IBNS Program – June 1-5, 2005

 

Wednesday, June 1:

 

8:00-12:00     Exhibitor Setup

 

8:45-12:30     Satellite Symposium:  Ultrasonic vocalization in rodents.  Behavioural and neural determinants of call production.  Organizer:  Stefan Brudzynski, Brock University.

 

9:00-14:00     Meeting Registration – (Note:  even if you have preregistered, please use this time to pick up your receipts, name badges, programs and pay dues.)

 

12:00-             Exhibits will be open from Wednesday noon through Saturday afternoon.

 

13:30-14:00   Welcoming Remarks and Exhibitor Introduction:  C. Sue Carter, IBNS President, University of Illinois at Chicago.    

 

14:00-14:30   2004 Marjorie A. Myers Lifetime Achievement Award:  Laszlo Lenard, Pecs University Medical School. Central regulation of feeding.

 

14:30-15:24   Oral Session 1: Chemistry of Behavior. Chair:  Iain McGregor, University of Sydney.

 

14:30-14:48   M5 MUSCARINIC GENE FACILITATES DOPAMINE REWARD FUNCTION IN RATS.  Yeomans, J.S.; Steidl, S.; Wang, H.

 

14:48-15:06   GROUP I AND GROUP III METABOTROPIC GLUTAMATE RECEPTORS OPPOSE EACH OTHER IN THE CONTROL OF LOCOMOTOR RESPONSES PRODUCED BY D1-LIKE AND/OR D2-LIKE RECEPTORS.    David, H.N.; Chevallier, K.; Abraini, J.H.

 

15:06-15:24   ACUTE EFFECTS OF 3,4-METHYLENEDIOXYMETHAMPHETA-MINE (MDMA) ON STRIATAL SINGLE-UNIT ACTIVITY AND BEHAVIOR IN FREELY MOVING RATS: DIFFERENTIAL ROLES FOR 5-HT2A AND 5-HT2C/2B RECEPTORS.  Ball, K.T.; Rebec, G.V.

 

15:24-15:55   Refreshment Break/Exhibitors Display

 

15:55-16:13   NEONATAL EXPOSURE TO 3,4-METHLYNEDIOXYMETHAM-PHETAMINE ALTERS NMDA RECEPTOR AND ASSOCIATED PROTEINS IN ADULT RATS.  Skelton, M.R.; Williams, M.T.; Vorhees, C.V.

 

16:13-16:31   MECHANISMS UNDERLYING MDMA FACILITATION OF SOCIAL INTERACTION IN THE RAT.  McGregor, I.; Thompson, M.; Morley. K.; Arnold, J.; Hunt, G.

 

16:31-16:49   MDMA - ALCOHOL INTERACTIONS: EFFECTS ON ACTIVITY AND THERMOREGULATION.  Jones, B.C.; Cassel, J-C., Koenig, J.; Jeltsch, H.

 

17:00 - 18:00 Keynote Speaker:  Larry Cahill, Ph.D., University of California, Irvine. Neurobiological Mechanisms of Emotion and Memory: Uncovering Influences of Sex and Hemisphere

 

18:00-19:00   Reception.

 

Thursday, June 2:

 

8:15-10:15     Student Travel Award Slide Blitz.  Chair:  Robert Gerlai, University of Toronto at Mississauga.

 

10:30-11:42   Oral Session 2:  Aversive Behavior.  Chair:  Andrew Holmes, Experimental Therapeutics Branch, NIMH.

 

10:30-10:48   NORADRENALINE TRANSMISSION WITHIN THE BED NUCLEUS OF THE STRIA TERMINALIS IS CRITICAL FOR FEAR BEHAVIOR INDUCED BY TMT-EXPOSURE.  Fendt, M.

 

10:48-11:06   VOCALIZATION-RELATED INPUT INTO THE PERIAQUEDUCTAL GRAY OF THE MIDBRAIN IN THE SQUIRREL MONKEY.  Juergens, U.; Dujardin, E.

 

11:06-11:24   SOCIAL APPROACH-AVOIDANCE TEST IN F-344 RATS: PHARMACOLOGICAL VALIDATION.  Nicolas, L.B.; Prinssen, E.P.

 

11:24-11:42   PROBLEMS IN THE MODELING OF AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR.  Blanchard, R.; Yang, M.K.; Litvin, Y.

