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Barbara E. Jones

Researcher at Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

Publications -  117
Citations -  17965

Barbara E. Jones is an academic researcher from Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cholinergic neuron & Cholinergic. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 117 publications receiving 17180 citations. Previous affiliations of Barbara E. Jones include University of Chicago & McMaster University.

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Limbic lesions and the problem of stimulus--reinforcement associations.

TL;DR: Only the impairment produced by the TPA lesion was consistent with a difficulty in the formation of such associations, an interpretation which is strengthened by a consideration of the gross behavioral abnormalities that have been described repeatedly following this same lesion.
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Ascending projections of the locus coeruleus in the rat. II. Autoradiographic study

TL;DR: The ascending projections of the locus coeruleus were studied using an autoradiographic method and the largest projections are to the lateral hypothalamic area, periventricular nucleus, supraoptic nucleus and paraventricul nucleus.
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Discharge of Identified Orexin/Hypocretin Neurons across the Sleep-Waking Cycle

TL;DR: Identified orexin neurons discharge during active waking, decrease discharge during quiet waking in absence of movement, and virtually cease firing during sleep, when postural muscle tone is low or absent; they increase firing before the end of PS and thereby herald the return of waking and muscle tone.
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Serotonin neurons of the midbrain raphe: ascending projections.

TL;DR: The ascending projections of serotonin neurons of the midbrain raphe were analyzed in the rat using the autoradiographic tracing method and a number of fibers leave the major group to ascend along the fasciculus retroflexus.
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The efferent projections from the reticular formation and the locus coeruleus studied by anterograde and retrograde axonal transport in the rat.

TL;DR: Autoradiographic study revealed prominent reticuloreticular projections from all areas and secondary projections onto cranial nerve motor nuclei from most areas within the brain stem.