2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2015.06.036
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Rats with differential self-grooming expression in the elevated plus-maze do not differ in anxiety-related behaviors

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Cited by 27 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
(81 reference statements)
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“…The EPM used was similar to that described in previous studies (Daniels et al, 2004;Walf and Frye, 2007;Reimer et al, 2015). It consists of four arms (two open without walls and two enclosed by 15.25 cm high walls) 50 cm long and 5 cm wide.…”
Section: The Elevated Plus-maze (Epm)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The EPM used was similar to that described in previous studies (Daniels et al, 2004;Walf and Frye, 2007;Reimer et al, 2015). It consists of four arms (two open without walls and two enclosed by 15.25 cm high walls) 50 cm long and 5 cm wide.…”
Section: The Elevated Plus-maze (Epm)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rat subcohorts selected on the basis of self-grooming duration show no differences in anxiety-like behaviours or neurochemical and neuroendocrine parameters 5 …”
mentioning
confidence: 95%
“…For example, high-frequency, short bouts of self-grooming can yield a cumulative duration that is similar to that of fewer, longer bouts of such behaviour. Moreover, rats that exhibit different self-grooming durations may show no differences in anxiety-related behavioural or neuroendocrine parameters 5 . In addition, as self-grooming frequency (the rate of initiation) and bout length (execution) under stress probably have differential neural underpinnings, these aspects of self-grooming may differentially change during stress (BOX 1).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The work by Begemann and colleagues 3 suggests that childhood trauma may partially explain the association between hallucinatory experiences and measures of executive function and working memory, but also that childhood trauma is of no explanatory value in terms of the verbal and general knowledge deficits associated with psychotic features. Similarly, the work by Aas and colleagues 4 suggests that childhood trauma is associated with deficits in general, but not specific, cognitive domains. Indeed, in our sample, we found only negligible, statistically nonsignificant correlations between childhood trauma and cognition.…”
Section: Childhood Trauma As a Neglected Factor In Psychotic Experienmentioning
confidence: 93%