Mihaela Iordanova

Affiliations: 
Psychology Concordia University (Canada), Montreal, QC, Canada 
Area:
Behavioural Neuroscience
Google:
"Mihaela Iordanova"
Mean distance: 14.29 (cluster 19)
 
SNBCP
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Esber GR, Usypchuk A, Saini S, et al. (2023) OFC neurons do not represent the negative value of a conditioned inhibitor. Neurobiology of Learning and Memory. 107869
Lay BPP, Koya E, Hope BT, et al. (2022) The Recruitment of a Neuronal Ensemble in the Central Nucleus of the Amygdala During the First Extinction Episode Has Persistent Effects on Extinction Expression. Biological Psychiatry
Lay BPP, Choudhury R, Esber GR, et al. (2022) Correction to: Persistent disruption of overexpectation learning after inactivation of the lateral orbitofrontal cortex in male rats. Psychopharmacology
Lay BPP, Choudhury R, Esber GR, et al. (2022) Experimental chambers Persistent disruption of overexpectation learning after inactivation of the lateral orbitofrontal cortex in male rats. Psychopharmacology
Gostolupce D, Lay BPP, Maes EJP, et al. (2022) Understanding Associative Learning Through Higher-Order Conditioning. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. 16: 845616
Kang M, Reverte I, Volz S, et al. (2021) Agency rescues competition for credit assignment among predictive cues from adverse learning conditions. Scientific Reports. 11: 16187
Gostolupce D, Iordanova MD, Lay BPP. (2021) Mechanisms of higher-order learning in the amygdala. Behavioural Brain Research. 113435
Iordanova MD, Yau JO, McDannald MA, et al. (2021) Neural substrates of appetitive and aversive prediction error. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
Manning EE, Bradfield LA, Iordanova MD. (2020) Adaptive behaviour under conflict: deconstructing extinction, reversal, and active avoidance learning. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
Lay BPP, Frate M, Lozzi M, et al. (2020) Female rats take longer than male rats to update reward expectancies when outcomes are worse than expected. Behavioral Neuroscience
See more...