Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are heterogeneous and complex neurodevelopmental conditions that urgently need reliable and sensitive measures to inform diagnosis properly. The Reading the Mind in the Eyes Task (or Eyes Test from now on) is widely used for this purpose. A recent study showed that subcategories of items of the children version of the Eyes Test could be especially discriminative to distinguish ASD and control children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Brain Res Protoc
January 1998
Many experimental designs require the chronic implantation of different elements destined to act as channels that facilitate the information conveyance between the brain and some external devices or vice versa. Electrodes for electrophysiological or electrochemical recording or brain stimulation, and guide shafts for drug administration or chemical monitoring of the extracellular space are the most common examples of channels serving those purposes. The stereotaxic implantation of one or more of those experimental tools in the same antero-posterior plane is relatively easy, but surgery is nonetheless more complicated when two or more elements have to be placed using totally different coordinates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article describes the construction of a functional quadruple fluid swivel with low propensity to leaking and low resistance to rotation. It was obtained through the addition of a fourth channel and some modifications performed on the rotary unit of a triple channel fluid swivel recently described. Those modifications included alterations of the Touhey-Borst adapter (Becton-Dickinson), and the development of a new method of fixation of the rotary tubes to the rotary unit of the swivel using nuts and screws.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlutamate release was monitored in the lateral hypothalamus and the nucleus accumbens during a meal using 30 s resolution microdialysis and capillary zone electrophoresis with laser-induced fluorescence. A significant increase in hypothalamic glutamate and a decrease in accumbens glutamate were observed. These results, added to previous pharmacological studies, suggest that glutamatergic synapses in the lateral hypothalamus and the nucleus accumbens might be involved in the control of feeding behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurochemical changes in the rat lateral hypothalamus during drinking were assessed in 20 min sampling intervals, using in vivo brain microdialysis. Water-deprived animals drank (11 +/- 1 ml) during the hour that water was available. Drinking was maximal (7.
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