戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 ative to each other (with minimal effects of sniff).
2 r information up to approximately 0.5 s (2-6 sniffs).
3 o less than 150ms--the timescale of a single sniff.
4 rmation elephants gain from seeing periscope-sniff.
5 ecules reaching different receptors during a sniff.
6 rmation was gained from seeing the periscope-sniff.
7  to attended sniffs as opposed to unattended sniffs.
8  clean air, the other focusing on odor-laden sniffs.
9  motor component of olfaction--that is, they sniffed.
10 onsistent with passive respiration or active sniffing.
11 >5 Hz) respiration typically associated with sniffing.
12  turn may regulate odorant perception during sniffing.
13 re during low (2Hz) and high (5Hz) frequency sniffing.
14 tween the two odorants during high-frequency sniffing.
15 ntation further by the dynamic regulation of sniffing.
16 cells appear to be tuned to the frequency of sniffing.
17 ules along the olfactory air channels during sniffing.
18 ses during sleep, sleeping does not preclude sniffing.
19  presented with acetic acid awakened without sniffing.
20 ehavioral activity, specifically rearing and sniffing.
21  of behavioral significance during olfactory sniffing.
22 en by the olfactory bulb at the frequency of sniffing.
23 detection by a factor of up to 18 for active sniffing.
24  and respiration is superimposed by bouts of sniffing.
25 t HFO were coupled to "fast" theta frequency sniffing.
26 s contrasted with eight normal subjects (Pdi(sniff), 111.77 +/- 13.35 cm H(2)O) of similar age.
27  diaphragm weakness of varying severity (Pdi(sniff), 31.74 +/- 3.75 cm H(2)O) as contrasted with eigh
28 representation in OT is visible in the first sniff (50-100 ms) of an odor on each trial, and precedes
29 5 versus 56 +/- 29 cm H2O, p < 0.01; Pdi(max sniff), 71 +/- 7 versus 46 +/- 27 cm H2O, p < 0.01; Pdi(
30                                              Sniffing, a behavior that enhances detection and localiz
31                      Mammals sample odors by sniffing, a complex behavior that controls odorant acces
32                                              Sniffing, a high-frequency, highly rhythmic inhalation a
33                             The relevance of sniffing ability to olfaction and a possible role of inc
34 niffing, demonstrating significantly reduced sniff airflow rate (P < 0.01) and volume (P < 0.002).
35                      Subjects approached and sniffed all odors equally but preferentially licked prey
36 r social interactions (including ano-genital sniffs, allogrooming, and crawl-under/over behaviors) th
37                                              Sniffing allows animals to make odor-guided decisions wi
38                               No measures of sniffing among interacting animals are available, howeve
39  SR tasks utilize the tendency for a male to sniff and interact with a novel individual more than a f
40 particular prepotent CS and to energetically sniff and nibble it in a nearly frenzied consummatory ma
41  also measured in six asthmatics, using both sniff and partially occluded airway technique.
42 that included decreased play, reduced social sniffing and allogrooming, and less aggressive behavior.
43            In an effort to determine whether sniffing and arousal are dissociable, dimethyl disulfide
44 , towards both males and females, as well as sniffing and close investigation.
45 of operation with the artificial nose-active sniffing and continuous inspiration-and demonstrated an
46 indicate that ghrelin stimulates exploratory sniffing and increases olfactory sensitivity, presumably
47 evented ketamine-dependent increases in fast sniffing and instead HFO coupling to slower basal respir
48 s that were alloparental showed increases in sniffing and latencies to lick and huddle.
49 red behaviors (in control kittens) including Sniffing and Licking (increased), and Grooming (decrease
50 ol exposure results in a tuned unconditioned sniffing and neurophysiological olfactory response to et
51   Whisking is thought to be coordinated with sniffing and normal respiratory behavior, but the precis
52 ta suggest an unexpected functional role for sniffing and show that sensory codes can be transformed
53 esponses were highly conserved between rapid sniffing and slow breathing.
