Neil C. Schmitzer-Torbert

Affiliations: 
Wabash College, Crawfordsville, IN, United States 
Area:
Learning and Memory
Google:
"Neil Schmitzer-Torbert"
Mean distance: 15.18 (cluster 17)
 
SNBCP

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
A. David Redish grad student 2000-2005 UMN
 (The involvement of the rodent striatum in navigation.)
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.

Redish AD, Abram SV, Cunningham PJ, et al. (2022) Sunk cost sensitivity during change-of-mind decisions is informed by both the spent and remaining costs. Communications Biology. 5: 1337
Schmitzer-Torbert N. (2020) Mindfulness and decision making: sunk costs or escalation of commitment? Cognitive Processing. 21: 391-402
Schmitzer-Torbert N, Apostolidis S, Amoa R, et al. (2015) Post-training cocaine administration facilitates habit learning and requires the infralimbic cortex and dorsolateral striatum. Neurobiology of Learning and Memory. 118: 105-12
van der Meer MA, Johnson A, Schmitzer-Torbert NC, et al. (2010) Triple dissociation of information processing in dorsal striatum, ventral striatum, and hippocampus on a learned spatial decision task. Neuron. 67: 25-32
Schmitzer-Torbert NC, Redish AD. (2008) Task-dependent encoding of space and events by striatal neurons is dependent on neural subtype. Neuroscience. 153: 349-60
Masimore B, Schmitzer-Torbert NC, Kakalios J, et al. (2005) Transient striatal gamma local field potentials signal movement initiation in rats. Neuroreport. 16: 2021-4
Schmitzer-Torbert N, Jackson J, Henze D, et al. (2005) Quantitative measures of cluster quality for use in extracellular recordings. Neuroscience. 131: 1-11
Schmitzer-Torbert N, Redish AD. (2004) Neuronal activity in the rodent dorsal striatum in sequential navigation: separation of spatial and reward responses on the multiple T task. Journal of Neurophysiology. 91: 2259-72
Schmitzer-Torbert N, Redish AD. (2002) Development of path stereotypy in a single day in rats on a multiple-T maze. Archives Italiennes De Biologie. 140: 295-301
See more...