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1. Peer’s Presence Reverses Escalated Cocaine Intake in Rats

3. Striatal Astrocytes Shape Behavioral Flexibility via Regulation of the Glutamate Transporter EAAT2

4. Peer presence and familiarity as key factors to reduce cocaine intake: An effect mediated by the Subthalamic Nucleus

5. Decreased risk‐taking and loss‐chasing after subthalamic nucleus lesion in rats

6. Evidence for a vocal signature in the rat and its reinforcing effects: a key role for the subthalamic nucleus

7. Peer presence and familiarity as key factors to reduce cocaine intake in both rats and humans: an effect mediated by the subthalamic nucleus

8. Subthalamic low-frequency oscillations predict vulnerability to cocaine addiction

10. A glimpse at deep brain stimulation mechanisms using subthalamic nucleus optogenetic manipulations

11. Subthalamic nucleus mediates the modulation on cocaine self‐administration induced by ultrasonic vocalization playback in rats

12. Subthalamic nucleus high frequency stimulation prevents and reverses escalated cocaine use

13. Context-induced relapse to cocaine seeking after punishment-imposed abstinence is associated with activation of cortical and subcortical brain regions

14. Harnessing Circuits for the Treatment of Addictive Disorders

15. Contributors

16. Context-induced relapse after extinction versus punishment: similarities and differences

17. Low frequency oscillatory activity of the subthalamic nucleus is a predictive biomarker of compulsive-like cocaine seeking

18. Subthalamic nucleus mediates the modulation on cocaine self-administration induced by ultrasonic 3 vocalizations playback in rats

20. Of Rats And Men: Peer Presence And Familiarity Are Key Factors Which Reduce Drug Intake

22. La chirurgie au secours des addictions

23. Differential involvement of anxiety and novelty preference levels on oral ethanol consumption in rats

24. Opposite Effects of Basolateral Amygdala Inactivation on Context-Induced Relapse to Cocaine Seeking after Extinction versus Punishment

25. Increased Impulsivity Retards the Transition to Dorsolateral Striatal Dopamine Control of Cocaine Seeking

26. Differential roles of the prefrontal cortical subregions and basolateral amygdala in compulsive cocaine seeking and relapse after voluntary abstinence in rats

27. Targeting the subthalamic nucleus in a preclinical model of alcohol use disorder

28. Differential Roles of the Dorsolateral and Midlateral Striatum in Punished Cocaine Seeking

29. High anxiety is a predisposing endophenotype for loss of control over cocaine, but not heroin, self-administration in rats

30. Neural mechanisms underlying the vulnerability to develop compulsive drug-seeking habits and addiction

31. The Orbital Prefrontal Cortex and Drug Addiction in Laboratory Animals and Humans

32. [Surgical strategy to rescue the addicts]

33. The Good and Bad Differentially Encoded within the Subthalamic Nucleus in Rats(1,2,3)

34. The subthalamic nucleus keeps you high on emotion: behavioral consequences of its inactivation

35. Differential vulnerability to the punishment of cocaine related behaviours: effects of locus of punishment, cocaine taking history and alternative reinforcer availability

36. Cocaine Modulation of Frontostriatal Expression of Zif268, D2, and 5-HT2c Receptors in High and Low Impulsive Rats

37. Deep brain stimulation for addiction: why the subthalamic nucleus should be favored

38. First evidence of a hyperdirect prefrontal pathway in the primate: Precise organization for new insights on subthalamic nucleus functions

39. Drug intake is sufficient, but conditioning is not necessary for the emergence of compulsive cocaine seeking after extended self-administration

40. Habit Formation and Compulsion

41. S.11.3 - DIFFERENCES BETWEEN NATURAL AND DRUG REWARD

42. High impulsivity predicts relapse to cocaine-seeking after punishment-induced abstinence

43. Anxiety increases the place conditioning induced by cocaine in rats

44. Novelty preference predicts place preference conditioning to morphine and its oral consumption in rats

45. Helplessness in the tail suspension test is associated with an increase in ethanol intake and its rewarding effect in female mice

46. Preference for caffeine appears earlier in non-anxious than in anxious mice

47. Differential effects of novelty exposure on place preference conditioning to amphetamine and its oral consumption

48. P.4.03 High impulsivity predicts relapse to cocaine seeking after extended access: effect of treatment with atomoxetine

50. Review. Neural mechanisms underlying the vulnerability to develop compulsive drug-seeking habits and addiction.

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