L
Lisa A. Gabel
Researcher at Lafayette College
Publications - 33
Citations - 526
Lisa A. Gabel is an academic researcher from Lafayette College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dyslexia & Interface (computing). The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 31 publications receiving 490 citations. Previous affiliations of Lisa A. Gabel include Brown University & University of Connecticut.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Visual Experience Regulates Transient Expression and Dendritic Localization of Fragile X Mental Retardation Protein
TL;DR: It is found that FMRP levels increase in the cell bodies and dendrites of visual cortical neurons after as little as 15 min of light exposure, which suggests that F MRP plays a dynamic role in a distinct epoch of experience-dependent synaptic plasticity.
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Biophysical characterization and functional consequences of a slowly inactivating potassium current in neostriatal neurons.
Lisa A. Gabel,Eric S. Nisenbaum +1 more
TL;DR: The properties of IAs suggest that it should play a critical role in placing the voltage limits on the recurring episodes of subthreshold depolarization which are characteristic of spiny neurons recorded in vivo, but its effectiveness will vary exponentially with the level and duration of hyperpolarization.
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Progress towards a cellular neurobiology of reading disability
TL;DR: A hypothesis has emerged in which impaired neuronal migration is a cellular neurobiological antecedent to RD and the evidence for this hypothesis is critically evaluated, missing evidence is highlighted, and future research efforts are outlined that will be required to develop a more complete cellular neurobiology of RD.
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Dcdc2 knockout mice display exacerbated developmental disruptions following knockdown of doublecortin
Yu Wang,Xiuyin Yin,Glenn D. Rosen,Lisa A. Gabel,Sarah M. Guadiana,Matthew R. Sarkisian,Albert M. Galaburda,Joseph J. LoTurco +7 more
TL;DR: It is found that deficits in neuronal migration, and dendritic growth caused by RNAi of Dcx were more severe in Dcdc2 knockouts than in wild-type mice with the same transfection.
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Impaired detection of variable duration embedded tones in ectopic NZB/BINJ mice.
Ann M. Peiffer,Casey Dunleavy,Michael Frenkel,Lisa A. Gabel,Joseph J. LoTurco,Glenn D. Rosen,Roslyn Holly Fitch +6 more
TL;DR: The current results add further support to the association between focal cortical malformations and impaired auditory processing, and the notion that these auditory effects may occur regardless of the cortical location of the anomaly.