 

11:45-13:15   Council Meeting

 

13:15-15:15   Student Workshop:  Student career development symposium: Selecting the right postdoctoral fellowship and getting the first position in academia or industry. Organized by Gonzalez-Lima, E; Gonzalez-Lima, F; Gerlai, R. Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin; Department of Psychology, University of Toronto at Mississauga, Canada. The symposium is intended for the student who is thinking about making decisions as to the direction of his or her future career.

 

15:15-17:15   Symposium 1:  Modeling behavioral symptoms of autism in rodents.  Chairs:  Jacqueline N. Crawley, Lab of Neuropharmacology, NIMH and Stephen W. Porges, University of Illinois at Chicago.

 

15:15-15:45   BEHAVIORAL TASKS TO MODEL THE CORE SYMPTOMS OF AUTISM IN MICE.  Crawley, J. N.

 

15:45-16:15   MODELING AUTISM BEHAVIORAL DEFICITS IN THE LABORATORY RAT.  Walker, B.R.

 

16:15-16:45   BEHAVIORAL GENETICS OF SOCIAL AND REVERSAL TRAITS IN INBRED STRAINS OF MICE.    Bolivar, V.; Walters, S.; Santiago, A.; Phoenix, J.; Flaherty, L.

 

16:45-17:15   CLINICAL SYMPTOMS AND POTENTIAL TREATMENTS FOR AUTISM; HOW ANIMAL MODELS CAN HELP.  Porges, S.W.

 

17:30-19:30   Poster Session 1

 

Neurochemistry of Learning

 

1.                  THE EFFECT OF CORTICAL CHOLINERGIC DEAFFERENTATION ON FEAR CONDITIONING AND AVERSIVE BEHAVIOR.  Knox, D.; Berntson, G. 

2.                  DOPAMINERGIC DRUGS, BUT NOT CHLORDIAZEPOXIDE, MODIFY THE DECREASED CONTEXTUAL FEAR CONDITIONING IN SPONTANEOUSLY HYPERTENSIVE RATS. Calzavara, M.B.; Lopez, G.B.; Abílio, V.C.; Silva, R.H.; Frussa-Filho, R.

3.                  AUGMENTATION OF ATTENTIONAL PERFORMANCE-ASSOCIATED INCREASES IN PREFRONTAL ACETYLCHOLINE RELEASE DURING BASAL FOREBRAIN NMDA RECEPTOR BLOCKADE-INDUCED IMPAIRMENTS IN PERFORMANCE.  Kozak R.; Bruno J.P.; Sarter M.

4.                  EFFECT OF PITUITRIN ON BEHAVIOR AND MEMORY PROCESSES. Kunchulia, M.

5.                  ENVIROMENTAL ENRICHMENT ENHANCES LEARNING AND MEMORY AND HIPPOCAMPAL EXPRESSION OF NEUROGRANIN AND OTHER SIGNALING MOLECULES. Huang, F.L.; Huang, K.P.; Wu, J.F.

Fear and Anxiety

 

6.                  IMPROVED PREDICTIVE VALIDITY OF THE MARBLE BURYING TEST FOR ANXIETY BY SIMULTANEOUS MEASUREMENTS OF LOCOMOTOR ACTIVITY. Nicolas, L.B.; Kolb, Y.; Prinssen, E.P.

7.                  GALANIN GAL-R2 RECEPTOR NULL MUTANT MICE EXHIBIT AN ANXIOGENIC-LIKE PHENOTYPE ON TESTS OF ANXIETY-LIKE BEHAVIOR.  Bailey, K.; Pavlova, M.; Hohmann, J.; Zeng, H.; Crawley, J.

8.                  INVOLVEMENT OF TRANSMITTERS IN THE ANXIOLYTIC ACTION OF UROCORTIN 2 IN MICE.  Telegdy, G.; Adamik, A.

9.                  BEHAVIORAL PROFILE OF RATS FOLLOWING CRF-MEDIATED STRESSORS. Sajdyk, T.; Fitz, S.; Merrill, C.; Conroy, S.; Chambers, R.; Shekhar, A.

10.             REPEATED ADMINISTRATION OF NEUROPEPTIDE Y IN THE BASOLATERAL NUCLEUS OF THE AMYGDALA ELICITS LONG-TERM ANXIOLYTIC-LIKE RESPONSES. Sajdyk, T.; Fitz, S.; Rainnie, D.; Shekhar, A.

