, schizophrenia, depression and Alzheimer’s disease.
We have developed a repeated acquisition version of inhibitory avoidance
task using spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) pups that we believe
provides a reproducible measure of the cognitive and attention deficits
often characteristic of these disease states….rat pups were trained
to avoid a mild footshock delivered when the pup had transferred from
a brightly lit to a darkened compartment.”
“Pups were
handled for about 2 min each on the day preceding the experiement and
on the morning of the experiment itself. A period of 30 min was allowed
to elapse following the drug or vehicle injection before a pup was placed
into a brightly lit compartment of a computer-controlled Gemini inhibitory
avoidance apparatus (San Diego Instruments).”
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Fox, Gerard B.;
Pan, Jia Bao; Esbenshard, Timothy A.; Bennani, Youssef L.;Black, Lawrence
A.; Faghih, Ramin; Hancock, Arthur A.; Decker, Michael W.
Behavioral Brain Research, 131 (2002) 151-161
Holeboard
A Rotating
Holeboard Procedure for Testing Drug Effects on Spatial Learning and
Memory in Mice
A procedure is described herein for evaluating drug effects on acquisition
and retention of a spatial learning task in mice. The rotating holeboard
apparatus is a rectangular open field containing four open holes arranged
in either a four-corner or a row configuration. A mouse is trained to
poke its head into a hole and retrieve a food reward from a “baited”
hole which contains a reward on every trial.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Watters, Gayle-Brosnan;
Wozniak, David F.
Brain Research Protocols 1 (1997) 331-338
SR-HLAB™
Prestimulus
Effects on Startle Magnitude: Sensory or Motor?
Startle may be inhibited when the startling event is preceded by a stimulus;
this is called prepulse inhibition when the prestimulus is weak and
nonstartling and paired pulse inhibition when the prestimulus elicits
startle. The authors examined the relationship of these measures across
species and tested whether paired pulse inhibition is independent of
the startling effects of the prestimulus.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Swerdlow, Neal R.;
Shoemaker, Jody M.; Stephany, Nora; Wasserman, Lindsay; Ro, Hyun J.;
and Geyer, Mark A.
Copyright 2002 by the American Psychological Association, Inc.
Tactile Prepuff Inhibition of Startle in Children with Tourett’s
Syndrome: In Search of an “fMRI-Friendly” Startle Paradigm
Bilateral eyeblink PPI was measured in children using chin air puffs
to elicit startle and prepuffs to the dorsal hand surface as inhibiting
stimuli. This paradigm involved no metallic objects or acoustic stimuli,
making it suitable for an fMRI environment that is magnetically sensitive
and acoustically complex.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Swerdlow, Neal R.;
Blythe, Karban; Ploum, Yvonne; Sharp, Richard; Geyer, Mark A; Eastvold,
Angela
Copyright 2001 by the Society of Biological Psychiatry
Electromyographical
Differentiation between the Acoustic Blink and Startle Reflex
Recent evidence suggests that electromyographc activity in the orbicularis
oculi muscle occurring in response to sudden acoustic stimuli consists
of two overlapping components: the blink and the startle reflex. The
aim of this study was to identify these two components in acoustically
elicited eyeblink responses and to analyze their differential modulation
by weak acoustic prepulses. Reflex measures were carried out using a
commercially available device (SR-LAB, San Diego Instruments). Via this
computerized system, EMG activity was recorded in 250-1ms readings from
pulse, onset, bandpass filtered (1-1000 Hz), amplified, digitized and
rectified.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Meincke, Ulrich;
Morth, Dina; Vob, Tatjana; Gouzoulis-Mayfrank, Euphrosyne
Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci (2002) 252: 141-145
ROTOR-ROD™
Spontaneous
Stereotypy in an Animal Model of Down Syndrome: Ts65Dn Mice
Stereotyped behaviors occur at high rates in individuals with mental
retardation (e.g. Down syndrome). To determine if spontaneous stereotypy
occurs in a murine model of Down syndrome, the home cage behavior of
Ts65Dn and control mice was monitored during the dark cycle. Motor activity
was further assessed in novel automated test chambers with acoustic
startle and rotor rod paradigms providing additional environmental challenges.
For information
on this study, please refer to:
Turner, C.A.; Newman,
H.A.; Bugenhagen, P.; Crnic, L.; Lewis, M.H.
