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The European Journal of Neuroscience
|
August 13, 2003
NMDA lesions of Ammon's horn and the dentate gyrus disrupt the direct and temporally paced homing displayed by rats exploring a novel environment: evidence for a role of the hippocampus in dead reckoning
Douglas G Wallace, Ian Q Whishaw
Animal Cognition
|
February 8, 2020
Effects of string length on the organization of rat string-pulling behavior
Ashley A Blackwell, Douglas G Wallace
Behavioural Brain Research
|
January 16, 2003
On the origins of autobiographical memory
Ian Q Whishaw, Douglas G Wallace
Behavioural Brain Research
|
July 6, 2007
Selective hippocampal cholinergic deafferentation impairs self-movement cue use during a food hoarding task
Megan M Martin, Douglas G Wallace
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Animal Behavior Processes
|
March 1, 2002
What is learned in sequential learning? An associative model of reward magnitude serial-pattern learning
Douglas G Wallace, Stephen B Fountain
The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. B, Comparative and Physiological Psychology
|
July 26, 2003
An associative model of rat serial pattern learning in three-element sequences
Douglas G Wallace, Stephen B Fountain
Developmental Psychobiology
|
April 16, 2005
The development of spatial capacity in piloting and dead reckoning by infant rats: use of the huddle as a home base for spatial navigation
Irene Loewen, Douglas G Wallace, Ian Q Whishaw
Behavioural Brain Research
|
February 15, 2002
Rats can track odors, other rats, and themselves: implications for the study of spatial behavior
Douglas G Wallace, Bogdan Gorny, Ian Q Whishaw
Behavioral Neuroscience
|
June 14, 2003
Odor tracking in rats with orbital frontal lesions
Douglas G Wallace, Bryan Kolb, Ian Q Whishaw
Journal of Comparative Psychology (Washington, D.C. : 1983)
|
November 23, 2006
Comparative analysis of movement characteristics during dead-reckoning-based navigation in humans and rats
Douglas G Wallace, Sarwat Choudhry, Megan M Martin
Page
of 6
Search research articles
Search
Showing results (1-10 of 55) with videos related to
Sort By:
Page
of 6
The European Journal of Neuroscience
|
August 13, 2003
NMDA lesions of Ammon's horn and the dentate gyrus disrupt the direct and temporally paced homing displayed by rats exploring a novel environment: evidence for a role of the hippocampus in dead reckoning
Douglas G Wallace, Ian Q Whishaw
Animal Cognition
|
February 8, 2020
Effects of string length on the organization of rat string-pulling behavior
Ashley A Blackwell, Douglas G Wallace
Behavioural Brain Research
|
January 16, 2003
On the origins of autobiographical memory
Ian Q Whishaw, Douglas G Wallace
Behavioural Brain Research
|
July 6, 2007
Selective hippocampal cholinergic deafferentation impairs self-movement cue use during a food hoarding task
Megan M Martin, Douglas G Wallace
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Animal Behavior Processes
|
March 1, 2002
What is learned in sequential learning? An associative model of reward magnitude serial-pattern learning
Douglas G Wallace, Stephen B Fountain
The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. B, Comparative and Physiological Psychology
|
July 26, 2003
An associative model of rat serial pattern learning in three-element sequences
Douglas G Wallace, Stephen B Fountain
Developmental Psychobiology
|
April 16, 2005
The development of spatial capacity in piloting and dead reckoning by infant rats: use of the huddle as a home base for spatial navigation
Irene Loewen, Douglas G Wallace, Ian Q Whishaw
Behavioural Brain Research
|
February 15, 2002
Rats can track odors, other rats, and themselves: implications for the study of spatial behavior
Douglas G Wallace, Bogdan Gorny, Ian Q Whishaw
Behavioral Neuroscience
|
June 14, 2003
Odor tracking in rats with orbital frontal lesions
Douglas G Wallace, Bryan Kolb, Ian Q Whishaw
Journal of Comparative Psychology (Washington, D.C. : 1983)
|
November 23, 2006
Comparative analysis of movement characteristics during dead-reckoning-based navigation in humans and rats
Douglas G Wallace, Sarwat Choudhry, Megan M Martin
Page
of 6