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Behavioural Changes

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TopicWorld Wide

behavioural changes

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with behavioural changes across World Wide.
7 curated items4 ePosters3 Seminars
Updated over 1 year ago
7 items · behavioural changes
7 results
SeminarNeuroscience

The multi-phase plasticity supporting winner effect

Dayu Lin
NYU Neuroscience Institute, New York, USA
May 14, 2024

Aggression is an innate behavior across animal species. It is essential for competing for food, defending territory, securing mates, and protecting families and oneself. Since initiating an attack requires no explicit learning, the neural circuit underlying aggression is believed to be genetically and developmentally hardwired. Despite being innate, aggression is highly plastic. It is influenced by a wide variety of experiences, particularly winning and losing previous encounters. Numerous studies have shown that winning leads to an increased tendency to fight while losing leads to flight in future encounters. In the talk, I will present our recent findings regarding the neural mechanisms underlying the behavioral changes caused by winning.

SeminarNeuroscience

The influence of menstrual cycle on the indices of cortical excitability

Vladimir Djurdjevic
HSE University
Nov 17, 2021

Menstruation is a normal physiological process in women occurring as a result of changes in two ovarian produced hormones – estrogen and progesterone. As a result of these fluctuations, women experience different symptoms in their bodies – their immune system changes (Sekigawa et al, 2004), there are changes in their cardiovascular and digestive system (Millikan, 2006), as well as skin (Hall and Phillips, 2005). But these hormone fluctuations produce major changes in their behavioral pattern as well causing: anxiety, sadness, heightened irritability and anger (Severino and Moline, 1995) which is usually classified as premenstrual syndrome (PMS). In some cases these symptoms severely impair women’s lives and professional help is required. The official diagnosis according to DSM-5 (2013) is premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). Despite its ubiquitous presence the origins of PMS and PMDD are poorly understood. Some efforts to understand the underlying brain state during the menstruation cycle were performed by using TMS (Smith et al, 1999; 2002; 2003; Inghilleri et al, 2004; Hausmann et al, 2006). But all of these experiments suffer from major shortcomings - no control groups and small number of subjects. Our plan is to address all of these shortcomings and make this the biggest (to our knowledge) experiment of its kind which will, hopefully, provide us with some much needed answers.

ePoster

Cerebral malaria leads to persistent microglial activation, long-term behavioural changes and electrographic seizures in mice

Simone Mehler, Ina Leiter, Wolfgang Härtig, Jens Bankstahl, Bernd Lepenies, Marion Bankstahl

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Effects of non-invasive electrical stimulation on neural and behavioural changes following photothrombotic ischemic stroke

Montana Samantzis, Georgie Moore, Dylan Black, Phoebe Mayne, Matilde Balbi

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Light-dependent cAMP modulation in astrocytes triggers synaptic potentiation, hemodynamic responses, and behavioural changes in mice: Role in Huntington’s disease

Laia Sitjà Roqueta, Neville M. Ngum, Evgenii Zherebtsov, Melike Küçükerden, Sara Conde-Berriozabal, Anna Castañé, Manuel J. Rodríguez, Jordi Alberch, Deniz Dalkara, Andreas Möglich, Alexander Bykov, Igor Meglinski, H. Rheinallt Parri, Mercè Masana

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

The pesticide glyphosate induces sex-dependent behavioural changes in mice: A role for the gut microbiota?

Rie Matsuzaki, Eoin Gunnigle, John F Cryan

FENS Forum 2024