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118 results on '"John Patrick Aggleton"'

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1. Deconstructing the Direct Reciprocal Hippocampal-Anterior Thalamic Pathways for Spatial Learning

2. The separate and combined properties of the granular (area 29) and dysgranular (area 30) retrosplenial cortex

3. Anterior thalamic inputs are required for subiculum spatial coding, with associated consequences for hippocampal spatial memory

4. Evidence for two distinct thalamocortical circuits in retrosplenial cortex

5. Chemogenetics reveal an anterior cingulate-thalamic pathway for attending to task-relevant information

6. A Direct Comparison of Afferents to the Rat Anterior Thalamic Nuclei and Nucleus Reuniens: Overlapping But Different

7. Proximal perimeter encoding in the rat rostral thalamus

8. When is the rat retrosplenial cortex required for stimulus integration?

9. Dissociation of Recognition and Recency Memory Judgments After Anterior Thalamic Nuclei Lesions in Rats

10. The medial dorsal thalamic nucleus and the medial prefrontal cortex of the rat function together to support associative recognition and recency but not item recognition

11. Contrasting brain activity patterns for item recognition memory and associative recognition memory: Insights from immediate-early gene functional imaging

12. Differential effects of amygdaloid lesions on conditioned taste aversion learning by rats

13. Selective disconnection of the hippocampal formation projections to the mammillary bodies produces only mild deficits on spatial memory tasks: Implications for fornix function

14. Theta-Modulated Head Direction Cells in the Rat Anterior Thalamus

15. Differing time dependencies of object recognition memory impairments produced by nicotinic and muscarinic cholinergic antagonism in perirhinal cortex

16. Lesions in the anterior thalamic nuclei of rats do not disrupt acquisition of stimulus sequence learning

17. Selective lamina dysregulation in granular retrosplenial cortex (area 29) after anterior thalamic lesions: an in situ hybridization and trans-neuronal tracing study in rats

18. Effects of selective granular retrosplenial cortex lesions on spatial working memory in rats

19. Lesions of the rat perirhinal cortex spare the acquisition of a complex configural visual discrimination yet impair object recognition

20. Qualitatively different modes of perirhinal–hippocampal engagement when rats explore novel vs. familiar objects as revealed by c-Fos imaging

21. Lesions of the perirhinal cortex do not impair integration of visual and geometric information in rats

22. Suppression to visual, auditory, and gustatory stimuli habituates normally in rats with excitotoxic lesions of the perirhinal cortex

23. Post-surgical interval and lesion location within the limbic thalamus determine extent of retrosplenial cortex immediate-early gene hypoactivity

24. Anterior thalamic lesions stop synaptic plasticity in retrosplenial cortex slices: expanding the pathology of diencephalic amnesia

25. Lesions of the fornix and anterior thalamic nuclei dissociate different aspects of hippocampal-dependent spatial learning: Implications for the neural basis of scene learning

26. Mapping immediate-early gene activity in the rat after place learning in a water-maze: the importance of matched control conditions

27. Qualitatively Different Hippocampal Subfield Engagement Emerges with Mastery of a Spatial Memory Task by Rats

28. The importance of the rat hippocampus for learning the structure of visual arrays

29. Changes in immediate early gene expression in the rat brain after unilateral lesions of the hippocampus

30. Selective dysgranular retrosplenial cortex lesions in rats disrupt allocentric performance of the radial-arm maze task

31. Testing the importance of the retrosplenial guidance system: effects of different sized retrosplenial cortex lesions on heading direction and spatial working memory

32. Benzodiazepine impairment of perirhinal cortical plasticity and recognition memory

33. On the Transience of Egocentric Working Memory: Evidence From Testing the Contribution of Limbic Brain Regions

34. Lesions of the mammillothalamic tract impair the acquisition of spatial but not nonspatial contextual conditional discriminations

35. Distinct patterns of hippocampal formation activity associated with different spatial tasks: a Fos imaging study in rats

36. Cholinergic Neurotransmission Is Essential for Perirhinal Cortical Plasticity and Recognition Memory

37. Using Idiothetic Cues to Swim a Path With a Fixed Trajectory and Distance: Necessary Involvement of the Hippocampus, but Not the Retrosplenial Cortex

38. Comparison of hippocampal, amygdala, and perirhinal projections to the nucleus accumbens: Combined anterograde and retrograde tracing study in the Macaque brain

39. Fos Imaging Reveals that Lesions of the Anterior Thalamic Nuclei Produce Widespread Limbic Hypoactivity in Rats

40. The irregular firing properties of thalamic head direction cells mediate turn-specific modulation of the directional tuning curve

41. Nucleus reuniens of the thalamus contains head direction cells

42. Dysgranular retrosplenial cortex lesions in rats disrupt cross-modal object recognition

43. A novel role for the rat retrosplenial cortex in cognitive control

44. Rats' processing of visual scenes: effects of lesions to fornix, anterior thalamus, mamillary nuclei or the retrohippocampal region

45. An experimental test of the role of postsynaptic calcium levels in determining synaptic strength using perirhinal cortex of rat

46. Fos expression in the rostral thalamic nuclei and associated cortical regions in response to different spatial memory tests

47. Using Fos Imaging in the Rat to Reveal the Anatomical Extent of the Disruptive Effects of Fornix Lesions

48. Intact negative patterning in rats with fornix or combined perirhinal and postrhinal cortex lesions

49. Synaptic depression induced by pharmacological activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors in the perirhinal cortex in vitro

50. Extending the spontaneous preference test of recognition: evidence of object-location and object-context recognition

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