J
Jacob Raber
Researcher at Oregon Health & Science University
Publications - 253
Citations - 13602
Jacob Raber is an academic researcher from Oregon Health & Science University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Apolipoprotein E & Water maze. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 230 publications receiving 11862 citations. Previous affiliations of Jacob Raber include Scripps Health & University of California, San Francisco.
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Developmental methamphetamine exposure results in short- and long-term alterations in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal-axis-associated proteins
TL;DR: Developmental exposure to methamphetamine causes long-term behavioral and cognitive deficits and has short- and long- term effects on vasopressin immunoreactivity and short-term effects on GR immunore activity, respectively.
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Effects of ε4 on Object Recognition in the Non-Demented Elderly
TL;DR: In this article, Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) e4 negatively affects performance in the novel-image-novel-location (NINL) object recognition test in healthy non-demented elderly human study participants.
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Hippocampal M1 receptor function associated with spatial learning and memory in aged female rhesus macaques
Gwendolen E. Haley,Christopher D. Kroenke,Christopher D. Kroenke,Daniel Schwartz,Steven G. Kohama,Henryk F. Urbanski,Henryk F. Urbanski,Jacob Raber,Jacob Raber +8 more
TL;DR: While in rhesus macaques, there are age-related decreases in M1 and M2 receptor binding, in aged females, hippocampal M1, but not M2, receptor function is associated with spatial learning and memory and circadian activity.
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Pharmacological inhibition of Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase rescues spatial memory impairments in Neurofibromatosis 1 mutant mice.
TL;DR: Cognitive impairment of spatial memory retention observed in heterozygous NF1 mutant mice was rescued by the Alk inhibitor, supporting the hypothesis that inhibition of Alk may cognitively benefit patients with Neurofibromatosis 1.
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Non-replication of an association of Apolipoprotein E2 with sinistrality
Brian J. Piper,Alia L. Yasen,Amy E Taylor,Jonatan R. Ruiz,J. William Gaynor,Catherine A. Dayger,Marcela González-Gross,Oh D. Kwon,Lars-Göran Nilsson,Ian N. M. Day,Jacob Raber,Jeremy K. Miller +11 more
TL;DR: This study was unable to replicate this association in young adults and a meta-analysis of nine other datasets failed to find an over-representation of ϵ2 among left-handers indicating that this earlier outcome was most likely a statistical artefact.