All Relations between hippocampus and reward

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
R K Pitma. Animal models of compulsive behavior. Biological psychiatry. vol 26. issue 2. 1989-08-01. PMID:2660914. possible models include stimulation of the reinforcement mechanism, manipulation of the striatal "comparator" function, production and blockade of displacement behavior, and interference with the hippocampus' modulation of the stereotypy-inducing effect of reward. 1989-08-01 2023-08-11 human
C F Flaherty, G A Rowan, D F Emerich, T J Wals. Effects of intrahippocampal administration of colchicine on incentive contrast and on radial maze performance. Behavioral neuroscience. vol 103. issue 2. 1989-05-30. PMID:2706077. these results suggest that a completely functioning hippocampus is not necessary for the memory of reward quality, the comparison of rewards, the suppression of behavior when reward is decreased, the formation of associations between two levels of reward, and the reversal of this association, as long as these processes are reflected in consummatory behavior. 1989-05-30 2023-08-11 rat
W A Corrigall, M A Linsema. Conditioned place preference produced by intra-hippocampal morphine. Pharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior. vol 30. issue 3. 1989-02-23. PMID:3211988. the results are discussed in terms of possible reward or habituation functions of the hippocampus. 1989-02-23 2023-08-11 rat
R M Ridley, N A Samson, H F Baker, J A Johnso. Visuospatial learning impairment following lesion of the cholinergic projection to the hippocampus. Brain research. vol 456. issue 1. 1988-10-13. PMID:3136860. these results are consistent with the suggestion that the hippocampus (perhaps in conjunction with the entorhinal cortex) is concerned primarily with memory for responses but not memory for reward and that lesions of the cholinergic system produce impairments equivalent to the effects of ablation of the terminal areas. 1988-10-13 2023-08-11 Not clear
B D Fantie, S Nakajim. Operant conditioning of hippocampal theta: dissociating reward from performance deficits. Behavioral neuroscience. vol 101. issue 5. 1988-01-14. PMID:3675840. operant conditioning of hippocampal theta: dissociating reward from performance deficits. 1988-01-14 2023-08-11 rat
K A Campbell, N W Milgra. Mechanisms underlying the plasticity of hippocampal stimulation-induced reward. Behavioral neuroscience. vol 99. issue 2. 1987-09-29. PMID:3843708. mechanisms underlying the plasticity of hippocampal stimulation-induced reward. 1987-09-29 2023-08-11 Not clear
K A Campbell, N W Milgra. Mechanisms underlying the plasticity of hippocampal stimulation-induced reward. Behavioral neuroscience. vol 99. issue 2. 1987-09-29. PMID:3843708. in experiment 3 electrical activity during hippocampal self-stimulation was examined in order to explore the possible correlation between hippocampal reward and epileptiform activity. 1987-09-29 2023-08-11 Not clear
S Laroche, N Neuenschwander-el Massioui, J M Edeline, G Dutrieu. Hippocampal associative cellular responses: dissociation with behavioral responses revealed by a transfer-of-control technique. Behavioral and neural biology. vol 47. issue 3. 1987-07-24. PMID:3038068. multiunit activity was recorded in the ca3 field of the dorsal hippocampus in freely moving rats during classical conditioning and subsequent presentation of the cs on operant baselines for food reward as well as shock avoidance. 1987-07-24 2023-08-11 rat
J N Rawlins, J Feldon, S But. The effects of delaying reward on choice preference in rats with hippocampal or selective septal lesions. Behavioural brain research. vol 15. issue 3. 1985-08-22. PMID:4005029. the effects of delaying reward on choice preference in rats with hippocampal or selective septal lesions. 1985-08-22 2023-08-11 rat
J N Rawlins, J Feldon, S But. The effects of delaying reward on choice preference in rats with hippocampal or selective septal lesions. Behavioural brain research. vol 15. issue 3. 1985-08-22. PMID:4005029. during the critical test phase in both experiments, we delayed the reward in the crf arm only by 10 s. experiment 1 tested intact rats given saline injections, or injections of chlordiazepoxide hydrochloride (librium, 5 mg/kg), and rats with hippocampal or cortical control lesions. 1985-08-22 2023-08-11 rat