Behav Genet 2002 Jul 31 (4): 393-400
Sensitivity
to the Effects of Sedative-Hypnotics on Motor Performance: Influence
of Task Difficulty and Chronic Phenobarbital Administration
This study examined sensitivity to the effects of various sedative-hypnotics
on motor performance in rats treated chemically with Phenobarbital.
Eight rats were trained to walk on a rotor rod treadmill at low (8 rpm)
and high (24 rpm) rotational speeds. Motor performance was measured
through the use of a rotor rod rotating treadmill (San Diego Instruments).
The rotor rod apparatus consisted of a steel and Plexiglas cabinet that
was divided into four 12 cm lanes by vertical steel partitions. A 10
cm diameter cylinder was suspended 80 cm above the floor of the apparatus
and ran through the center of each lane.
For information
on this study, please refer to:
Smith, M.A.; Stoops,
W.W.
Behavioural Pharmacology 2001; 12:125-134
SR-LAB™
Measurement
of Startle Response, Prepulse Inhibition and Habituation.
This paper, co-authored by Dr. Mark Geyer and Dr. N.R. Swerdlow is a
general introduction and guide to the conduct of startle research. It
notes the following factors as affecting the variability of behavioral
response: species, strain, sex, age, vendor, Animal Care (housing, handling,
noise, feed, bedding, changing day, etc.), surgery, baseline matching,
multiple chambers (matched for chamber), outliers (>2-3 standard
deviations), official handling procedure, light cycle, 1hr acclimation
in testing area before testing run, same fans, calibration, record window
(100ms for rats, 65ms for mice), using the average (instead of the peak),
response is less variable, speakers and single sound source for all
noises (background, prepulse and pulse).
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Geyer, M.A., Swerdlow,
N.R. (1998)
Measurement of Startle Response, Prepulse Inhibition, and Habituation.
Current Protocols in Neuroscience. 8.7.1 – 8.7.15.
5-HT1A Receptor Knockout, but not 5-HT1B Receptor Knockout
Mice, Show Reduced Startle Reactivity and Footshock-induced Sensitization,
as Measured with the Acoustic Startle Response
The startle response was chosen as the basic response measure. Startle
reflexes were measured in four identical startle response systems (SR-LAB,
San Diego Instruments), each consisting of a non-restrictive Plexiglas
cylinder, mounted on a Plexiglas platform and placed in a ventilated,
sound-attenuated chamber. Cylinder movements were detected and measured
by a piezoelectric element mounted under each cylinder. A dynamic calibration
system (San Diego Instruments) was used to ensure comparable startle
magnitudes across four devices. Startle stimuli were presented through
a high frequency speaker located above the startle chambers.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Dirks; Pattij; Bouwknecht;
Westphal; Hijzen; Groenink; Van der Gugten; Oosting; Hen; Geyer and
Olivier
Behavioural Brain Research 118 (2001) 169-178
Startle
Responses, Heart Rate, and Temperature in 5-HT1B Receptor Knockou Mice
Startle reflexes were measured in four identical startle response systems
(SR-LAB, San Diego Instruments), each consisting of a non-restrictive
Plexiglas cylinder, mounted on a Plexiglas platform and placed in a
ventilated, sound-attenuated chamber. Cylinder movements were detected
and measured by a piezoelectric accelerometer mounted under each cylinder.
