Jaak Panksepp Estonian-American neuroscientist
Panksepp, Jaak, 1943-2017
Panksepp, Jaak, 1943-....
Panksepp, J.
Panksepp, Jaak
VIAF ID: 93923952 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/93923952
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a Jaak Panksepp ‡c Estonian-American neuroscientist
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Panksepp, J.
- 100 1 _ ‡a Panksepp, Jaak
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Panksepp, Jaak ‡d 1943-2017
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Panksepp, Jaak, ‡d 1943-....
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Panksepp, Jaak, ‡d 1943-2017
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (20)
5xx's: Related Names (7)
- 510 2 _ ‡a Bowling Green State University
- 510 2 _ ‡a Bowling Green State University ‡4 affi ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#affiliation ‡e Affiliation
- 551 _ _ ‡a Dorpat ‡4 ortg ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#placeOfBirth
- 510 2 _ ‡a Plenum Press
- 510 2 _ ‡a University of Massachusetts
- 510 2 _ ‡a Washington State University
- 510 2 _ ‡a ebrary, Inc
Works
Title | Sources |
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Affective neuroscience / Jaak Panksepp. - Oxford, 2005. | |
Affective neuroscience the foundations of human and animal emotions | |
The archaeology of mind : neuroevolutionary origins of human emotions | |
Can anthropomorphic analyses of separation cries in other animals inform us about the emotional nature of social loss in humans? Comment on Blumberg and Sokoloff | |
Cognitive Conceptualism-Where Have All the Affects Gone? Additional Corrections for Barrett et al. | |
Effects of intraaccumbens amphetamine on production of 50kHz vocalizations in three lines of selectively bred Long-Evans rats | |
The emotional foundations of personality : a neurobiological and evolutionary approach | |
Emotions and psychopathology | |
Evolution, early experience and human development : from research to practice and policy | |
Handbook of the hypothalamus | |
Hypothalamic regulation of energy balance and feeding behavior. 1974. | |
Oxytocin mediates acquisition of maternally associated odor preferences in preweanling rat pups. | |
The pharmacology of endorphin modulation of chick distress vocalization | |
The power of the word may reside in the power of affect | |
Preclinical modeling of primal emotional affects (Seeking, Panic and Play): gateways to the development of new treatments for depression | |
Primary emotional traits in patients with personality disorders | |
Prior morphine experience induces long-term increases in social interest and in appetitive behavior for natural reward | |
Prolactin and modulation of social processes in domestic chicks | |
The prolonged effects of naloxone on play behavior and feeding in the rat | |
The psychobiology of play: Theoretical and methodological perspectives | |
Psychology. Beyond a joke: from animal laughter to human joy? | |
Rats selectively bred for low levels of play-induced 50 kHz vocalizations as a model for autism spectrum disorders: a role for NMDA receptors | |
Reanalysis of feeding patterns in the rat | |
Reduced fear-recognition sensitivity following acute buprenorphine administration in healthy volunteers | |
Reduction of distress vocalization in chicks by opiate-like peptides | |
Regional brain cholecystokinin changes as a function of rough-and-tumble play behavior in adolescent rats | |
The relationship between self-stimulation and sniffing in rats: does a common brain system mediate these behaviors? | |
Repeated cocaine treatments induce distinct locomotor effects in crayfish | |
Resting-state functional connectivity of antero-medial prefrontal cortex sub-regions in major depression and relationship to emotional intelligence | |
The 'resting-state hypothesis' of major depressive disorder-a translational subcortical-cortical framework for a system disorder | |
Rethinking the cognitive revolution from a neural perspective: how overuse/misuse of the term 'cognition' and the neglect of affective controls in behavioral neuroscience could be delaying progress in understanding the BrainMind | |
The Riddle of Laughter | |
The role of brain norepinephrine in clonidine suppression of isolation-induced distress in the domestic chick | |
The role of emotional systems in addiction: a neuroethological perspective. | |
The Role of Nature and Nurture for Individual Differences in Primary Emotional Systems: Evidence from a Twin Study | |
The role of norepinephrine in feeding behavior | |
The role of nucleus accumbens dopamine in motivated behavior: a unifying interpretation with special reference to reward-seeking | |
SEEKING and depression in stroke patients: an exploratory study | |
The SEEKING mind: primal neuro-affective substrates for appetitive incentive states and their pathological dynamics in addictions and depression | |
Self-referential processing in our brain--a meta-analysis of imaging studies on the self | |
Sensory modulation of juvenile play in rats | |
The serotonergic puzzle-box of anxiety | |
Sleep as a fundamental property of neuronal assemblies | |
Sleep-waking patterns in cats after administration of fenfluramine and other monoaminergic modulating drugs | |
Social defeat, a paradigm of depression in rats that elicits 22-kHz vocalizations, preferentially activates the cholinergic signaling pathway in the periaqueductal gray | |
The social defeat animal model of depression shows diminished levels of orexin in mesocortical regions of the dopamine system, and of dynorphin and orexin in the hypothalamus | |
Social isolation effects on the "behavioral despair" forced swimming test: effect of age and duration of testing | |
Socially-induced brain 'fertilization': play promotes brain derived neurotrophic factor transcription in the amygdala and dorsolateral frontal cortex in juvenile rats | |
Stress-induced, glucocorticoid-dependent strengthening of glutamatergic synaptic transmission in midbrain dopamine neurons | |
Subliminal affect valence words change conscious mood potency but not valence: is this evidence for unconscious valence affect? | |
Suppression of feeding in cats following 2-deoxy-D-glucose | |
Suppression of food intake in diabetic rats by voluntary consumption and intrahypothalamic injection of glucose | |
Teoria emocji i popędów | |
Textbook of biological psychiatry | |
Tickling, a Technique for Inducing Positive Affect When Handling Rats | |
Tickling induces reward in adolescent rats | |
Tolerance in the depression of intake when amphetamine is added to the rat's food | |
Top-down versus bottom-up perspectives on clinically significant memory reconsolidation | |
Toward a cross-species understanding of empathy | |
Toward a general psychobiological theory of emotions | |
Toward a science of ultimate concern | |
Toward affective circuit-based preclinical models of depression: sensitizing dorsal PAG arousal leads to sustained suppression of positive affect in rats | |
Tractographic analysis of historical lesion surgery for depression | |
The trans-species core SELF: the emergence of active cultural and neuro-ecological agents through self-related processing within subcortical-cortical midline networks. | |
Ultra-Low-Dose Buprenorphine as a Time-Limited Treatment for Severe Suicidal Ideation: A Randomized Controlled Trial | |
Ultrasonic vocalizations as indices of affective states in rats | |
Ultrasonic vocalizations of rats (Rattus norvegicus) during mating, play, and aggression: Behavioral concomitants, relationship to reward, and self-administration of playback | |
Uncovering the molecular basis of positive affect using rough-and-tumble play in rats: a role for insulin-like growth factor I. | |
Use of tramadol in psychiatric care: A comprehensive review and report of two cases | |
Validation of a novel social investigation task that may dissociate social motivation from exploratory activity | |
The ventromedical hypothalamus and metabolic adjustments of feeding behavior | |
What is Basic about Basic Emotions? Lasting Lessons from Affective Neuroscience | |
What is neuropsychoanalysis? Clinically relevant studies of the minded brain | |
Why does depression hurt? Ancestral primary-process separation-distress (PANIC/GRIEF) and diminished brain reward (SEEKING) processes in the genesis of depressive affect | |
Why does separation distress hurt? Comment on MacDonald and Leary (2005). | |
Will better psychiatric treatments emerge from top-down or bottom-up neuroscientific studies of affect? |