J N Rawlins, J Feldon, S But. The effects of delaying reward on choice preference in rats with hippocampal or selective septal lesions. Behavioural brain research. vol 15. issue 3. 1985-08-22. PMID:4005029. once reward was delayed, the rats with hippocampal lesions switched their preference to the prf arm, while the rats in the other treatment groups did not. 1985-08-22 2023-08-11 rat
L Van Wolfswinkel, J M Van Re. Hippocampus modulates self-stimulation reward from the ventral tegmental area in the rat. Brain research. vol 322. issue 1. 1985-03-07. PMID:6518367. hippocampus modulates self-stimulation reward from the ventral tegmental area in the rat. 1985-03-07 2023-08-12 rat
L Van Wolfswinkel, J M Van Re. Hippocampus modulates self-stimulation reward from the ventral tegmental area in the rat. Brain research. vol 322. issue 1. 1985-03-07. PMID:6518367. it was found that an electrolytic lesion of a part of the dorsal hippocampus induced a marked decrease in the variation of thresholds across rats, while the mean reward level did not change. 1985-03-07 2023-08-12 rat
L Van Wolfswinkel, J M Van Re. Hippocampus modulates self-stimulation reward from the ventral tegmental area in the rat. Brain research. vol 322. issue 1. 1985-03-07. PMID:6518367. this indicates that a factor is removed, by the hippocampal lesion, which causes differences in reward between individual rats. 1985-03-07 2023-08-12 rat
L Van Wolfswinkel, J M Van Re. Hippocampus modulates self-stimulation reward from the ventral tegmental area in the rat. Brain research. vol 322. issue 1. 1985-03-07. PMID:6518367. it is suggested that the mesolimbic dopaminergic system is involved in this modulatory influence of the hippocampus on reward. 1985-03-07 2023-08-12 rat
S Zola-Morgan, J Dabrowska, M Moss, H Mahu. Enhanced preference for perceptual novelty in the monkey after section of the fornix but not after ablation of the hippocampus. Neuropsychologia. vol 21. issue 5. 1984-01-07. PMID:6646398. monkeys with sections of the fornix, but not those with ablations of hippocampus, showed an abnormally marked preference for novel stimuli in both modalities, even when perceptual novelty was designed to compete unfavorably with food reward (experiments 1b and 2b). 1984-01-07 2023-08-12 monkey
R E Dyball, A T Paterso. Neurohypophysial hormones and brain function: the neurophysiological effects of oxytocin and vasopressin. Pharmacology & therapeutics. vol 20. issue 3. 1983-10-28. PMID:6136996. they exert profound effects on behavior, particularly on memory, a function frequently ascribed to the hippocampus, amygdala and septum; on memory consolidation, internal reward and self stimulation functions frequently ascribed to brainstem and diencephalic aminergic systems including the substantia nigra and on sensory and autonomic responses which involve the medulla and spinal cord. 1983-10-28 2023-08-12 Not clear
R Jaffard, C Destrade, B Soumireu-Mourat, T Durkin, A Ebe. Changes in hippocampal cholinergic activity following learning in mice. Neuroscience letters. vol 19. issue 3. 1983-06-10. PMID:7052541. a short bar-press operant conditioning acquisition session with food reward on continuous reinforcement was shown to induce a decrease (13.5%) of hippocampal choline acetyltransferase activity in mice. 1983-06-10 2023-08-12 mouse
L D Devenport, J A Devenport, F A Hollowa. Reward-induced stereotypy: modulation by the hippocampus. Science (New York, N.Y.). vol 212. issue 4500. 1981-07-20. PMID:7195073. in animals with hippocampal damage, the signaled administration of reward is sufficient to induce the sort of behavioral sterotypy and locomotion that heretofore has been observed only after drug administration. 1981-07-20 2023-08-12 Not clear
L D Devenport, J A Devenport, F A Hollowa. Reward-induced stereotypy: modulation by the hippocampus. Science (New York, N.Y.). vol 212. issue 4500. 1981-07-20. PMID:7195073. the interaction of the hippocampus with reward helps to explain many well-known characteristics of animals with lesions in the hippocampus and may have relevance for catecholamine-based clinical disorders. 1981-07-20 2023-08-12 Not clear