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      Effects of pyrethroids on brain development and behavior: Deltamethrin

      , ,
      Neurotoxicology and Teratology
      Elsevier BV

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          The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire: A Research Note

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            Morris water maze: procedures for assessing spatial and related forms of learning and memory.

            The Morris water maze (MWM) is a test of spatial learning for rodents that relies on distal cues to navigate from start locations around the perimeter of an open swimming arena to locate a submerged escape platform. Spatial learning is assessed across repeated trials and reference memory is determined by preference for the platform area when the platform is absent. Reversal and shift trials enhance the detection of spatial impairments. Trial-dependent, latent and discrimination learning can be assessed using modifications of the basic protocol. Search-to-platform area determines the degree of reliance on spatial versus non-spatial strategies. Cued trials determine whether performance factors that are unrelated to place learning are present. Escape from water is relatively immune from activity or body mass differences, making it ideal for many experimental models. The MWM has proven to be a robust and reliable test that is strongly correlated with hippocampal synaptic plasticity and NMDA receptor function. We present protocols for performing variants of the MWM test, from which results can be obtained from individual animals in as few as 6 days.
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              The molecular biology of memory storage: a dialogue between genes and synapses.

              E R Kandel (2001)
              One of the most remarkable aspects of an animal's behavior is the ability to modify that behavior by learning, an ability that reaches its highest form in human beings. For me, learning and memory have proven to be endlessly fascinating mental processes because they address one of the fundamental features of human activity: our ability to acquire new ideas from experience and to retain these ideas over time in memory. Moreover, unlike other mental processes such as thought, language, and consciousness, learning seemed from the outset to be readily accessible to cellular and molecular analysis. I, therefore, have been curious to know: What changes in the brain when we learn? And, once something is learned, how is that information retained in the brain? I have tried to address these questions through a reductionist approach that would allow me to investigate elementary forms of learning and memory at a cellular molecular level-as specific molecular activities within identified nerve cells.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Neurotoxicology and Teratology
                Neurotoxicology and Teratology
                Elsevier BV
                08920362
                September 2021
                September 2021
                : 87
                : 106983
                Article
                10.1016/j.ntt.2021.106983
                33848594
                45774334-74c2-4f22-a93d-c5823d6dcb0a
                © 2021

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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