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Anders Björklund

Researcher at Lund University

Publications -  771
Citations -  87172

Anders Björklund is an academic researcher from Lund University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transplantation & Dopamine. The author has an hindex of 165, co-authored 769 publications receiving 84268 citations. Previous affiliations of Anders Björklund include University of Washington & Institute for the Study of Labor.

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Family structure and child outcomes in the USA and Sweden

TL;DR: The authors compared the relationship between childhood family structure, schooling, and earnings in Sweden and the USA and found a negative relationship between living in a non-intact family and child outcomes, and the estimates are remarkably similar in both countries.
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The use of neurotoxic dihydroxytryptamines as tools for morphological studies and localized lesioning of central indolamine neurons

TL;DR: The lesions produced by intraventricularly or intracerebrally administered dihydroxytryptamines were found to be much superior to mechanical or electrolytic lesions in producing extensive accumulations of fluorescence in the indolamine axon pathways.
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Intranigral fetal dopamine grafts induce behavioral compensation in the rat Parkinson model

TL;DR: A novel pattern of behavioral recovery induced by intranigral VM transplants in the rat Parkinson model is demonstrated, which may have important implications for the understanding of how the nigrostriatal dopamine system influences motor control in the basal ganglia as well as for the development of optimal transplantation strategies in Parkinson's disease.
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Comparison of the behavioural and histological characteristics of the 6-OHDA and α-synuclein rat models of Parkinson's disease.

TL;DR: This study suggests that the AAV-α-syn model replicates the human pathology more closely than either of the other two 6-OHDA lesion models.
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Regulation of striatal serotonin release by the lateral habenula-dorsal raphe pathway in the rat as demonstrated by in vivo microdialysis: role of excitatory amino acids and GABA.

TL;DR: The idea that excitatory amino acids in the LHb-NRD pathway are involved in the regulation of striatal 5-HT release is compatible with the idea that this influence is modulated by GABAergic synaptic activity at the level of the NRD.