Search

Your search keyword '"Henry H. Yin"' showing total 122 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Henry H. Yin" Remove constraint Author: "Henry H. Yin"
122 results on '"Henry H. Yin"'

Search Results

101. Contributions of Striatal Subregions to Place and Response Learning

102. From habits to actions: dorsolateral striatum lesions alter the content of learning

103. Kainic acid lesions disrupt fear-mediated memory processing

104. Action, time and the basal ganglia

105. The elephantine shape of addiction

106. Opponent regulation of action performance and timing by striatonigral and striatopallidal pathways

107. Elevated dopamine alters consummatory pattern generation and increases behavioral variability during learning

108. Beyond reward prediction errors: the role of dopamine in movement kinematics

109. Operant self-stimulation of dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra.

110. Bidirectional modulation of substantia nigra activity by motivational state.

111. Motivational state and reward content determine choice behavior under risk in mice.

112. A wireless multi-channel recording system for freely behaving mice and rats.

113. The role of mediodorsal thalamus in temporal differentiation of reward-guided actions

114. Endocannabinoid signaling is critical for habit formation

115. Force tuning explains changes in phasic dopamine signaling during stimulus-reward learning.

116. Factors Associated With Children Diagnosed With Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and 30-Day Follow-up Care With Practitioners Among Medicaid Recipients in Georgia.

118. A craniofacial-specific monosynaptic circuit enables heightened affective pain.

119. Striatal fast-spiking interneurons selectively modulate circuit output and are required for habitual behavior.

120. Altered mGluR5-Homer scaffolds and corticostriatal connectivity in a Shank3 complete knockout model of autism.

121. Spine pruning drives antipsychotic-sensitive locomotion via circuit control of striatal dopamine.

122. Kainic acid lesions disrupt fear-mediated memory processing.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources