J
Joseph P. Garner
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 130
Citations - 6609
Joseph P. Garner is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Autism & Population. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 122 publications receiving 5658 citations. Previous affiliations of Joseph P. Garner include University of California, Davis & Purdue University.
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Environmental standardization: cure or cause of poor reproducibility in animal experiments?
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a proof of principle based on data from a multilaboratory study on behavioral differences between inbred mouse strains, which suggests that environmental standardization is a cause of, rather than a cure for, poor reproducibility of experimental outcomes.
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Stereotypies and other abnormal repetitive behaviors: potential impact on validity, reliability, and replicability of scientific outcomes.
TL;DR: Far from increasing variability, enrichment may actually improve validity, reliability, and replicability by reducing the number of abnormal animals introduced into experiments, as in the specific example of abnormal repetitive behaviors (ARBs).
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Adult attachment and the defensive regulation of attention and memory : Examining the role of preemptive and postemptive defensive processes
TL;DR: Analysis of forgetting curves revealed that avoidant adults initially encoded less information about the interview than did nonavoidant adults, although avoidant and nonavoidants adults forgot the information they did encode at the same rate.
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Evidence for a relationship between cage stereotypies and behavioural disinhibition in laboratory rodents.
Joseph P. Garner,Georgia Mason +1 more
TL;DR: It is found that the cage stereotypies of captive bank voles also correlate with signs of altered response selection by the basal ganglia, the first evidence for a neural substrate of cage stereotypy.
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Intranasal oxytocin treatment for social deficits and biomarkers of response in children with autism
Karen J. Parker,Ozge Oztan,Robin A. Libove,Raena D. Sumiyoshi,Lisa Jackson,Debra S. Karhson,Jacqueline E. Summers,Kyle Hinman,Kara S. Motonaga,Jennifer M. Phillips,Dean S. Carson,Joseph P. Garner,Antonio Y. Hardan +12 more
TL;DR: Findings indicate that OXT treatment enhances social abilities in children with ASD and that individuals with pretreatment OXT signaling deficits may stand to benefit the most from Oxt treatment.