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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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Anatomical and functional consequences of grafting mesencephalic neurons into a peripheral nerve "bridge" connected to the denervated striatum.

TL;DR: It was shown that the use of a peripheral nerve segment as a bridge between a distant neuronal transplant and a selected region of the adult host brain resulted in the growth of monoaminergic axons into the denervated striatum from the extracerebrally located grafted neurons.
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Unemployment and Income Distribution: Time-Series Evidence from Sweden

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the relationship between unemployment and the personal distribution of income using Swedish time-series data and found that higher unemployment risks are highest among people with low earnings capacity, even when they have a job.
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Isolation and characterization of neural precursor cells from the Sox1-GFP reporter mouse.

TL;DR: It is shown that the GFP reporter is coexpressed with the Sox1 protein as well as with other known markers for neural stem and progenitor cells, and can be used to identify and isolate these cells by fluorescence‐activated cell sorting (FACS) from the developing or adult brain and from neurosphere cultures.
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Behavioral dependence of the electrical activity of intracerebrally transplanted fetal hippocampus.

TL;DR: These findings suggest that at least a portion of the graft neurons had come under the control of the host brain, and by way of the newly established host-graft connections the activity of some graft neurons was regulated in a near-normal manner.
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Grafted septal neurons form cholinergic synaptic connections in the dentate gyrus of behaviorally impaired aged rats.

TL;DR: Three months after grafting, behaviorally recovered rats were studied by immunocytochemistry by using monoclonal antibodies to choling acetyltransferase (ChAT) and electron microscopy and the innervation of the host dentate gyrus by graft‐derived ChAT‐positive fibres was unmasked.