Publication: Mouse psychosocial stress reduces motivation and cognitive function in operant reward tests: A model for reward pathology with effects of agomelatine
Mouse psychosocial stress reduces motivation and cognitive function in operant reward tests: A model for reward pathology with effects of agomelatine
Date
Date
Date
Citations
Bergamini, G., Cathomas, F., Auer, S., Sigrist, H., Seifritz, E., Patterson, M., Gabriel, C., & Pryce, C. R. (2016). Mouse psychosocial stress reduces motivation and cognitive function in operant reward tests: A model for reward pathology with effects of agomelatine. European Neuropsychopharmacology, 26(9), 1448–1464. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroneuro.2016.06.009
Abstract
Abstract
Abstract
A major domain of depression is decreased motivation for reward. Translational automated tests can be applied in humans and animals to study operant reward behaviour, aetio-pathophysiology underlying deficits therein, and effects of antidepressant treatment. Three inter-related experiments were conducted to investigate depression-relevant effects of chronic psychosocial stress on operant behaviour in mice. (A) Non-manipulated mice were trained on a complex reversal learning (CRL) test with sucrose reinforcement; relative to vehicle (V
Metrics
Downloads
Views
Additional indexing
Creators (Authors)
Volume
Volume
Volume
Number
Number
Number
Page Range
Page Range
Page Range
Page end
Page end
Page end
Item Type
Item Type
Item Type
Dewey Decimal Classifikation
Dewey Decimal Classifikation
Dewey Decimal Classifikation
Language
Language
Language
Publication date
Publication date
Publication date
Date available
Date available
Date available
ISSN or e-ISSN
ISSN or e-ISSN
ISSN or e-ISSN
OA Status
OA Status
OA Status
Publisher DOI
Funder name
Funder name
Funder name
Project Title
Project Title
Project Title
Metrics
Downloads
Views
Citations
Bergamini, G., Cathomas, F., Auer, S., Sigrist, H., Seifritz, E., Patterson, M., Gabriel, C., & Pryce, C. R. (2016). Mouse psychosocial stress reduces motivation and cognitive function in operant reward tests: A model for reward pathology with effects of agomelatine. European Neuropsychopharmacology, 26(9), 1448–1464. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroneuro.2016.06.009