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Ab J. Alingh Prins
Researcher at University of Groningen
Publications - 6
Citations - 476
Ab J. Alingh Prins is an academic researcher from University of Groningen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Thermoregulation & Circadian rhythm. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 6 publications receiving 466 citations.
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Book ChapterDOI
Neuroendocrine states and behavioral and physiological stress responses
Béla Bohus,R.F. Benus,Dirk S. Fokkema,Jaap M. Koolhaas,Csaba Nyakas,G.A. van Oortmerssen,Ab J. Alingh Prins,A.J.H. de Ruiter,Antonius Scheurink,Anton B. Steffens +9 more
TL;DR: This chapter presents a novel, behavioral physiological stress concept that originates from the classical view that stress is a response and is extended to environment, behavior, and physiology, and it incorporates the novel neuroendocrine views including the neuropeptide concept.
Journal ArticleDOI
Interaction between circadian and caloric control of feeding behavior in the rat.
TL;DR: These experiments suggest that in the rat a circadian pacemaker dominates feeding motivation during the end of the night thereby strongly interacting with caloric control of feeding behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI
Patterns of Body Temperature During Feeding in Rats Under Varying Ambient Temperatures
TL;DR: The present study suggests that temperatures do not exceed this value by adaptive autonomic thermoregulatory responses shifting heat flow from core to skin and by stopping all locomotory activities including feeding, thereby avoiding deterioration of vital organs and physiological processes due to hyperthermia.
Journal ArticleDOI
Daily rhythms of feeding in the genetically obese and lean Zucker rats
TL;DR: Feeding patterns were examined in obese (fa/fa) and lean (Fa/-) adult Zucker rats over the light-dark cycle during 14 days, showing some indication that the circadian controlled temporal distribution of meals is different in obese rats compared to lean rats.
Journal ArticleDOI
Age-related alterations in cardiac response to emotional stress: relations to behavioral reactivity in the rat.
TL;DR: It is suggested that the behaviorally coupled inhibitory influences on the heart are diminishing during aging either due to impairments in the descending cholinergic (vagal) system or secondarily, due to a decrease in the central "drive" of this system.