54 t complements past studies on the locking of sniffing and the theta-rhythm as well as the relation of
55 nimal cranes and explores is phase-locked to sniffing and to movement of the nose.
56                     Our results suggest that sniffing and whisking may be under the control of interd
57                 During bouts of exploration, sniffing and whisking showed strong one-to-one phase loc
58                                              Sniffing and whisking typify the exploratory behavior of
59     Here we studied the coordination between sniffing and whisking, the motor processes in rodents th
60  the theta-rhythm as well as the relation of sniffing and whisking.
61 e how these oscillators synergize to control sniffing and whisking.
62 alternative choice (TAC) tasks need only 1-2 sniffs and do not increase performance with longer sampl
63 g maximum static inspiratory efforts (Pdimax sniff) and bilateral supramaximal electrophrenic twitch
64 minating the early odor sampling period (2-4 sniffs) and beta dominating later.
65 n that can be decoded within 110-518 ms of a sniff, and maximally within the theta frequency band.
66 erence, we assessed willingness to approach, sniff, and taste novel foods, and the duration of freeze
67                   The DA-/- mice approached, sniffed, and chewed food during this second period of ac
68 ffect on odor representations during natural sniffing, and behaving rats do not modulate flow rate to
69 im, novelty-suppressed feeding, female urine sniffing, and chronic unpredictable stress tests.
70 te well, they do so with lower airflow, more sniffs, and lower frequency of sniffing than HS-detectin
71 rmacological tools to show that whisking and sniffing are coordinated by respiratory centres in the v
72                                 Whisking and sniffing are predominant aspects of exploratory behaviou
73 ts' ability to use a conspecific's periscope-sniff as if it were an ostensive pointing gesture enable
74 ions of the local field potential to signify sniffing as a sensorimotor process.
75 lfactory impairment in PD and further depict sniffing as an important component of human olfaction.
76 ubercle responded preferentially to attended sniffs as opposed to unattended sniffs.
77  for LS- vs 69 ms for HS-detecting rats) and sniff at lower frequencies (7.8 Hz for LS- vs 8.6 Hz for
78 erceptual function by monitoring odor-evoked sniffing behavior in a plethysmograph at one-, three- an
79  take advantage of this property, modulating sniffing behavior to manipulate airflow and thereby dire
80  to smell persisted in displaying reciprocal sniffing behavior, demonstrating the independence of thi
81                  High-frequency whisking and sniffing behaviors are not correlated.
82 se findings demonstrate that rodents utilize sniffing behaviors communicatively, not only to collect
83 ng behavior in rats, but not the licking and sniffing behaviors of a high dose (600 microgram/kg) of
84 odor discriminations that elicited different sniffing behaviors.
85 i.p.), without affecting the licking and the sniffing behaviors.
86 etection thresholds and enhances exploratory sniffing, both being related to food seeking.
87              Odorants encountered later in a sniff bout were encoded as the combination of that odora
88                                     Although sniffing bouts are the same duration for each group ( ap
89 voked response were consistent from sniff to sniff but varied across cells.
90  the background odorant during low-frequency sniffing, but were encoded as the difference between the
91 easured GDX females' odor-sampling behavior (sniffing) by monitoring intranasal pressure transients d
92 rimotor or theta cycle, suggesting that each sniff can be considered a snapshot of the olfactory worl
93 utely dissociated cortical astrocytes using "sniff-cell" approach and demonstrated that release is ve
94 nated orofacial behaviors such as breathing, sniffing, chewing, licking, swallowing, vocalizing, and
95  analysis, use of poppers, amphetamines, and sniffed cocaine as well as heavy alcohol use in the prio
96 c drinks or use of poppers, amphetamines, or sniffed cocaine just before or during sex was independen
97 ted heavy alcohol use, 37% used poppers, 19% sniffed cocaine, and 13% used amphetamines.