11.             SODIUM LACTATE INDUCED PANIC-LIKE PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES CORRELATE WITH CELLULAR RESPONSES IN SPECIFIC SUBREGIONS OF THE DORSOMEDIAL HYPOTHALAMUS OF RATS. Johnson, P.; Fitz, S.; Keim, S.; Lowry, C.; Shekhar, A.


Development & Individual Differences

 

12.             EFFECT OF NEONATAL NOVELTY EXPOSURE ON SOCIAL COMPETITION.  Akers, K.G.; Tang, A.C.

13.             TIMING AND AMOUNT OF EARLY EXPERIENCE AFFECTS PARENTAL CARE IN PRAIRIE VOLES. Boone, E.M.; Lewis-Reese, A.; Carter, C.S.; Bales, K.L.

14.             PATERNAL RESPONSIVITY IN BIPARENTAL (PEROMYSCUS CALIFORNICUS) AND NONPARENTAL (PEROMYSCUS MANICULATAS) MICE. Everette, A.; Tu, K.; Love, G.; McNamara, I.; Kinsley, C.H.; Lambert, K.G.

15.             EFFECTS OF NEONATAL NOVELTY EXPOSURE ON ANOXIA-INDUCED PATHOLOGICAL BEHAVIOR IN THE CONTEXT OF ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL NOVELTY. Nakazawa, M.; Tang, A.C.

16.             COPING STRATEGIES IN LONG-EVANS MALE RATS: INNATE VS. ACQUIRED CHARACTERISTICS. Tu, K.; Everette, A.; Love, G.; McNamara, I.; Banks, M.; Kinsley C.; Lambert, K.G.

17.             THE EFFECT OF GENDER AND NUMBER OF PUPS ON POSTPARTUM DEPRESSIVE-LIKE BEHAVIOR IN RATS. Zarepour, L.; Borjian, L.; Mojab, S.

18.             EARLY DEPRIVATION AND MATERNAL SEPARATION HAVE DIFFERING EFECTS ON JUVENILE PLAY AND COMMUNICATIVE BEHAVIORS IN RATS. Zimmerberg, B.; Sageser, K.A.

 

Social Behavior

 

19.             EFFECTS OF LESIONS TO THE DORSAL AND VENTRAL HIPPOCAMPUS ON DEFENSIVE BEHAVIORS IN RATS.  Pentkowski, N.; Blanchard, D.C.; Blanchard, R.J.

20.             SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT REGULATES THE HPA AXIS AND CELLULAR PROLIFERATION IN THE PRAIRIE VOLE.  Ruscio, M.G.; Sweeny, T.; Suppatkul, P.; Hazelton, J.; Carter, C.S.

21.             BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS RESULTING FROM THE DISRUPTION OF GLIAL FUNCTIONING IN THE BASOLATERAL AMYGDALA. Gaskins, D.; Lee, Y.; Shekhar, A.

22.             DEFICITS IN BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO FAMILIAR STIMULI MEDIATED BY THE BASOLATERAL NUCLEUS OF THE AMYGDALA. Truitt, W.; Sajdyk, T.; Fitz, S.D.; Dietrich, A.; Shekhar, A.

23.             EFFECTS OF ZIPRASIDONE AND D-CYCLOSERINE TREATMENT ON THE BEHAVIORAL DEFICITS IN RATS WITH DISRUPTED BASOLATERAL AMYGDALA FUNCTION. Sajdyk, T.; Fitz, S.; McDougle, C.; Shekhar, A.

24.             FLAVOR PAIRING BIASES OUTCOMES IN A SOCIAL FOOD PREFERENCE TASK. Walker, E.M.; Desir N.; Hohmann, C.F.

 

Chemistry of Behavior

 

25.             EFFECTS OF 5-METHOXY-DIISOPROPYLTRYPTAMINE ON HORMONE AND NEUROTRANSMITTER LEVELS IN THE ADULT RAT. Schaefer, T.L.; Herring, N.R.; McCrea, A.E.; Lipton, J.W.; Campbell, N.G.; Vorhees, C.V.; Williams, M.T.

26.             BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS OF 5-METHOXY-N,N-DIISOPROPYLTRYPTA-MINE (FOXY) IN ADULT RATS. Herring, N.R.; Schaefer, T.L.; McCrea, A.E.; Vorhees, C.V.; Williams, M.T.

