PMID: 6983696Sep 1, 1982Paper

Elimination of medial prefrontal cortex self-stimulation following transection of efferents to the sulcal cortex in the rat

Physiology & Behavior
D CorbettP M Milner

Abstract

Intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS) of the medial prefrontal cortex (MFC) was not affected by lesions of the medial forebrain bundle, the nucleus accumbens or medialis dorsalis. However, bilateral, parasagittal knife cuts that transected fibers interconnecting the medial and sulcal cortices eliminated ICSS from the MFC with no apparent recovery over a 21 day test period. Similar knife cuts produced only transient effects on lateral hypothalamic ICSS. These data suggest that the neural substrates of frontal cortex ICSS are very different than those that subserve ICSS along the medial forebrain bundle.

References

Jun 1, 1977·Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior·D C RobertsH C Fibiger
Nov 25, 1977·Brain Research·T J CollierA Routtenberg
Nov 1, 1979·Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior·W H LynessK E Moore
Dec 29, 1978·Brain Research·K A CampbellJ K Christoff
Jun 1, 1978·Canadian Journal of Psychology·A Robertson, G J Mogenson
Sep 24, 1976·Brain Research·A RobertsonG J Mogenson
Oct 1, 1971·Experimental Neurology·A RouttenbergY H Huang
Feb 1, 1972·The Journal of Comparative Neurology·A Hjorth-Simonsen, B Jeune
May 1, 1971·Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology·A Routtenberg
Aug 1, 1972·Behavioral Biology·A Routtenberg, M Sloan
Nov 2, 1973·Science·A M ThierryJ Glowinski
Jun 1, 1966·Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology·R UrsinJ Olds
Jan 1, 1980·Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior·R A Wise
Apr 1, 1980·Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology·P ShizgalJ Yeomans

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Citations

Dec 1, 1982·Physiology & Behavior·J R StellarL E Mills
Mar 1, 1986·Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior·K G ReymannH Matthies
May 1, 1987·Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior·A Arregui-AguirreI Morgado-Bernal
Dec 1, 1990·Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior·D Corbett
Jul 1, 1992·Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior·D Corbett
Sep 1, 1985·Behavioural Brain Research·C Bielajew, G Fouriezos
Jan 11, 2000·Behavioural Brain Research·A ArvanitogiannisP Shizgal
Dec 15, 2000·Progress in Neurobiology·T M Tzschentke
Sep 1, 1989·Behavioural Brain Research·D Corbett
Jan 1, 1989·Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews·A Robertson
Oct 29, 2005·The Journal of Comparative Neurology·Roy A Wise

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Basal Ganglia

Basal Ganglia are a group of subcortical nuclei in the brain associated with control of voluntary motor movements, procedural and habit learning, emotion, and cognition. Here is the latest research.