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Psychopharmacology
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June 1, 1995
The olfactory tubercle as a site of action of neuroleptics with an atypical profile in the paw test: effect of risperidone, prothipendyl, ORG 5222, sertindole and olanzapine
A R Cools, E P Prinssen, B A Ellenbroek
Brain Research Bulletin
|
January 1, 1996
d-Sulpiride inhibits oral behaviour elicited from the nucleus accumbens of freely moving rats
E P Prinssen, D J Heeren, A R Cools
European Journal of Pharmacology
|
June 1, 1976
Dopamine receptors: selective agonists and antagonists of functionally distinct types within the feline brain
A R Cools, A J Boudier, J M Rossum
Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology
|
May 1, 1993
Use of high and low responders to novelty in rat studies on the role of the ventral striatum in radial maze performance: effects of intra-accumbens injections of sulpiride
A R Cools, B Ellenbroek, D Heeren, et al.
Neuroscience
|
February 6, 2010
Differential role of GABAA and GABAB receptors in two distinct output stations of the rat striatum: studies on the substantia nigra pars reticulata and the globus pallidus
H Ikeda, A Kotani, N Koshikawa, et al.
European Journal of Pharmacology
|
February 7, 1977
ACTH-induced excessive grooming involves brain dopamine
V M Wiegant, A R Cools, W H Gispen
Behavioural Brain Research
|
May 14, 2003
Removal of short-term isolation stress differentially influences prepulse inhibition in APO-SUS and APO-UNSUS rats
T A Sontag, A R Cools, B A Ellenbroek
The European Journal of Neuroscience
|
January 1, 1994
The role of serotonin receptor subtypes in the behavioural effects of neuroleptic drugs. A paw test study in rats
B A Ellenbroek, E P Prinssen, A R Cools
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
|
January 1, 1988
Role of central dopamine in ACTH-induced grooming behavior in rats
A R Cools, B M Spruijt, B A Ellenbroek
Behavioural Brain Research
|
April 1, 1986
The periaqueductal gray: a prerequisite for ACTH-induced excessive grooming
B M Spruijt, A R Cools, W H Gispen
Page
of 27
Search research articles
Search
Showing results (91-100 of 263) with videos related to
Sort By:
Page
of 27
Psychopharmacology
|
June 1, 1995
The olfactory tubercle as a site of action of neuroleptics with an atypical profile in the paw test: effect of risperidone, prothipendyl, ORG 5222, sertindole and olanzapine
A R Cools, E P Prinssen, B A Ellenbroek
Brain Research Bulletin
|
January 1, 1996
d-Sulpiride inhibits oral behaviour elicited from the nucleus accumbens of freely moving rats
E P Prinssen, D J Heeren, A R Cools
European Journal of Pharmacology
|
June 1, 1976
Dopamine receptors: selective agonists and antagonists of functionally distinct types within the feline brain
A R Cools, A J Boudier, J M Rossum
Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology
|
May 1, 1993
Use of high and low responders to novelty in rat studies on the role of the ventral striatum in radial maze performance: effects of intra-accumbens injections of sulpiride
A R Cools, B Ellenbroek, D Heeren, et al.
Neuroscience
|
February 6, 2010
Differential role of GABAA and GABAB receptors in two distinct output stations of the rat striatum: studies on the substantia nigra pars reticulata and the globus pallidus
H Ikeda, A Kotani, N Koshikawa, et al.
European Journal of Pharmacology
|
February 7, 1977
ACTH-induced excessive grooming involves brain dopamine
V M Wiegant, A R Cools, W H Gispen
Behavioural Brain Research
|
May 14, 2003
Removal of short-term isolation stress differentially influences prepulse inhibition in APO-SUS and APO-UNSUS rats
T A Sontag, A R Cools, B A Ellenbroek
The European Journal of Neuroscience
|
January 1, 1994
The role of serotonin receptor subtypes in the behavioural effects of neuroleptic drugs. A paw test study in rats
B A Ellenbroek, E P Prinssen, A R Cools
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
|
January 1, 1988
Role of central dopamine in ACTH-induced grooming behavior in rats
A R Cools, B M Spruijt, B A Ellenbroek
Behavioural Brain Research
|
April 1, 1986
The periaqueductal gray: a prerequisite for ACTH-induced excessive grooming
B M Spruijt, A R Cools, W H Gispen
Page
of 27