27.             EFFECTS OF SHORT-TERM REM SLEEP DEPRIVATION ON THE EXPRESSIONS OF THE HYPOTHALAMIC NEUROPEPTIDES GENES IN RATS.  Fujihara, H.;  Sei, H.; Morita, Y.; Ueta, Y.

28.             WITHDRAWN

29.             THE EFFECTS OF KETAMINE ON THE EXPRESSION OF NMDA NR2B RECEPTOR SUBUNITS.  Hoxha, N.; Mickley G.A.

30.             GENE DELETION OF THE GLUTAMATE GLUR1 RECEPTOR CAUSES HYPER-REACTIVITY TO NOVELTY AND SENSORIMOTOR GATING DEFICITS IN MICE.  Wiedholz, L.; Holmes, A.

31.             GROUP II, BUT NOT GROUP I, MGLURS IN THE RAT NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS CONTRIBUTE TO CONDITIONED LOCOMOTION ELICITED BY AMPHETAMINE-ASSOCIATED ENVIRONMENTAL CUES. Kim, W.Y.; Kim, J.-H.; Vezina, P.

32.             THE ANABOLIC STEROID NANDROLONE BUT NOT 17á-METHYLTESTOSTERONE INDUCES CONDITIONED PLACE PREFERENCE IN ADULT MICE. Rundle-Gonzalez, V.; Garcia-Sosa, R.; Ayala-Baez, C.; Gandia-Cruz, G.; Jorge, J.C.

33.             EFFECTS OF AN ANABOLIC STEROID ON GABA IMMUNOREACTIVITY IN REWARD AND ANXIETY BRAIN CENTERS.  Arriaga-Gonzalez, D.; Rundle-Gonzalez, V.; Barreto-Estrada, J.L.; Jorge, J.C.

34.             FURTHER STUDIES OF ESTRADIOL AND INTAKE OF PALATABLE INGESTA.  Reid, L.D.; Boswell, K.J.; Klein, L.A.; Caffalette, C.A.; Schlosburg, J.E.; Stitt, K.T.; Reid, M.L.

35.             PLASTIC FUNCTION OF GLUCOSE INCREASED IN THE BRAIN DURING. Oomura, Y.; Aou, S.; Hori, N.; Fukunaga, H.; Sasaki, K.

36.             ELEVATED BLOOD GLUCOSE LEVELS IN SUGAR-DEPENDENT RATS. Murphy, H.M.; Wideman, C.H.

37.             EFFECTS OF THE ENVIRONMENT EXPOSURE ON BEHAVIORAL SENSITIZATION INDUCED BY REPEATED ADMINISTRATION OF COCAINE. Araujo, N.P.; Carrara-Nascimento, P.F.; Fukushiro, D.F.; Rodrigues, M.S.D.; Oliveira-Lima, A.J.; Frussa-Filho, R.

38.             THE EFFECTS OF METHAMPHETAMINE AND COCAINE ON RATS’ Y-MAZE PERFORMANCE USING DIRECTIONAL VS. VISUAL CUES.  Klipec, W.D.; Brackney, R.J.; Sounhein, K.; Mejia, R.; Dolezal, A.

39.             EFFECTS OF THE NEUROTENSIN ANTAGONIST SR48692 ON NIGROSTRIATAL DOPAMINE SUPERSENSITIVITY INDUCED BY A REPEATED TREATMENT WITH RESERPINE. Medrano, W.A.; Takatsu-Coleman, A.L.; Abílio, V.C.; Frussa-Filho, R.

40.             THE ROLE OF THE STRIATUM ON THE EFFECTS OF MODAFINIL. Giordano, M.; Mendoza-Trejo, M.; Mena-Segovia, J.

41.             D3 RECEPTOR DOES NOT MEDIATE DA ANTAGONIST INHIBITION OF MK-801 HYPERACTIVITY. Joyce, J.N.; Iarkov, A.V.

42.             EFFECTS OF 7-OH-DPAT, A D3 RECEPTOR AGONIST, ON PAIN MODULATION, IN THE RAT. Casarrubea, M.; Sorbera, F.; Saia, V.; Greco, P.; Crescimanno, G.

 

Friday, June 3:

 

8:30-10:30     Symposium 2:  Integrative function of the hypothalamus.  Chair:  Yoichi Ueta, University of Occupational and Environmental Health.