98                                        Thus, sniffing controls an adaptive filter for detecting chang
99                  In terrestrial vertebrates, sniffing controls odorant access to receptors, and there
100 ls did not contribute to baseline rhythms or sniff-coupled odor-evoked inhibition.
101 ming of olfactory activation relative to the sniff cycle ('sniff phase'), we used optogenetics in gen
102  light-evoked inputs that are shifted in the sniff cycle by as little as 10 milliseconds, which is si
103  phase locking with multiple whisks within a sniff cycle or multiple sniffs within a whisk cycle-alwa
104 ation, onset times tiled the duration of the sniff cycle.
105 dly in response to sensory input during each sniff cycle.
106 th precise odor delivery synchronized to the sniffing cycle.
107 patients were also significantly impaired at sniffing, demonstrating significantly reduced sniff airf
108 abolished agonistic behaviors and reciprocal sniffing displays.
109 sis byproduct of cocaine, used to train drug-sniffing dogs).
110                            Rodents whisk and sniff during exploratory behavior to sample odorants and
111    An enhanced saliva specimen (i.e., strong sniff, elicited cough, and collection of saliva/secretio
112 ant changes in the temporal structure of the sniff-evoked MT cell response.
113                            The dynamics of a sniff-evoked response were consistent from sniff to snif
114                            In mammals, every sniff evokes a precise, odour-specific sequence of activ
115                             However, whether sniff flow rates shape odor representations during natur
116 al gamma dominating the first 250 ms of odor sniffing, followed by systemwide beta as behavioral resp
117  SPME and for Purge and Trap extracts, or by sniffing for the aqueous SAFE extract.
118  inputs encoding that odorant, whereas lower sniff frequencies caused little attenuation.
119 n the MT cell population across the range of sniff frequencies expressed during behavior.
120 of short-term plasticity at breathing versus sniffing frequencies alters cortical spike responses.
121 , low breathing frequencies and at increased sniffing frequencies is not known, nor is it known if th
122                                For inputs at sniffing frequencies, cortical neurons linearly encoded
123                             Here, we ask how sniff frequency affects responses of mitral/tufted (MT)
124 ory bulb varies dynamically as a function of sniff frequency and that one function of the postsynapti
125 by the intrinsic properties of MTCs; and (4) sniff frequency IGC activation in vivo generates persist
126 uration and shorter rise-time spike burst as sniff frequency increased, reflecting increased temporal
127                                   Increasing sniff frequency led to moderate attenuation of MT respon
128 n of activated glomeruli, independent of the sniff frequency used to sample the odorant, and similar
129 tude and temporal structure as a function of sniff frequency.
130 ed previously from awake animals and varying sniff frequency.
131  hormone conditions, females decreased their sniffing frequency as the urinary odor concentration dec
132 of a conspecific often elicits a decrease in sniffing frequency in the conspecific.
133                       OB-HPC coupling at the sniffing frequency is proposed as a mechanism underlying
134    Failure of subordinates to decrease their sniffing frequency shortened the latency for agonistic b
135  with subordinates reliably decreasing their sniffing frequency upon being investigated in the face b
136 ased odor detection thresholds and increased sniffing frequency.
137      Monkeys with red-green colour blindness sniffed fruits more often, indicating that increased rel
138           It has been proposed that a single sniff generates a "snapshot" of the olfactory world.
139 cation and orientation of the next periscope-sniff given.
140 unpleasant odors, suggesting that the act of sniffing has a functional role in creating of olfactory
141 -Botzinger complex, such that high-frequency sniffing has a one-to-one relationship with whisking, wh
142 ivity in the olfactory bulb (OB) relative to sniffing has been the object of many studies, the behavi
143                                              Sniffing, high-frequency respiratory bouts, and whisking
144                   These findings implicate a sniffing impairment as a component of the olfactory impa
145 timing of photoactivation in relation to the sniff in both the timing and the amplitude of their resp
146                                      Rodents sniff in response to novel odors, reward expectation, an
147                                         Pups sniffed in response to the highest concentrations of DMD
148  in the dorsal hippocampus (HPC) during odor sniffing in a two-odor olfactory discrimination task.
