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1 odels (novel object recognition and auditory sensory gating).
2 ies of the N40 potential, another measure of sensory gating.
3 in the genes that regulate these 2 forms of sensory gating.
4 S nicotinergic system that leads to abnormal sensory gating.
5 -nicotinic partial agonist effects) improved sensory gating.
6 reveal its role in promoting normal acoustic sensory gating.
7 nce: differences in inhibitory signaling and sensory gating.
8 as prepulse inhibition (PPI), which reflects sensory gating.
9 -16 as a previously undescribed regulator of sensory gating.
10 onally and mechanistically distinct forms of sensory gating.
11 tions including arousal, attention, mood and sensory gating.
12 g and have impairments in spatial memory and sensory gating.
13 tory of anxiety diagnoses had diminished P50 sensory gating.
14 eflects the underlying biological process of sensory gating.
15 sensitivity to nicotine-induced seizures and sensory gating.
16 pervigilance, attentional bias, and impaired sensory gating.
17 otic medications have normal P50 measures of sensory gating.
19 ssociated with less inhibition during infant sensory gating, a performance deficit mitigated by prena
22 ophysiological brain deficit related to poor sensory gating and attention in schizophrenia and other
23 y be beneficial to clinical populations with sensory gating and cholinergic abnormalities, including
24 have therapeutic value in restoring impaired sensory gating and cognitive deficits in schizophrenia a
25 f hSK3Delta led to deficits in attention and sensory gating and heightened sensitivity to a psychomim
26 ent of inhibitory neuron function related to sensory gating and increased attention and working memor
30 ., attention, memory, executive functioning, sensory gating and overall cognition) and promising safe
31 indicate a potential functional link between sensory gating and postural control, supporting future i
32 nd demonstrates in vivo efficacy in auditory sensory gating and, in an in vivo model to assess cognit
34 ransmission, improving speech understanding, sensory gating, and slow-wave sleep for a subset of elde
35 that serotonin regulates executive function, sensory gating, and social behavior and that attention d
37 rior alpha-band oscillations associated with sensory gating are involved in STM retention by particip
40 ontinued treatment exhibited deficiencies in sensory gating, as indexed by smaller P2; error-monitori
41 posed endophenotype of schizophrenia, namely sensory gating assessed by P50 suppression of the audito
43 e function of this interaction appears to be sensory gating, because inactivating the central, basola
47 arenicline (1) significantly reduced the P50 sensory gating deficit in nonsmokers after long-term tre
53 a parsimonious explanation for cognitive and sensory gating deficits in pathologies with impaired PV+
54 findings may reflect neural compensation for sensory gating deficits in psychotic major depression.
55 disorders, highlighting a potential role of sensory gating deficits in the pathophysiology of fibrom
58 l personality disorder may have trait-linked sensory gating deficits similar to those in patients wit
63 ts SOL, but not night awakenings, suggesting sensory gating differentially affects neural mechanisms
64 te a developmental cascade by which impaired sensory gating during a sensitive period of neonatal neu
65 he ipsilateral somatosensory cortex (iS1) to sensory gating during index finger voluntary activity.
70 ies of amygdala-cerebellum interactions, the sensory gating hypothesis posits that the gating mechani
71 to that observed in the PCP animal model of sensory gating impairment of schizophrenia, as well as a
73 d potential paradigm was used to examine P50 sensory gating in 85 schizophrenia patients (56 medicate
76 these findings, we hypothesize that altered sensory gating in nTS contributes to cardiorespiratory i
81 se inhibition, to the authors' knowledge P50 sensory gating in schizotypal personality disorder has y
82 omatosensory and motor cortex, contribute to sensory gating in the iS1 during voluntary activity in h
83 omatosensory and motor cortex, contribute to sensory gating in the iS1 during voluntary activity in h
85 lized to networks implicated in auditory P50 sensory gating, including the hippocampus and neocortex.
86 tics have been proposed to normalize the P50 sensory gating index in patients with schizophrenia.
91 its relevance, a process generally known as sensory gating, is crucial during sleep to ensure a bala
95 itory stimulation, an example of an auditory sensory gating mechanism involved in human psychopatholo
96 rder to investigate the relationship between sensory gating mechanisms of the P13 potential, the puta
99 wn differences among inbred mouse strains in sensory gating of auditory evoked potentials, prepulse i
100 s to the brain and/or signify differences in sensory gating of cardiac-related information in the ins
104 s study was to develop a clinically relevant sensory gating paradigm and to assess differences in bra
106 rom the nose, thus demonstrating a change in sensory gating potentially mediated by local inhibition
110 on of the gating deficit; and 3) P50 and M50 sensory gating ratios would predict neuropsychological m
111 SCZ) include cognitive deficits and impaired sensory gating represented by P50 inhibition deficits, w
112 TRN inhibition is considered critical for sensory gating, selective attention, and multimodal perf
115 rotects against an amphetamine disruption of sensory gating, suggesting that drugs which inhibit GlyT
117 us, thalamus, and prefrontal cortex during a sensory gating task with high face validity further supp
118 ay disrupt normal adult auditory processing, sensory gating, thalamocortical rhythmicity, and slow-wa
119 P50 suppression is an operational measure of sensory gating that can be assessed by averaging electro
120 om Palau, Micronesia, were assessed with P50 sensory gating to 1) test for replication of the associa
122 e on antipsychotic medication; five measured sensory gating using the P50 suppression response to a r
124 ighly prevalent in schizophrenia and affects sensory gating, we also assessed smoking behavior, cotin
125 heir first-degree relatives have deficits in sensory gating, with P50 ratios that are generally great
126 wever, for a developing nervous system, such sensory gating would be counterproductive if it impedes