Kurt M. Fraser

Affiliations: 
University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United States 
Area:
Motivation, Reward, Dopamine
Website:
www.kurtmfraser.com
Google:
"Kurt Fraser"
Mean distance: 14.99 (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.

Fraser KM, Kim TH, Castro M, et al. (2024) Encoding and context-dependent control of reward consumption within the central nucleus of the amygdala. Iscience. 27: 109652
de Jong JW, Liang Y, Verharen JPH, et al. (2024) State and rate-of-change encoding in parallel mesoaccumbal dopamine pathways. Nature Neuroscience
Fraser KM, Chen BJ, Janak PH. (2023) Nucleus accumbens and dorsal medial striatal dopamine and neural activity are essential for action sequence performance. The European Journal of Neuroscience. 59: 220-237
Fraser KM, Collins VL, Wolff AR, et al. (2023) Contexts facilitate dynamic value encoding in the mesolimbic dopamine system. Biorxiv : the Preprint Server For Biology
Fraser KM, Kim TH, Castro M, et al. (2023) Encoding and context-dependent control of reward consumption within the central nucleus of the amygdala. Biorxiv : the Preprint Server For Biology
Fraser KM, Pribut HJ, Janak PH, et al. (2023) From Prediction to Action: Dissociable Roles of Ventral Tegmental Area and Substantia Nigra Dopamine Neurons in Instrumental Reinforcement. The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society For Neuroscience
Fraser KM, Janak PH. (2022) Basolateral amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex, but not dorsal hippocampus, are necessary for the control of reward-seeking by occasion setters. Psychopharmacology
de Jong JW, Fraser KM, Lammel S. (2022) Mesoaccumbal Dopamine Heterogeneity: What Do Dopamine Firing and Release Have to Do with It? Annual Review of Neuroscience
Ottenheimer DJ, Wang K, Tong X, et al. (2020) Reward activity in ventral pallidum tracks satiety-sensitive preference and drives choice behavior. Science Advances. 6
Ottenheimer DJ, Bari BA, Sutlief E, et al. (2020) A quantitative reward prediction error signal in the ventral pallidum. Nature Neuroscience
See more...