Marijn van Wingerden

Affiliations: 
Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany 
Area:
animal cognition, decision making
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"Marijn van Wingerden"
Mean distance: 16.28 (cluster 17)
 
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Cyriel M.A. Pennartz grad student 2004-2013 Amsterdam
 (PhD in cognitive neuroscience)
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Publications

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Seidisarouei M, Schäble S, van Wingerden M, et al. (2023) 50-kHz ultrasonic vocalizations do not signal social anhedonia in transgenic DISC1 rats. Brain and Behavior. e2984
Herlehy RA, Lim S, Murray SH, et al. (2022) Effect of social instability stress in adolescence or adulthood on sensitivity to sucrose concentration in a social context in male and female Long-Evans rats. Developmental Psychobiology. 64: e22293
Seidisarouei M, Schäble S, van Wingerden M, et al. (2022) Social anhedonia as a Disrupted-in-Schizophrenia 1-dependent phenotype. Scientific Reports. 12: 10182
Seidisarouei M, van Gurp S, Pranic NM, et al. (2021) Distinct Profiles of 50 kHz Vocalizations Differentiate Between Social Versus Non-social Reward Approach and Consumption. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. 15: 693698
van Gurp S, Hoog J, Kalenscher T, et al. (2020) Vicarious reward unblocks associative learning about novel cues in male rats. Elife. 9
Margittai Z, van Wingerden M, Schnitzler A, et al. (2018) Dissociable roles of glucocorticoid and noradrenergic activation on social discounting. Psychoneuroendocrinology. 90: 22-28
Hernandez-Lallement J, van Wingerden M, Kalenscher T. (2016) Towards an animal model of callousness. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
Hernandez-Lallement J, van Wingerden M, Schäble S, et al. (2016) A Social Reinforcement Learning Hypothesis of Mutual Reward Preferences in Rats. Current Topics in Behavioral Neurosciences
Hernandez-Lallement J, van Wingerden M, Schäble S, et al. (2015) Basolateral amygdala lesions abolish mutual reward preferences in rats. Neurobiology of Learning and Memory
Hernandez-Lallement J, van Wingerden M, Marx C, et al. (2014) Rats prefer mutual rewards in a prosocial choice task. Frontiers in Neuroscience. 8: 443
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