 

8:30-9:00       OREXIN/HYPOCRETIN AND NEUROMEDIN U AS A STRESS MEDIATOR IN THE HYPOTHALAMUS.  Ueta, Y.

 

9:00-9:30       CLOCK GENE MUTATION AND AUTONOMIC AND ENDOCRINE CHANGES.  Sei, H.; Oishi, K.; Ishida, N.

 

9:30-10:00     AUTONOMIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR RESPONSES TO GRAVITATIONAL STRESS.  Morita, H.; Gotoh, M.T.; Matsuda, T.; Tanaka, K.

 

10:00-10:30   HYPOCRETIN DEFICIENT NARCOLEPSY AS A DISEASE MODEL TO STUDY THE HYPOTHALAMIC FUNCTION IN HEALTH AND DISEASE.  Nishino, S.

 

10:45-11:45   Presidental Lecture:  EPIGENETIC PERSPECTIVES ON MONOGAMY: INSIGHTS FROM PRAIRIE VOLES.  C. Sue Carter, The University of Illinois at Chicago.

 

13:15-15:15   Symposium 3:  Modeling different facets of disease toward endophenotypes.  Chairs:  Haim Einat, University of Minnesota at Duluth and Henry Szechtman, McMaster University.

 

13:15-13:39   ANIMAL MODELS FOR BIPOLAR DISORDER – NEW UNDERSTANDING AND NEW POSSIBILITIES.  Einat, H.

 

13:39-14:03   COMPULSIVE CHECKING AND ITS ROOTS IN NORMAL BEHAVIOR: TOWARD AN ANIMAL MODEL OF OCD.  Szechtman, H.; Woody, E.Z.; Eilam, D.

 

14:03-14:27   COMPULSIVE RITUALS IN ANIMALS AND HUMANS: APPLICATION OF A NEW CONCEPT IN THE STUDY OF OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE DISORDER (OCD).  Eilam, D.

 

14:27-14:51   DEVELOPING A MOUSE MODEL OF EARLY LIFE TRAUMA AND NEGLECT.  Holmes, A.

 

14:51-15:15   AN IMMUNO-PRECIPITATED NEURODEVELOPMENTAL ANIMAL MODEL OF SCHIZOPHRENIA IN MICE.  Feldon, J.; Meyer, U.; Yee,  B.

 

15:15-15:45   Refreshment Break/Exhibitors Display

 

15:45-16:15   2005 Marjorie A. Myers Lifetime Achievement Award:  to be announced.

 

16:15-17:27   Oral Session 3:  Animal Models.  Chair:  Richard Paylor, Experimental Therapeutic Branch, NIHM.

 

16:15-16:33   MODELING AUTISM-RELATED BEHAVIORS IN THE FMR1 KNOCKOUT MOUSE MODEL OF FRAGILE X SYNDROME.  Spencer, C.M.; Alekseyenko, O.; Serysheva, E.; Yuva-Paylor, L.; Paylor, R.

 

16:33-16:51   CONDITIONED FEAR IN CONGENITALLY HELPLESS RATS: EXTINCTION DEFICIT, TREATMENT, AND IMPLICATIONS FOR POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER.  Shumake, J.; Barrett, D.; Wrubel, K.M.; Johnson, S.E.; Gonzalez-Lima, F.

 

16:51-17:09   AUTISM-RELATED BEHAVIORS IN A NEW X-LINKED TRANSGENIC MOUSE.  Spencer, C.M.; Yuva-Paylor, L.; Schuster, G.; Shope, C.; Noebels, J.; Brownell, W.; Overbeek, P.; Paylor, R.

 

17:09-17:27   SECRETIN RECEPTOR DEFICIENT MICE EXHIBIT AUTISTIC PHENOTYPES.  Nishijima, I.; Givens, B.; Paylor, R.; Bradley, A.

 

17:30-19:30   Poster Session 2.

 

Fragile X Syndrome and Autism

 

43.             A DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING FRAGILE X SYNDROME: THE INFLUENCE OF ENVIRONMENTAL AND GENETIC FACTORS ON BEHAVIOR PROBLEMS IN PATIENTS WITH FRAGILE X SYNDROME.  Akbarzadeh, M.; Akbarzadeh, R.; Akbarzadeh, R.

