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- Publications
- Influence
Physiological and behavioral effects of infantile stimulation
- S. Levine, G. C. Haltmeyer, G. Karas, V. Denenberg
- Psychology
- 1967
Abstract Male Purdue-Wistar rats were handled for 20 days in infancy or were not disturbed (total N = 312). In adulthood these animals were subdivided and tested in the open field for 1, 2, 3, or 4… Expand
Estradiol facilitates performance as working memory load increases
- H. A. Bimonte, V. Denenberg
- Psychology, Medicine
- Psychoneuroendocrinology
- 1 February 1999
A water-escape version of the radial-arm maze was used to assess rat spatial working memory performance. Intact females and ovariectomized females receiving a physiologically low dose,… Expand
Distinguishing whether dopamine regulates liking, wanting, and/or learning about rewards.
- S. Robinson, Suzanne M Sandstrom, V. Denenberg, R. Palmiter
- Psychology, Medicine
- Behavioral neuroscience
- 1 February 2005
To determine whether dopamine regulates liking, wanting, and/or learning about rewards during goal-directed behavior, the authors tested genetically engineered dopamine-deficient (DD) mice for… Expand
CRITICAL PERIODS, STIMULUS INPUT, AND EMOTIONAL REACTIVITY: A THEORY OF INFANTILE STIMULATION.
- V. Denenberg
- Psychology, Medicine
- Psychological review
- 1 September 1964
Rabbit: Frequency of Suckling in the Pup
- M. Zarrow, V. Denenberg, Clark O. Anderson
- Biology, Medicine
- Science
- 31 December 1965
Rabbit does were given free access to their young, access once a day, and access twice a day. In all three groups the young were nursed only once every 24 hours. Growth curves for the pups from day 2… Expand
OPEN‐FIELD BEHAVIOR IN THE RAT: WHAT DOES IT MEAN? *
- V. Denenberg
- Biology, Medicine
- Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- 1 July 1969
The rationale underlying the use of the open-field test is roughly as follows. Many mammals, when exposed to strange or noxious stimuli, will typically “freeze.” Freezing appears to have adaptative… Expand
Hemispheric laterality in animals and the effects of early experience
- V. Denenberg
- Psychology
- 1 March 1981
A review of research with chicks, songbirds, rodents, and nonhuman primates indicates that the brain is lateralized for a number of behavioral functions. These findings can be understood in terms of… Expand
In two species, females exhibit superior working memory and inferior reference memory on the water radial-arm maze
- H. A. Bimonte, L. Hyde, B. Hoplight, V. Denenberg
- Psychology, Medicine
- Physiology & Behavior
- 1 August 2000
Male and female mice and rats were tested on a water escape version of the radial-arm maze designed to measure working and reference memory. In both species, females exhibited superior working memory… Expand
A factor analysis of the human's corpus callosum
- V. Denenberg, A. Kertesz, P. Cowell
- Psychology, Medicine
- Brain Research
- 10 May 1991
We have recently developed a computer program for measuring midsagittal sections of the human corpus callosum, similar to one used for the rat. Callosal area, perimeter, axis length, and 99 widths… Expand
Altered Activity, Social Behavior, and Spatial Memory in Mice Lacking the NTAN1p Amidase and the Asparagine Branch of the N-End Rule Pathway
- Y. T. Kwon, S. Balogh, +7 authors A. Varshavsky
- Biology, Medicine
- Molecular and Cellular Biology
- 1 June 2000
ABSTRACT The N-end rule relates the in vivo half-life of a protein to the identity of its N-terminal residue. N-terminal asparagine and glutamine are tertiary destabilizing residues, in that they are… Expand
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