A dynamic calibration system (San Diego Instruments) was used to ensure
comparable startle magnitudes across four devices. Startle stimuli were
presented through a high frequency speaker located above the startle
chambers.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Bouwknecht; Hijzen;
Groenink; Van der Gugten; Dirks; Maes; Hen; Geyer and Olivier
Neurophysiology, Basic and Clinical Vol 11 No 18 18 December 2000
The
Effects of Perinatal AZT Exposure on the Acoustic Startle Response in
Adult Rats
AZT has become the standard medication to prevent the transmission of
the human immunodeficiency virus from mother to fetus. The present study
was designed to assess the acoustic startle response in adult rats that
had been perinatally exposed to AZT. One SR-LAB acoustic startle sound-attenuating
chamber (San Diego Instruments) with fan and light recoded the degree
of deflection of the platform as the subject responded to the startle
stimulus.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Melnick; Weedon;
Dow-Edwards
Neurotoxicology and Teratology 24 (2002) 773-781
GABA-A and 5-HTIA Receptor Agonists Block Expression of
Feat-Potentiated Startle in Mice
The present experiments characterized the acquisition of fear-potentiated
startle and determined the sensitivity of FPS to anxiolytic compounds
in DBA/1J mice. A light conditioned stimulus and mild footshock unconditioned
stimulus were used. Startle chambers (SR-LAB, San Diego Instruments)
consisted of nonrestrictive Plexiglass cylinders 5 cm in diameter resting
on a Plexiglass platform in a ventilated chamber. High frequency speakers
mounted above the cylinders produced all acoustic stimuli. Scrambled,
constant-current footshocks were delivered through a cradle-shaped grid
on the floor of the cylinder. Footshocks, startle intensities and light
presentations were controlled by HSR2000 software (SR-LAB). Piezoelectric
accelerometers mounted under the cylinders transduced movements of the
animal, which were digitized and stored by interface and computer assembly.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Risbrough; Brodkin;
Geyer
Neuropsychopharmacology (2003)
“Typical” but not “Atypical” Anitpsychotic Effects
on Startle Gating Deficits in Prepubertal Rats
All startle experiments utilized four chambers (SR-LAB, San Diego Instruments)
housed in a sound-attenuated room with a 60dB ambient noise level. For
rats aged 42 days to adulthood, each startle chamber consisted of a
Plexiglas cylinder, resting on a Plexiglas stand. Acoustic stimuli and
background noise were presented via a Radioshack Supertweeter mounted
above the Plexiglas cylinder. Startle magnitude was detected and recorded
as transduced cylinder movement via a piezoelectric device mounted below
the Plexiglas stand. Acoustic stimulus intensities and response intensities
were calibrated (using an SR-LAB Startle Calibration System) to be nearly
identical in each of the four startle chambers.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Martinez; Platten;
Pollack; Shoemaker; Ro; Pitcher; Geyer; Swerdlow
Psychopharmacology (2002)161:38-46
Metabotropic Glutamate Subtype 5 Receptors Modulate Locomotor Activity
and Sensorimotor Gating in Rodents
Use-dependent
N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) antagonists produce behaviors
in human volunteers that resemble schizophrenia and exacerbate those
behaviors in schizophrenic patients, suggesting that hypofunction of
NMDAR-mediated neuronal circuitry may be involved in the etiology of
clinical schizophrenia. Activation of the metabotropic glutamate receptor
subtype 5 (mGIuRS) enhances NMDAR-mediated currents in vitro. Thus,
activation of mGIuR5 could potentiate hypofunctional NMDARs in neuronal
circuitry relevant to schizophrenia. To further elucidate the role of
mGIuR5, the present study examined the effects of mGIuR5 antagonist
administration, with and without coadministration of the use-dependent
NMDAR antagonist phencyclidine (PCP), on locomotor activity and prepulse
inhibition (PPI) of the acoustic startle response in rodents. We further
examined
PPI in mGIuR5 knockout
mice. Finally, we examined PPI after administration of the mGIuR5 agonist
2-chloro-5-hydroxyphenylglycine (CHPG) alone and in combination with
amphetamine. The data indicate that the mGIuR5 antagonist 2-methyl-6-(phenylethynyl)pyridine
has no effect on locomotor activity or PPI by itself but does potentiate
both PCP-induced locomotor activity and disruption of PPI. We further
found that mGIuR5 knockout mice display consistent deficits in PPI relative
to their wild-type controls. Finally, the data indicate that CHPG has
no effect on PPI by itself, but ameliorates amphetamine-induced disruption
of PPI. Collectively, these data suggest that mGlu5 receptors play a
modulatory role on rodent PPI and locomotor behaviors and are consistent
with the hypothesis that mGlu5 agonist/potentiators may represent a
novel approach for antipsychotic drug development.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Gene G. Kinney,
Maryann Burno, Una C. Campbell, Lisa M. Hernandez, Dana Rodriguez, Linda
J. Bristow, and P. Jeffrey Conn
Department of Neuroscience,
Merck Research Laboratories, West Point, Pennsylvania (G.G.K., M.B.,
P.J.C.); and Behavioral Pharmacology, San Diego, California (U.C.C.,
L.M.H., D.R., L.J.B.)
The Journal of Pharmacology
and Experimental Therapeutics Vol. 306, No. 1, Copyright ® 2003
by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
48702/1070309
Prestimulus Effects on Startle Magnitude: Sensory or Motor?
