Publications by authors named "Prickaerts J"

Many studies reported that chronic ethanol consumption leads to cognitive dysfunction in rodents. It has been suggested that the effects of chronic ethanol consumption resemble those of aging because of the behavioral and neurochemical similarities between the two processes. The present study examined the effects of a chronic ethanol treatment (20% aqueous solution) in Lewis rats on performance in three different tasks: the Morris spatial navigation task, a cone-field task, and a temporal discrimination task.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In order to model the dynamic properties of light adaptation processes in cat horizontal (H-) cells, the time course of the gain adjustment following changes in the mean illumination level was studied. H-cell responses were recorded intracellularly in the optically intact, in vivo, eye of the cat. The light stimulus consisted of two spots, a large background spot (8.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The spatiotemporal properties of cat horizontal (H-) cells were studied by recording the intracellular responses in the optically intact, in vivo, eye to sinusoidal gratings at a photopic mean illumination level. In order to investigate the linearity of spatial summation a "null test" was performed in which the responses to contrast reversal gratings were measured at different positions of the grating relative to the receptive field. Spatial and temporal transfer functions were measured using drifting sinusoidal gratings of variable spatial and temporal frequencies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many studies have shown that chronic ethanol consumption leads to a decline in learning and memory performance in rats and mice. However, other aspects of behavior have received less attention. Anxiety, for example, is known to be affected in alcoholics but has not been studied in animal models of ethanol consumption.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Morphometric determination of extracellular space in control and post-ischaemic reperfused rabbit myocardium was evaluated using two fixatives differing in their composition and total osmolality. Measurement of control extracellular space in an isotonic fixative (294 mOsm/kg water) was 20.8% and in a hypertonic fixative (1816 mOsm/kg water) was 22.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF