Per ulteriori informazioni selezionare i riferimenti di interesse.
Nisoxetine infusion into the olfactory bulb enhances the capacity for malerats to identify conspecifics
NEUROSCIENCE
Release of classical transmitters and nitric oxide in the rat olfactory bulb, evoked by vaginocervical stimulation and potassium, varies with the oestrus cycle
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Octopamine reverses the isolation-induced increase in trophallaxis in the carpenter ant Camponotus fellah
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Previous maternal experience potentiates the effect of parturition on oxytocin receptor mRNA expression in the paraventricular nucleus
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Neurobiology of mother-infant interactions: experience and central nervoussystem plasticity across development and generations
NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS
ROLE OF FRONTAL-CORTEX IN SOCIAL ODOR DISCRIMINATION AND SCENT-MARKING IN FEMALE GOLDEN-HAMSTERS (MESOCRICETUS-AURATUS)
Behavioral neuroscience
INTELLIGENT PERCEPTION
Applied animal behaviour science
CATECHOLAMINERGIC INVOLVEMENT IN THE CONTROL OF AGGRESSION - HORMONES, THE PERIPHERAL SYMPATHETIC, AND CENTRAL NORADRENERGIC SYSTEMS
Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews
CHARACTERIZATION OF VASOPRESSIN V-1A BINDING-SITES IN THE OVINE OLFACTORY-BULB
Neuroscience letters
PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY OF MATERNAL-BEHAVIOR
JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
NEUROTRANSMITTER RELEASE IN THE ACCESSORY OLFACTORY-BULB DURING AND AFTER THE FORMATION OF AN OLFACTORY MEMORY IN MICE
Neuroscience
INVOLVEMENT OF THE MAIN BUT NOT THE ACCESSORY OLFACTORY SYSTEM IN MATERNAL-BEHAVIOR OF PRIMIPAROUS AND MULTIPAROUS EWES
Physiology & behavior
OXYTOCIN AND VASOPRESSIN RELEASE IN THE OLFACTORY-BULB OF PARTURIENT EWES - CHANGES WITH MATERNAL EXPERIENCE AND EFFECTS ON ACETYLCHOLINE, GAMMA-AMINOBUTYRIC-ACID, GLUTAMATE AND NORADRENALINE RELEASE
Brain research
ESTROGEN-RECEPTOR OCCURRENCE IN THE FEMALE MOUSE-BRAIN - EFFECTS OF MATERNAL EXPERIENCE, OVARIECTOMY, ESTROGEN AND ANOSMIA
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-PARIS
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INFANTS PRECEDING APPETITE, ILLNESS, AND GROWTH-PERFORMANCE AND MOTHERS SUBSEQUENT FEEDING PRACTICE DECISIONS
Social science & medicine