For information on this study, please refer to:
Swerdlow; Shoemaker;
Stephany; Wasserman; Ro; Geyer
Behavioural Neuroscience (2002) Vol. 116, No. 4, 672-681
Dopamine Agonist Effects on Startle and Sensorimotor Gating in Normal
Male Subjects: Time Course Studies
For information on this study, please refer to:
Swerdlow; Eastvold;
Karban; Ploum; Stephany; Geyer; Cadenhead; Auerbach
Pyschopharmacology (2002) 161: 189-201
Evaluation
of an Anxiety-Related Phenotype in Galanin Overexpressing Transgenic
Mice
For information on this study, please refer to:
Holmes; Yang; Crawley
Journal of Molecular Neuroscience (2002) 18: 151-165
Neurobehavioral
Teratogenic Effects of Thalidomide in Rats
For information on this study, please refer to:
Vorhees; Weisenburger;
Minck
Neurotoxicology and Teratology 23 (2001) 255-264
Behavioral
Phenotyping of GFAP-ApoE3 and –ApoE4 Transgenic Mice: ApoE4 Mice
Show Profound Working Memory Impairments in the Absence of Alzheimer’s-like
Neuropathology
For information on this study, please refer to:
Hartman; Wozniak;
Nardi; Olney; Sartorius; Holtzmann
Experimental Neurology 170, 326-344 (2001)
Blind
Mice are not Impaired in T-Maze Footshock Avoidance Acquisition and
Retention
For information on this study, please refer to:
Farr; Banks; La
Scola; Morley
Physiology & Behavior 76 (2002) 531-538
Anxiolytic-like
Activity of the mGluR5 Antagonist MPEP: A Comparison with Diazepam and
Buspirone
For information on this study, please refer to:
Brodkin; Busse;
Sukoff; Varney
Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior 73 (2002) 359-366
Genetic
Differences in Gating-Disruptive Effects of Apomorphine: Evidence of
Central Medication
For information on this study, please refer to:
Swerdlow; Shoemaker;
Pitcher; Platten; Kuczenski
Behavioral Neurosciences 2002, Vol. 116 No. 4 682-690
Effects
of Repeated Exposure of Rats to JP-5 or JP-8 Jet Fuel Vapor on Neurobehavioral
Capacity and Neurotransmitter Levels
For information on this study, please refer to:
Rossi; Nordholm;
Carpenter; Ritchie; Malcomb
Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part A, 63: 397-428,
2001
Serum
Cleaved Tau Protein and Neurobehavioral Battery of Tests as Markers
of Brain Injury in Experimental Bacterial Meningitis
For information on this study, please refer to:
Irazuzta; Courten-Myers;
Zemlan; Bekkedal; Rossi
Brain Research 913 (2001) 95-105
Effects
of Selected Anticholinergics on Acoustic Startle Response in Rats
For information on this study, please refer to:
Sipos; Burchnell;
Galbicka
Journal of Applied Toxicology 21, S95-S101 (2001)
Estrogen Increases Prepulse Inhibition of Acoustic Startle in Rats
For information on this study, please refer to:
Van den Buuse; Eikelis
European Journal of Pharmacology, 425 (2001) 33-41
The Adenosine A2A Agonist CGS 21680 Reverses the Reduction
in Prepulse Inhibition of the Acoustic Startle Response Induced by Phencyclidine,
but not by Apomorphine and Amphetamine
For information on this study, please refer to:
Sills; Azampanah;
Fletcher
Psychopharmacology, (2001) 156: 187-193
Comparison
of Apomorphine, Amphetamine and Dizocilpine Disruptions of Prepulse
Inhibition in Inbred and Outbred Mice Strains
For information on this study, please refer to:
Varty; Walters;
Cohen-Williams; Carey
European Journal of Pharmacology, 424 (2001) 27-36
Reduced
Brain Serotonin Activity Disrupts Prepulse Inhibition of the Acoustic
Startle Reflex: Effects of 5,7-Dihydroxytryptamine and p-Chlorophenylalanine
For information on this study, please refer to:
Fletcher; Selhi;
Azampanah; Sills
Neuropsychopharmacology, 2001-Vol.. 24, No. 4
SMART™
Phosphodiesterase
1B Knock-Out Mice Exhibit Exaggerated Locomotor Hyperactivity and DARPP-32
Phosphorylation in Response to Dopamine Agonists and Display Impaired
Spatial Learning
Regarding the Morris Maze - Data were recorded for acquisition and reversal
phases with a video tracking system (San Diego Instruments). Cued acquisition
latencies were recorded with a hand-held timer and observed on a closed
circuit monitor.
For more information
on this study, please refer to:
Reed, Tracy M.;
Repaske, David R.; Snyder, Gretchen L.; Greengard, Paul; Vorhees, Charles
V.
The Journal of Neuroscience, June 15, 2002, 22(12):5188-5197
|