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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Nicotine Enhancement After Medial Frontal Cortex Lesions: Behavioral and Temporal Parameters

Norris, R. L., Click, Ivy A., Thacker, S. K., Baisden, R., Brown, Russell W. 06 November 2002 (has links)
In this experiment, rats were administered nicotine (0.3 mg/kg) for 11 consecutive days before and after an electrolytic medial frontal cortex lesion. After drug administration ceased, rats were tested on two spatial memory tasks, the radial arm maze (RAM) and the Morris water task (MWT). Behavioral testing was arranged so that rats were tested on the RAM 1 day after drug administration followed by behavioral testing on the MWT 19 days after drug treatment, or tested on the MWT 1 day after drug administration followed by testing on the RAM 4 days after drug treatment. Results of MWT testing showed that regardless of the drug/behavioral testing interval, lesioned rats given nicotine demonstrated enhancement relative to saline-treated lesioned animals, but the effects were more robust 1 day after drug treatment had ceased. Nicotine-induced behavioral compensation after medial frontal cortex lesions appears to be time-dependent in animals behaviorally tested on the MWT. Results of RAM testing showed that there were no significant differences between lesioned groups at the 1-day drug/testing interval, although nicotine improved performance in non-lesioned rats compared to non-lesioned rats given saline. Four days after drug administration, nicotine improved performance in lesioned rats to the levels of non-lesioned rats given saline or nicotine. This result suggests that previous training on the MWT may have primed behavioral compensation produced by nicotine in medial frontal cortex lesioned rats behaviorally tested on the RAM.
2

MK-801 Blocks Nicotine Enhancement of Compensation After Frontal Cortex Lesions

Click, Ivy A., Norris, R. L., Thacker, S. K., Brown, Russell W. 01 March 2003 (has links)
No description available.
3

Pretest CS Cueing Facilitates the Recovery of Avoidance Behavior Following Visual Cortex Lesions in the Rat

Fritts, Mary E., Asbury, E. Trey, Isaac, Walter L. 15 February 1998 (has links)
Rats were trained on a four-way shuttle box with a compound light-tone conditioned stimulus (CS) until they emitted 7 avoidance responses in 10 trials (7/10) prior to bilateral ablation of the visual cortex or sham surgery. On Day 5 after surgery, rats were cued with either the compound light-tone CS, the light or tone portion of the CS only, or had no exposure to the CS. On Day 10 after surgery, all animals were tested for avoidance retention under the same conditions as preoperative training. The findings indicate that following a lesion, cueing with the light-tone compound CS facilitates performance as does light alone. Cueing to the tone alone has no effect. In sham animals, only cueing with the light-tone CS was effective in enhancing avoidance retention. Results are interpreted as early and modality-specific sensory cueing may facilitate the recovery process.

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