Pages that link to "Q52259693"
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The following pages link to Affinity for the dopamine D2 receptor predicts neuroleptic potency in decreasing the speed of an internal clock (Q52259693):
Displaying 50 items.
- The evolution of brain activation during temporal processing (Q22337261) (← links)
- Neuroanatomical and neurochemical substrates of timing (Q24602685) (← links)
- Effects of Auditory Rhythm and Music on Gait Disturbances in Parkinson's Disease (Q26776147) (← links)
- Prospective and retrospective duration memory in the hippocampus: is time in the foreground or background? (Q27004115) (← links)
- Dissecting Neural Responses to Temporal Prediction, Attention, and Memory: Effects of Reward Learning and Interoception on Time Perception (Q27302943) (← links)
- What makes us tick? Functional and neural mechanisms of interval timing (Q28272313) (← links)
- Impaired timing precision produced by striatal D2 receptor overexpression is mediated by cognitive and motivational deficits (Q28749574) (← links)
- Temporal processing in schizophrenia: effects of task-difficulty on behavioral discrimination and neuronal responses (Q30434564) (← links)
- The basal ganglia in perceptual timing: timing performance in Multiple System Atrophy and Huntington's disease (Q30443884) (← links)
- Minimal impairment in a rat model of duration discrimination following excitotoxic lesions of primary auditory and prefrontal cortices. (Q30473758) (← links)
- Timing dysfunctions in schizophrenia as measured by a repetitive finger tapping task (Q30478348) (← links)
- Subthalamic deep brain stimulation in Parkinson׳s disease has no significant effect on perceptual timing in the hundreds of milliseconds range (Q30578248) (← links)
- The substantia nigra, the basal ganglia, dopamine and temporal processing. (Q33561958) (← links)
- Neuropsychological mechanisms of interval timing behavior (Q33825411) (← links)
- Carving the clock at its component joints: neural bases for interval timing (Q33995464) (← links)
- Mechanisms of impulsive choice: I. Individual differences in interval timing and reward processing (Q34512404) (← links)
- Impaired Representation of Time in Schizophrenia Is Linked to Positive Symptoms and Cognitive Demand (Q34797415) (← links)
- Why noise is useful in functional and neural mechanisms of interval timing? (Q34909047) (← links)
- Oxycodone lengthens reproductions of suprasecond time intervals in human research volunteers (Q35240366) (← links)
- Rapid and acute effects of estrogen on time perception in male and female rats (Q35342635) (← links)
- Unwinding the molecular basis of interval and circadian timing. (Q35379888) (← links)
- Ketamine perturbs perception of the flow of time in healthy volunteers (Q35534219) (← links)
- Dopamine-dependent oscillations in frontal cortex index "start-gun" signal in interval timing. (Q35726812) (← links)
- Improving temporal cognition by enhancing motivation (Q36259005) (← links)
- Pathophysiological distortions in time perception and timed performance. (Q36378946) (← links)
- Time-sharing in rats: effect of distracter intensity and discriminability (Q36795073) (← links)
- Reward magnitude effects on temporal discrimination (Q36926266) (← links)
- Intact interval timing in circadian CLOCK mutants. (Q37035667) (← links)
- Computational perspectives on forebrain microcircuits implicated in reinforcement learning, action selection, and cognitive control (Q37351704) (← links)
- Attenuation of the effects of d-amphetamine on interval timing behavior by central 5-hydroxytryptamine depletion (Q37386493) (← links)
- Timing as a window on cognition in schizophrenia (Q37870394) (← links)
- Time representation in reinforcement learning models of the basal ganglia (Q38177260) (← links)
- Emotional modulation of interval timing and time perception (Q38773176) (← links)
- Effects of D-amphetamine in a temporal discrimination procedure: selective changes in timing or rate dependency? (Q39729732) (← links)
- Subjective and Real Time: Coding Under Different Drug States (Q40220342) (← links)
- Separating storage from retrieval dysfunction of temporal memory in Parkinson's disease (Q40644976) (← links)
- Toward a neurobiology of temporal cognition: advances and challenges. (Q41463755) (← links)
- The 'internal clocks' of circadian and interval timing. (Q41468967) (← links)
- Disruptive effects of stimulus intensity on two variations of a temporal discrimination procedure (Q41524460) (← links)
- The ‘internal clocks’ of circadian and interval timing ( erratum ) (Q41544505) (← links)
- Neuromodulation of Pupil Diameter and Temporal Perception (Q41732893) (← links)
- Effect of 5-HT2A and 5-HT2C receptors on temporal discrimination by mice (Q42025447) (← links)
- D-amphetamine, nicotine, and haloperidol produce similar disruptions in spatial and nonspatial temporal discrimination procedures. (Q42183318) (← links)
- Dopamine precursor depletion impairs timing in healthy volunteers by attenuating activity in putamen and supplementary motor area (Q42516540) (← links)
- Functional neural circuits for mental timekeeping (Q42597033) (← links)
- Nucleus accumbens dopamine modulates response rate but not response timing in an interval timing task (Q42712902) (← links)
- Dissociations between interval timing and intertemporal choice following administration of fluoxetine, cocaine, or methamphetamine. (Q42719797) (← links)
- Time estimation in mild Alzheimer's disease patients (Q43076474) (← links)
- Double Dissociation of Dopamine Genes and Timing in Humans (Q43513506) (← links)
- The role of dopamine in the timing of Pavlovian conditioned keypecking in ring doves (Q43709858) (← links)