Publications by authors named "Jennifer P Sturgill"

Probing for spatial cognitive processes in model rodent species has a long history in the psychological literature, with well-established protocols and paradigms successfully revealing the mechanisms underlying spatial learning and memory. There has also been much interest in examining the ecological and evolutionary context of spatial cognition, with a focus on how selection has molded spatial cognitive abilities in nonmodel species, how spatial cognitive traits vary across species, the neural mechanisms underlying spatial cognitive abilities, and the fitness outcomes of spatial cognition. Behavioral ecologists have been able to take advantage of paradigms from experimental psychology's rich history of spatial cognitive testing for use in nonmodel species.

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A phytochemical investigation of Abuta rufescens was performed to authenticate plant material reported previously and to assess the cytotoxicity of the alkaloids obtained from the plant. Three alkaloids which have not previously been reported from this species, two phenolic (subsessiline, an oxoaporphine, and telitoxine, an azafluoranthene) and one non-phenolic (isoimerubrine, a tropoloisoquinoline), were isolated and identified. These alkaloids, along with others previously isolated from this and another Abuta species (grandirubrine, a tropoloisoquinoline), were evaluated for cytotoxic activity against several human cancer cell lines (HCT-116 colon adenocarcinoma, ACHN renal carcinoma, and A549 lung carcinoma).

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