PMID: 6539141Apr 16, 1984Paper

Neonatal tail posture and its relationship to striatal dopamine asymmetry in the rat

Brain Research
G D RosenV H Denenberg

Abstract

Previous research has demonstrated a link between rotational behavior and striatal dopamine asymmetry in the rat (rats rotate contralateral to the side of higher striatal dopamine concentration) and that the direction of a rat pup's tail posture will predict rotational bias. The present study hypothesized that neonatal tail posture would also predict adult striatal dopamine asymmetry. This hypothesis was confirmed for animals with a left but not right tail posture.

References

Aug 16, 1974·Science·B ZimmerbergT P Jerussi
Jan 26, 1981·Brain Research·S D Glick, D A Ross

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Citations

Jan 1, 1991·Psychopharmacology·R K SchwartingJ P Huston
Dec 1, 1985·Neuropharmacology·A J BradburyR J Naylor
Feb 1, 1989·Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior·E Fride, M Weinstock
Jan 1, 1996·Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews·G D Rosen
Nov 1, 1992·Progress in Neurobiology·G D RosenA M Galaburda
Jan 1, 1991·Neuroscience·G D RosenA M Galaburda
Jan 1, 1993·Brain Research Bulletin·D AfonsoM Rodriguez
Apr 25, 2000·Neuropsychologia·M Laska, M Tutsch
Oct 30, 2004·Laterality·L Y Rizhova, E A Vershinina
Sep 1, 1988·The International Journal of Neuroscience·M S Myslobodsky, M Weiner
May 1, 1997·Neuroscience and Behavioral Physiology·B I Klement'evN A Chebotar

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