44.             ADVANCES IN RESEARCH ON THE FRAGILE X SYNDROME: ANALYZING GENE – BRAIN – BEHAVIOR RELATIONSHIPS IN NEURODEVELOPMENTAL EFFECTS.  Akbarzadeh, R.; Akbarzadeh, R.; Akbarzadeh, M.

45.             SUPPRESSION OF TWO MAJOR FRAGILE X SYNDROME MOUSE MODEL PHENOTYPES BY THE MGLUR5 ANTAGONIST MPEP. Yan, Q.J.; Rammal, M.; Bauchwitz, R.P.

46.             ALTERED RESPONSE TO SOUND AND ENVIRONMENT IN CUED/CONTEXUAL FEAR CONDITIONING IN A MOUSE MODEL FOR AUTISM. Desir, N; Walker, E.M.; Hodges, A.B.; Blue, M.E.; Hohmann, C.F.

47.             EFFECTS OF TEST AND GENETIC BACKGROUND ON ANXIETY-RELATED BEHAVIORS IN THE FMR1 KNOCKOUT MOUSE MODEL OF FRAGILE X SYNDROME. Spencer, C.M.; Alekseyenko, O.; Serysheva, E.; Yuva-Paylor, L.; Paylor, R.

48.             GABRB3 GENE KNOCKOUT MICE: A MODEL OF AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER?  DeLorey, T.M.; Hashemi, E.; Sahbaie, P.; Homanics, G.

 

Other Nervous System Disorders and Models

 

49.             EFFECT OF CURCUMIN ON 3-NITORPROPIONIC ACID-INDUCED MODEL OF HUNTINGTON’S DISEASE.  Pattipati, S.N.; Kumar, P.; Kumar, A.

50.             A COPPER AND CHOLESTEROL DIET DISRUPTS LEARNED IRRELEVANCE IN RABBIT EYEBLINK CONDITIONING: AN ANIMAL MODEL FOR ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE. Walker, A.G.; Mckinney, C.J.; Allen, M.T.

51.             DELAYED ACQUISITION OF A VISUAL DISCRIMINATION IN RATS CHRONICALLY INFUSED WITH SOLUBLE AMYLOID BETA PEPTIDE. Arnold, H.M.; Brenneman, D.E.; Yohrling, G.J.

52.             NICOTINE SENSITIZATION IN A RODENT MODEL OF PSYCHOSIS: A COMPARISON OF ADULT AND ADOLESCENT RATS.  Perna, M.; Smith, K.; Handy, C; Brown, R.

53.             NEONATAL QUINPIROLE TREATMENT PRODUCES DEFICITS IN PREPULSE INHIBITION IN RATS. Maple, A.; Smith, K.; Thacker, S.; Perna, M.; Brown, R.

54.             OLFACTION IMPAIRMENTS IN MICE OVEREXPRESSING HUMAN WILDTYPE ALPHA-SYNUCLEIN. Fleming, S.; Schallert, T.; Levine, M.; Masliah, E.; Chesselet, M.

55.             NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONING OF A FAMILY WITH MITOCHONDRIAL CYTOPATHY. Sullivan, K.D.; Neargarder, S.; Carvalho, J.

56.             A FUNCTIONAL GENOMICS RESOURCE FOR NEUROSCIENTISTS: THE NIH NEUROGENOMICS PROJECT. Yates, J.; Siepka, S. ; Shimomura, K,;   Li, Y.;  Hong, H.K.; Simpson, E.; Mohn, A.; Caron, M.G.; Kandel, E.; Kibbe, W.A.; Hohman, M.M.; Levine, J.E.;  Mullins, R.; Redei, E.; Sheffield, V.; Turek, F.H.; Vitaterna, M.H.; Pinto, L.H.; Takahashi, J.S.

 

Stress

 

57.             CHILDHOOD ABUSE AND REGIONAL BRAIN DEVELOPMENT: EVIDENCE FOR SENSITIVE PERIODS. Teicher, M.H.; Andersen S.L.; Tomoda, A.; Vincow, E.; Valente, E.; Polcari, A.

58.             EFFECTS OF ENERGY- REPRODUCTION- AND STRESS-RELATED SIGNALS ON THE PERFORMANCE OF VISUAL CATEGORICAL DISCRIMINATION OF FOOD AND SEX IN RHESUS MONKEYS. Inoue, T.; Takara, S.; Mizuno M.; Aou, S.

