Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Experts@Minnesota Home
Home
Profiles
Research units
University Assets
Projects and Grants
Research output
Datasets
Press/Media
Activities
Fellowships, Honors, and Prizes
Impacts
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Aversive stimuli differentially modulate real-time dopamine transmission dynamics within the nucleus accumbens core and shell
Aneesha Badrinarayan
, Seth A. Wescott
, Caitlin M.Vander Weele
,
Benjamin T. Saunders
, Brenann E. Couturier
, Stephen Maren
, Brandon J. Aragona
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
149
Scopus citations
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Aversive stimuli differentially modulate real-time dopamine transmission dynamics within the nucleus accumbens core and shell'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Transmission Dynamics
100%
Nucleus Accumbens
100%
Aversive Stimuli
100%
Nucleus Accumbens Shell
100%
Dopamine Transmission
100%
Dopamine
40%
Projection System
40%
Behavioral Response
20%
Neurochemicals
20%
Neural Circuitry
20%
Motivated Behavior
20%
Sprague-Dawley Rats
20%
Mesolimbic Dopamine System
20%
Behavioural Expression
20%
PH Shift
20%
Basic pH
20%
Phasic Dopamine Release
20%
Fast-scan Cyclic Voltammetry
20%
Aversive Behavior
20%
Local pH
20%
Direct Adaptive
20%
Release Event
20%
Neuroscience
Dopaminergic Transmission
100%
Nucleus Accumbens Shell
100%
Nucleus Accumbens Core
100%
Behavior (Neuroscience)
40%
Nucleus Accumbens
40%
Cyclic Voltammetry
20%
Dopamine Release
20%