Heterotopic and homotopic classical conditioning of the baroreflex.

scientific article published in July 1999

Heterotopic and homotopic classical conditioning of the baroreflex. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1007/BF02688682
P698PubMed publication ID10534102

P2093author name stringDworkin S
Dworkin BR
P2860cites workInteractions between behavior and the cardiovascular systemQ34066352
Behavioral studies of Pavlovian conditioningQ39639384
New technique to completely isolate carotid sinus baroreceptor regions in ratsQ45220149
Selective autonomic blockades: effects upon classical conditioning of heart rate and lever-lift suppression in rabbitsQ48510831
Learning of physiological responses: I. Habituation, sensitization, and classical conditioningQ48925387
Dissociation of associative and nonassociative concomitants of classical fear conditioning in the freely behaving ratQ51190362
Learning of physiological responses: II. Classical conditioning of the baroreflex.Q52204344
Verification of skeletal activity in tibial nerve recordings: A reply to Roberts (1991)Q52235456
Autonomic control of heart rate and blood pressure in spontaneously hypertensive rats during aversive classical conditioningQ52291497
Classically conditioned heart rate and blood pressure in rats based on either electric shock or ammonia fumes reinforcementQ52303680
Conditional reflex activation of the sympathetic cholinergic vasodilator nerves in the dog.Q52335443
Vagal compensatory adjustment: Relationship to heart rate classical conditioning in rabbitsQ52336185
P433issue3
P304page(s)158-176
P577publication date1999-07-01
P1433published inIntegrative Psychological and Behavioral ScienceQ15762482
P1476titleHeterotopic and homotopic classical conditioning of the baroreflex.
P478volume34

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q51951405Learning and the wisdom of the body.
Q34020023Plasticity of cardiorespiratory neural processing: classification and computational functions
Q36663114Semantic classical conditioning and brain-computer interface control: encoding of affirmative and negative thinking.

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