59.             MODULATION OF MOTOR FUNCTION BY STRESS: A NOVEL CONCEPT OF THE EFFECTS OF STRESS ON BEHAVIOR. Metz, G.A.; Jadavji, N.M.

60.             GENETIC MODULATION OF EARLY LIFE TRAUMA AND NEGLECT IN MICE. Millstein, R.A.; Boyce-Rustay, J.M.; Izquierdo, A.; Wiedholz, L.; Holmes, A.

61.             CARDIAC REGULATION AT REST AND FOLLOWING STRESS IN FEMALE PRAIRIE VOLES: PRELIMINARY FINDINGS. Grippo, A.J.; Carter, C.S.; Porges, S.W.

 

Drugs and Behavior

 

62.             CAFFEINE’S ROLE IN CONDITIONING PREFERENCE AND PALATABILITY SHIFTS. Boudreau, S.; LoLordo, V.

63.             A NOVEL METHOD OF ORAL ADMINISTRATION OF METHYLPHENIDATE TO RATS REVEALS POST-DRUG MEMORY IMPAIRMENT. LeBlanc-Duchin, D.; Taukulis, H.K.; Chuhan, Y.; Batra, N.

64.             ESTABLISHING BEHAVIORAL PARADIGMS FOR THE EFFECTS OF PRENATAL COCAINE EXPOSURE IN RABBITS. Thompson, B.L.; Stanwood, G.D.; Levitt, P.

65.             EVALUATION OF AMPHETAMINE WITHDRAWAL-INDUCED ANHEDONIA USING A LICKING MICROSTRUCTURE ANALYSIS.  Baird, J.P.; Molchen, W.A.; Marks, G.

66.             OREXIN-1 RECEPTORS MEDIATE FOOD AND WATER INTAKE RELATED EFFECTS OF OREXIN-A IN THE BED NUCLEUS OF STRIA TERMINALIS. Lenard, L.; Hangodi, O.; Bagi, E.; Urban, B.; Fekete, E.; Toth, K.

67.             EFFECT OF PERCHLORATE ADMINISTRATION AND ETHANOL CONSUMPTION ON THYROID HORMONE AND BRAIN CATECHOLAMINE CONCENTRATIONS IN THE RAT.  James, N.; Williams, H.; McMillen, B.

 

Neurochemical Basis of Behavior

 

68.             EFFECTS OF OREXINS/HYPOCRETINS ON INTRACELLULAR CALCIUM IN NEURONS OF THE MEDIAL PREOPTIC AREA IN RATS.  Takatsuna, M.; Watanabe, K.; Nakajima, K.; Oomura, Y.; Wayner, M.J.; Sasaki, K.

69.             SENSITIZED ATTENTIONAL PERFORMANCE AND FOS-IMMUNOREACTIVE CHOLINERGIC NEURONS IN THE BASAL FOREBRAIN.  Martinez, V.; Parikh, V.; Sarter, M.

70.             DIFFERENTIAL SENSITIVITY OF AMPHETAMINE-EVOKED ROTATIONAL BEHAVIOR TO DOPAMINE SYNTHESIS BLOCKADE EARLY AFTER UNILATERAL NIGROSTRIATAL OR CORTICAL DAMAGE.  Paquette, M.A.; Hutchings, J.E.; Marsh, S.T.; Castañeda, E.

71.             MODULATION OF CORTICAL ACETYLCHOLINE RELEASE VIA GLUTAMATERGIC AND D1 INTERACTIONS IN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS.  Zmarowski, A.; Sarter, M.; Bruno, J.P.

72.             A TESTOSTERONE METABOLITE IS REWARDING TO FEMALE RATS. Velázquez, K.; Ramos, D.; Lorenzini, I.; Jessica Marrero, J.; Maldonado-Vlaar, C.; Jorge, J.

 

Sexual Differentiation

 

73.             PERINATAL ACTIVATION OF ESTROGEN RECEPTOR â DEFEMINIZES THE DISPLAY OF SEXUAL BEHAVIOR. Kudwa, A.E.; Gatewood, J.D.; Michopoulos, V.J.; Rissman, E.F.

74.             SPINE DENSITY IN THE RAT BASOLATERAL AMYGDALA IS SEXUALLY DIMORPHIC. Rubinow, M.J.; Juraska, J.M.

75.             NON-TOXIC DOSES OF ENDOCRINE DISRUPTERS IMPAIR SEXUAL DIFFERENTIATION OF BEHAVIORS AND ENHANCE DEPRESSIVE BEHAVIOR IN RATS. Aou, S.; Fujimoto, T.; Kubo, K.