149 nificantly improved duration of female urine sniffing in mice that had developed helplessness.
150 rhaps the earliest hypothesis of the role of sniffing in olfaction arises from the fact that odorants
151 ound ketamine 20 mg/kg provoked "fast" theta sniffing in rodents which correlated with increased loco
152 ntations by imaging from ORNs during natural sniffing in the awake rat.
153 heta band (6-12 Hz) associated with directed sniffing in the OB and type 1 theta in the HPC.
154 he case for temporal integration over >/=2-6 sniffs in both tasks.
155  in Pdi during AE directly correlated to Pdi(sniff) in the patients (r = 0.69, p = 0.004).
156                            The source of the sniff-induced activation is the somatosensory stimulatio
157 strils of hamsters, where it was immediately sniffed into the nasal cavity.
158                       In olfaction, a single sniff is sufficient for fine odor discrimination but the
159 nced OB-HPC theta band coherence during odor sniffing is a significant decrease in lateral entorhinal
160                                              Sniffing is a specialized respiratory behavior that is e
161                                 We find that sniffing is accompanied by prominent lateral and vertica
162             Perhaps not independent of this, sniffing is commonly displayed during motivated [5-7] an
163  odorants during high-frequency respiration (sniffing) is a hallmark of active odorant sampling by ma
164                                              Sniffing, licking, and crouching behaviors were unaltere
165 ired design principle and making the device "sniff" like a dog.
166                                     Finally, sniff-like patterned activation of CCKergic TCs induces
167  of adaptation that occurs during repetitive sniffing-like inputs and may therefore play a critical r
168 nally modulated, in a homeostatic manner, by sniffing-like patterns of presynaptic activity.
169      We found that odorants evoked precisely sniff-locked activity in mitral/tufted cells in the olfa
170 tion for each group ( approximately 500 ms), sniffing longer and using more inhalations results in be
171  not rodents use temporal integration (i.e., sniffing longer to identify odors better).
172 s of two odors, rats needed to take only one sniff (&lt;200 ms at theta frequency) to make a decision of
173 atients with greater diaphragm weakness (Pdi(sniff) &lt; 30 cm H(2)O), abnormal respiratory muscle funct
174 mic ghrelin infusions significantly enhanced sniff magnitudes in response to both food and nonfood od
175 c recordings were performed during voluntary sniff maneuvers, normocapnic breathing, hypocapnia, and
176 ragmatic pressure with maximal sniff (Pdimax sniff), maximal oxygen consumption (V O2max), maximal mi
177 of MC odor representations by high-frequency sniffing may serve to enhance the discrimination of simi
178 ely proportional to odorant concentration in sniff mean airflow velocity, maximum airflow velocity, v
179 e COSAC mass spectrometer took a spectrum in sniffing mode, which displayed a suite of 16 organic com
180     In addition, water shrews preferentially sniffed model prey fish and crickets underwater by exhal
181 spects of mating behavior such as time spent sniffing, mounting, rooting and without contact.
182 tion was Tw Pdi, but the predictive power of sniff nasal inspiratory pressure was also excellent.
183                   By contrast, the action of sniffing nonodorized air induced significant activation
184                                Surprisingly, sniffing occurred even while pups remained asleep.
185                                 During rapid sniffing, odor inhalation triggered rapid and reliable c
186         We found that naive rats continue to sniff odorants vigorously for up to 3 minutes, much long
187 he olfactory bulb indicate that, within each sniff, odour representation is not only spatially organi
188 piratory mouth pressures (MIP, MEP), maximal sniff oesophageal (sniff P(oes)), transdiaphragmatic (sn
189                               High-frequency sniffing of an odorant attenuated inputs encoding that o
190 ted for chemoinvestigatory behavior (genital sniffing of females by male mice), lordosis (arched-back
191 s impairment, namely, that PD impairs active sniffing of odorants.
