Schizophrenia in Translation: Dissecting Motivation in Schizophrenia and Rodents
Published 2012 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Schizophrenia in Translation: Dissecting Motivation in Schizophrenia and Rodents
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN
Volume 38, Issue 6, Pages 1111-1117
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Online
2012-09-28
DOI
10.1093/schbul/sbs114
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- A New Perspective on Anhedonia in Schizophrenia
- (2012) Gregory P. Strauss et al. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY
- Negative Symptoms and the Failure to Represent the Expected Reward Value of Actions
- (2012) James M. Gold ARCHIVES OF GENERAL PSYCHIATRY
- Striatal D2 Receptors Regulate Dendritic Morphology of Medium Spiny Neurons via Kir2 Channels
- (2012) M. Cazorla et al. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
- Pavlovian Reward Prediction and Receipt in Schizophrenia: Relationship to Anhedonia
- (2012) Erin C. Dowd et al. PLoS One
- Negative symptoms have greater impact on functioning than positive symptoms in schizophrenia: Analysis of CATIE data
- (2012) Jonathan Rabinowitz et al. SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH
- Prefrontal Cortical Deficits and Impaired Cognition-Emotion Interactions in Schizophrenia
- (2011) Stefan Ursu et al. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY
- Pharmacologic Rescue of Motivational Deficit in an Animal Model of the Negative Symptoms of Schizophrenia
- (2011) Eleanor H. Simpson et al. BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
- The human prefrontal cortex mediates integration of potential causes behind observed outcomes
- (2011) Klaus Wunderlich et al. JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
- Frontal Cortex and Reward-Guided Learning and Decision-Making
- (2011) Matthew F.S. Rushworth et al. NEURON
- Disentangling pleasure from incentive salience and learning signals in brain reward circuitry
- (2011) K. S. Smith et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Value, pleasure and choice in the ventral prefrontal cortex
- (2011) Fabian Grabenhorst et al. TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES
- Re-valuing the amygdala
- (2010) Sara E Morrison et al. CURRENT OPINION IN NEUROBIOLOGY
- Motivated Cognitive Control: Reward Incentives Modulate Preparatory Neural Activity during Task-Switching
- (2010) A. C. Savine et al. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
- Abnormal Responses to Monetary Outcomes in Cortex, but not in the Basal Ganglia, in Schizophrenia
- (2010) James A Waltz et al. NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
- Impaired timing precision produced by striatal D2 receptor overexpression is mediated by cognitive and motivational deficits.
- (2009) Ryan D. Ward et al. BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
- Dissecting components of reward: ‘liking’, ‘wanting’, and learning
- (2009) Kent C Berridge et al. CURRENT OPINION IN PHARMACOLOGY
- Neural correlates of reward processing in schizophrenia — Relationship to apathy and depression
- (2009) Joe J. Simon et al. SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH
- Dopamine, Behavioral Economics, and Effort
- (2009) John D. Salamone Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
- Reward expectation alters learning and memory: The impact of the amygdala on appetitive-driven behaviors
- (2008) Lisa M. Savage et al. BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
- Opioid reward ‘liking’ and ‘wanting’ in the nucleus accumbens
- (2008) Susana Peciña PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR
- Transient and selective overexpression of D2 receptors in the striatum causes persistent deficits in conditional associative learning
- (2008) M.-E. Bach et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Affective Traits in Schizophrenia and Schizotypy
- (2008) W. P. Horan et al. SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN
Publish scientific posters with Peeref
Peeref publishes scientific posters from all research disciplines. Our Diamond Open Access policy means free access to content and no publication fees for authors.
Learn MoreAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started