8 results match your criteria: "Wisconsin Regional Primate Center[Affiliation]"

The present study is part of a larger project that investigates the effect of caloric restriction on longevity in the rhesus monkey. The purpose of the present study was to document presbycusis and the effect of caloric restriction on presbycusis in monkeys. The control group had 35 monkeys allowed to eat freely and the caloric-restricted group (CR) had 33 monkeys with a 30% reduction in caloric intake.

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Ethanol administered orally has been shown to elicit a powerful response in rhesus monkey taste nerves. In this study we focused on the effects of ethanol on lingual non-gustatory receptors by recording from 70 single lingual nerve fibers. Of these 70 fibers, 54 (78%) responded to one or more concentrations of 0.

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The glossopharyngeal nerve (NG) mediates taste from the posterior part of the tongue. Here, we studied the effects of ethanol on the tongue in recordings from both the whole NG and individual taste fibers of the rhesus monkey, Macaca mulatta. The results show that the nerve activity increased at 0.

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In peripheral taste the coding mechanism remains an enigma. Among coding theories the "across-fiber pattern" argues that activity across fibers codes for taste, whereas the "labeled line" claims that activity in a particular set of fibers underlies a taste quality. We showed previously that chimpanzee chorda tympani taste fibers grouped according to human taste qualities into an S-cluster, responding predominantly to sweet stimuli, a Q-cluster, sensitive to bitter tastants, and an N-cluster, stimulated by salts.

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Mucosal transmission of virulent and avirulent lentiviruses in macaques.

AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses

April 1998

Wisconsin Regional Primate Center and Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 53706, USA.

Sexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus provides an efficient mode for virus spread and poses unique challenges to vaccine developers. Host and viral factors that affect transmission have been studied by epidemiological approaches in the human population, and some of these factors have been modeled with experimental infection of nonhuman primates. Basic principles have emerged regarding transmission and viral virulence.

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Data are presented from 48 taste fibers in chorda tympani nerves of 10 chimpanzees during taste stimulation with 29 stimuli. The results demonstrated a higher taste fiber specificity than in any other mammalian species reported; breadth of tuning equals 0.3.

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Reproductive suppression of females is found throughout the Callitrichids. However, in many species some evidence of ovarian activity is observed in subordinate females. Subordinate cotton-top tamarin females in our colony have never been observed to ovulate in the presence of a reproductive female.

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