Tristan J Hynes

Affiliations: 
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Vancouver, BC, Canada 
Area:
Behavioural Neuroscience
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Publications

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Hynes T, Fouyssac M, Puaud M, et al. (2024) Pan-striatal reduction in the expression of the astrocytic dopamine transporter precedes the development of dorsolateral striatum dopamine-dependent incentive heroin seeking habits. The European Journal of Neuroscience
Chernoff CS, Hynes TJ, Schumacher JD, et al. (2023) Noradrenergic regulation of cue-guided decision making and impulsivity is doubly dissociable across frontal brain regions. Psychopharmacology
Hynes TJ, Chernoff CS, Hrelja KM, et al. (2023) Win-Paired Cues Modulate the Effect of Dopamine Neuron Sensitization on Decision Making and Cocaine Self-administration: Divergent Effects Across Sex. Biological Psychiatry
Zumbusch A, Samson A, Chernoff C, et al. (2023) Biological sex influences the contribution of sign-tracking and anxiety-like behavior toward remifentanil self-administration. Behavioral Neuroscience
Mortazavi L, Hynes TJ, Chernoff CS, et al. (2023) D Agonist during Learning Potentiates Cued Risky Choice. The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society For Neuroscience
Chernoff CS, Hynes TJ, Winstanley CA. (2021) Noradrenergic contributions to cue-driven risk-taking and impulsivity. Psychopharmacology
Betts GD, Hynes TJ, Winstanley CA. (2021) Pharmacological evidence of a cholinergic contribution to elevated impulsivity and risky decision-making caused by adding win-paired cues to a rat gambling task. Journal of Psychopharmacology (Oxford, England). 269881120972421
Hynes TJ, Hrelja KM, Hathaway BA, et al. (2021) Dopamine neurons gate the intersection of cocaine use, decision making, and impulsivity. Addiction Biology. e13022
Russell B, Barrus MM, Tremblay M, et al. (2020) GPR52 agonists attenuate ropinirole-induced preference for uncertain outcomes. Behavioral Neuroscience
Hynes TJ, Ferland JM, Feng TL, et al. (2020) Chemogenetic inhibition of dopaminergic projections to the nucleus accumbens has sexually dimorphic effects in the rat gambling task. Behavioral Neuroscience
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