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S F Maier

Showing results (31-40 of 180) with videos related to

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Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior|July 25, 1998
Uncontrollable stress potentiates morphine's rewarding propertiesM J Will, L R Watkins, S F Maier
Brain Research|June 5, 1992
Delta opiate receptors mediate tail-shock induced antinociception at supraspinal levelsL R Watkins, E P Wiertelak, S F Maier
Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology|February 1, 1971
Relative novelty of solid and liquid diet during thiamine deficiency determines development of thiamine-specific hungerS F Maier, D M Zahorik, R W Albin
Psychopharmacology|December 1, 1996
Associative and non-associative mechanisms of morphine analgesic tolerance are neurochemically distinct in the rat spinal cordJ E Grisel, L R Watkins, S F Maier
Behavioural Brain Research|June 23, 2000
Impaired escape performance and enhanced conditioned fear in rats following exposure to an uncontrollable stressor are mediated by glutamate and nitric oxide in the dorsal raphe nucleusR E Grahn, L R Watkins, S F Maier
Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior|July 1, 1993
Factors that modulate inescapable shock-induced reductions in daily activity in the ratW W Woodmansee, L H Silbert, S F Maier
Behavioral Neuroscience|October 1, 1985
Shock controllability and the nature of stress-induced analgesiaR C Drugan, D N Ader, S F Maier
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Animal Behavior Processes|October 1, 1984
Effects of task-irrelevant cues and reinforcement delay on choice-escape learning following inescapable shock: evidence for a deficit in selective attentionT R Minor, R L Jackson, S F Maier
Trends in Neurosciences|July 31, 2001
Glial activation: a driving force for pathological painL R Watkins, E D Milligan, S F Maier
Behavioral Neuroscience|February 1, 1994
Chlordiazepoxide microinjected into the region of the dorsal raphe nucleus eliminates the interference with escape responding produced by inescapable shock whether administered before inescapable shock or escape testingS F Maier, B A Kalman, R E Grahn
Pageof 18

Showing results (31-40 of 180) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 18
Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior|July 25, 1998
Uncontrollable stress potentiates morphine's rewarding propertiesM J Will, L R Watkins, S F Maier
Brain Research|June 5, 1992
Delta opiate receptors mediate tail-shock induced antinociception at supraspinal levelsL R Watkins, E P Wiertelak, S F Maier
Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology|February 1, 1971
Relative novelty of solid and liquid diet during thiamine deficiency determines development of thiamine-specific hungerS F Maier, D M Zahorik, R W Albin
Psychopharmacology|December 1, 1996
Associative and non-associative mechanisms of morphine analgesic tolerance are neurochemically distinct in the rat spinal cordJ E Grisel, L R Watkins, S F Maier
Behavioural Brain Research|June 23, 2000
Impaired escape performance and enhanced conditioned fear in rats following exposure to an uncontrollable stressor are mediated by glutamate and nitric oxide in the dorsal raphe nucleusR E Grahn, L R Watkins, S F Maier
Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior|July 1, 1993
Factors that modulate inescapable shock-induced reductions in daily activity in the ratW W Woodmansee, L H Silbert, S F Maier
Behavioral Neuroscience|October 1, 1985
Shock controllability and the nature of stress-induced analgesiaR C Drugan, D N Ader, S F Maier
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Animal Behavior Processes|October 1, 1984
Effects of task-irrelevant cues and reinforcement delay on choice-escape learning following inescapable shock: evidence for a deficit in selective attentionT R Minor, R L Jackson, S F Maier
Trends in Neurosciences|July 31, 2001
Glial activation: a driving force for pathological painL R Watkins, E D Milligan, S F Maier
Behavioral Neuroscience|February 1, 1994
Chlordiazepoxide microinjected into the region of the dorsal raphe nucleus eliminates the interference with escape responding produced by inescapable shock whether administered before inescapable shock or escape testingS F Maier, B A Kalman, R E Grahn
Pageof 18