76.             FLUOXETINE EXPOSURE DURING NEONATAL DEVELOPMENT ALTERS ACCESORY OLFACTORY BULB MORPHOLOGY ACCORDING TO SEX.  Melendez, D.; Lugo, N.; Jorge, J.C.

77.             EFFECTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL ENRICHMENT ON SPATIAL AND NON-SPATIAL MEMORY IN MALE AND FEMALE MICE THROUGHOUT THE LIFESPAN.  Levy, L.J.; Lambert, T.J.; Frick, K.M.

 

Physiology of Learning

 

78.             THE MEDIAL THALAMUS IS CRUCIAL FOR WATER MAZE BEHAVIORAL STRATEGIES BUT IS NOT REQUIRED FOR SPATIAL PLACE MEMORY. Cain, D.P.;  Boon, F.; Corcoran, M.E.

79.             MEMORY DEFICITS IN NEONATAL AND JUVENILE RATS  FOLLOWING CHRONIC STRESS. Hoxha, Z., Mickley, G.A

80.             SLEEP DISRUPTION IMPAIRS HIPPOCAMPAL RAT DENTATE GRANULE CELL LTP IN VIVO. Wayner, M.J.; Mery, L.R.; Marks, C.A.

81.             THE RAT P300 ERP TO SIGNALED OCCURRENCE AND OMISSION OF EXPECTED REINFORCERS FOLLOWING EXTENDED TRAINING.  Klipec, W.D.; Schneider, B.; Stanley, K.; Brackney, R. J.; Schwabe, J; Young, B.

82.             THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE RAT P300 ERP DURING BACKWARD CHAINING.  Stanley, K.; Klipec, W.D.; Lem, K.

83.             ERP EVIDENCE FROM DYNAMIC DISSOCIATION OF TEMPRAL STORAGE AND REHEARSAL OF CHINESE CHARACTERS. Wang,Y.W.; Lin, C.D.; Zhang, W.X.

84.             EFFECT OF EMOTIONAL CONTENT ON DECLARATIVE MEMORY:  AN EVENT RELATED POTENTIAL STUDY. Gasbarri,  A.;  Arnone, B.;   Pompili, A.;  Marchetti, A.;   Pacitti,  F.;   Saad Calil, S.;  Pacitti, C.;  Tavares, M.C.;  Tomaz, C.

 

Saturday, June 4:

 

8:30-10:30     Symposium 4:  Ventral striatal organization and physiology. Chair:  Jacques H. Abraini, Université de Caen.

 

8:30-9:00       GLUTAMATE-DOPAMINE INTERACTIONS IN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS:  EFFECTS ON CORTICAL ACh RELEASE AND ATTENTIONAL PROCESSING.  Bruno, J. P.; Sarter, M.; Neigh, G.; Zmarowski, A.

 

9:00-9:30       DOPAMINERGIC MODULATION OF GLUTAMATERGIC RESPONSES IN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS.  O'Donnell, P.; Brady, A.M.; Benoit-Marand, M.

 

9:30-10:00     BEHAVIORAL ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY OF THE MOTIVE CIRCUIT.    Rebec, G.V.; Wood, D.A

 

10:00-10:30   GLUTAMATE MODULATION OF DOPAMINERGIC MOTOR RESPONSES IN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS: TOWARDS AN EXTENDED MODEL OF STRIATAL ORGANISATION AND MOTOR FUNCTION.    Abraini, J.H.; David, H.N.

 

10:45-11:45   Keynote Speaker:    Robert Dantzer, D.V.M., Ph.D, CNRS-INRA, University of Bordeaux, France. Cytokine-Induced Sickness Behavior: An Integrated Perspective.

 

12:45-14:15   NIH Grant Workshop:  "NIH 101", Paul A. Rushing, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.  Much of the biomedical research in the United States is supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). This brief "NIH 101" workshop will provide information on all aspects of the grant process from submission to funding. A special emphasis will be placed on peer review. In addition, the presentation will be followed by a question and answer period.

 

14:15-15:15   Business Meeting – open to all IBNS members

 

15:15-17:15   Symposium 5:  Acute st