T
Trevor W. Robbins
Researcher at University of Cambridge
Publications - 1184
Citations - 177352
Trevor W. Robbins is an academic researcher from University of Cambridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prefrontal cortex & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 231, co-authored 1137 publications receiving 164437 citations. Previous affiliations of Trevor W. Robbins include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Neural and cognitive correlates of the common and specific variance across externalizing problems in young adolescence.
Natalie Castellanos-Ryan,Maren Struve,Robert Whelan,Tobias Banaschewski,Gareth J. Barker,Arun L.W. Bokde,Uli Bromberg,Christian Büchel,Herta Flor,Mira Fauth-Bühler,Vincent Frouin,Juergen Gallinat,Penny A. Gowland,Andreas Heinz,Claire Lawrence,Jean-Luc Martinot,Frauke Nees,Tomáš Paus,Zdenka Pausova,Marcella Rietschel,Trevor W. Robbins,Michael N. Smolka,Gunter Schumann,Hugh Garavan,Patricia J. Conrod +24 more
TL;DR: Using direct measures of brain function, this study found evidence in both unique and disorder-specific perturbations in conduct disorder, substance misuse, and ADHD.
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The potentiation of conditioned reinforcement by psychomotor stimulant drugs. A Test of Hill's Hypothesis
TL;DR: A test of Hill's hypothesis that psychomotor stimulant drugs potentiate the effects of conditioned reinforcement (CR) was made, using a choice paradigm in extinction, with several doses of pipradrol, and certain results supported the existence of other factors which might contribute to the potentiation effect.
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Risk-Sensitive Decision-Making in Patients with Posterior Parietal and Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex Injury
TL;DR: The causal involvement of both the pPAR and vmPFC in risk-sensitive choice are demonstrated and distinguishable roles of these areas in probability processing and risk appetite are indicated.
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Unilateral lesions of the dorsal striatum in rats disrupt responding in egocentric space
Peter J. Brasted,Trevor Humby,Stephen B. Dunnett,Stephen B. Dunnett,Trevor W. Robbins,Trevor W. Robbins +5 more
TL;DR: Postoperatively, lesioned animals were impaired when performing the task on the side contralateral to the lesion, and additional postoperative challenges showed this response deficit to be defined in egocentric coordinates, with the severest response deficits for the mostcontralateral locations.
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Doubly dissociable effects of median- and dorsal-raphé lesions on the performance of the five-choice serial reaction time test of attention in rats
TL;DR: The similarity of the effects following global forebrain 5-HT depletion and the selective DRN lesion suggests that the 5-ht projections of the DRN rather than the MRN may play an important role in impulsive behaviour following 5- HT depletion.