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Brain Research Bulletin is a peer-reviewed scientific journal covering neuroscience. It was established in 1976 with Matthew J. Wayner (then at Syracuse University ) as founding editor in chief . Later it was edited by Stephen Dunnett ( Cardiff University ).
[1] [2] The goal of the IBNS is to "encourage research and education in the field of behavioral neuroscience". Its current president is Mikhail Pletnikov. Brain Research Bulletin, [3] Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, [4] and Physiology and Behavior [5] are official journals of the IBNS.
Behavioural Brain Research; Behavioural Pharmacology (journal) Biological Psychiatry (journal) Biological Psychology (journal) Brain (journal) Brain and Behavior; Brain and Cognition; Brain and Neuroscience Advances; Brain, Behavior, and Immunity; Brain Research; Brain Research Bulletin; Brain Structure and Function; Brain, Behavior and ...
Stephen "Steve" Dunnett DSc FMedSci FLSW (born 28 January 1950 [1]) is a British neuroscientist, and among the most highly cited researchers in the neurosciences. [1] [2] Until his retirement in 2017, he was a professor at Cardiff University and the founder and co-director of the Brain Repair Group, where he worked on developing cell therapies for neurodegenerative diseases including Parkinson ...
Brain Research is a peer-reviewed scientific journal focusing on several aspects of neuroscience. It publishes research reports and " minireviews ". The editor-in-chief is Matthew J. LaVoie ( University of Florida ).
The British Neuroscience Association (BNA) is a scientific society with around 2,500 members. Starting out as an informal gathering of scientists meeting at the Black Horse Public House in London to discuss brain-related topics (the 'London Black Horse Group'), [1] on 23 February 1968 it was formerly established as the Brain Research Association, and subsequently relaunched as the British ...
Gillette's research has shown that the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) generates ~24h neuronal oscillations in rat hypothalamic brain slice in vitro, [3] and she has investigated temporal windows of sensitivity to circadian phase-shifting by different resetting stimuli, including secondary messengers, hormones, and neuropeptide. [3]
His critique, in particular, focuses on how the Associationist theory of mind allegedly cannot explain how the brain encodes quantitative data such as distances, directions, and temporal durations. Gallistel rather argues that such memories could be collected inside the neurons, at the molecular level, and to support his claim he remarks the ...