192 lomerular network, which is in turn tuned to sniffing of the animal in vivo.
193                                   Orthonasal sniffing of the hams was used to study how these substan
194 handshakes across gender, subjects increased sniffing of their own left non-shaking hand by more than
195 handshakes within gender, subjects increased sniffing of their own right shaking hand by more than 10
196 ss two experimental designs: one focusing on sniffs of clean air, the other focusing on odor-laden sn
197 25 microg) suppressed approach, nibbles, and sniffs of the prepotent CS.
198 which a rat prefers to approach, nibble, and sniff one of two reward-associated stimuli (its prepoten
199  that odors evoke transient bursts locked to sniff onset and that odor identity can be better decoded
200 e-dependent stereotypies such as locomotion, sniffing, or gnawing, while the remainder of behaviors w
201                                              Sniffing our hand after a handshake may allow us to dete
202                                   CMS P(di), sniff P(di) and per cent predicted SNP were significantl
203 ents without significant bulbar involvement, sniff P(di) had greatest predictive power [odds ratio (O
204 ophageal (sniff P(oes)), transdiaphragmatic (sniff P(di)) and nasal (SNP) pressure, cough gastric (co
205 sures (MIP, MEP), maximal sniff oesophageal (sniff P(oes)), transdiaphragmatic (sniff P(di)) and nasa
206 orced-choice detection paradigm during which sniff parameters (airflow peak rate, mean rate, volume,
207 monstrates that the automatic adjustments in sniffing patterns to pleasant and unpleasant odors may p
208  in transdiaphragmatic pressure with maximal sniff (Pdimax sniff), maximal oxygen consumption (V O2ma
209 tory deficit is unlikely due to difficulties sniffing, per se.
210              In addition, precise locking to sniff phase may facilitate ensemble coding by making syn
211  show that mice can behaviourally report the sniff phase of optogenetically driven activation of olfa
212 sponses were more tightly time-locked to the sniff phase than to the time after inhalation onset.
213 ory activation relative to the sniff cycle ('sniff phase'), we used optogenetics in gene-targeted mic
214 id of temporal dynamics-independently of the sniff-phase.
215 ted to often identify people by repetitively sniffing pieces of clothing or the body odor of family m
216 aphy coupled to both mass spectrometry and a sniffing port (GC-MS-O) were used for identification.
217 e ionization detector (FID) or an olfactory (sniffing) port.
218          Furthermore, a patient's ability to sniff predicted his or her performance on olfactory task
219          One natural gesture, the 'periscope-sniff' presumed to be used to enhance olfactory sampling
220  in VT directly correlated with baseline Pdi(sniff) (r = 0.59, p = 0.02) and Pdi(max) (r = 0.81, p =
221 nships across neurons robust to variation in sniff rate.
222 ent manner which is controlled by the chosen sniffing rate.
223 cells in anesthetized rats while reproducing sniffs recorded previously from awake animals and varyin
224 es shape odor representations during natural sniffing remains untested, and whether animals make use
225                                In mammals, a sniff represents the basic unit of odor sampling, yet ho
226                              We measured the sniff response repeatedly over time in patients with sev
227 rbal non-task-dependent measure known as the sniff response(8-11) to determine consciousness in patie
228 ient level, if an unresponsive patient had a sniff response, this assured future regaining of conscio
229 rols, fetal exposure altered: the adolescent sniffing response to ethanol odor consistent with the pr
230 ts with severe brain injuries and found that sniff responses significantly discriminated between unre
231                       In addition, olfactory sniff responses were associated with long-term survival
232 granule cells, was reliably recruited across sniff rhythms, and scaled in strength with excitation as
233  dominant rats, reflecting that decreases in sniffing serve as appeasement signals during social inte
234                                              Sniffing serves olfaction [13, 14], while whisking synch
235 ion [13, 14], while whisking synchronized to sniffing serves vibrissa-based touch [6, 15, 16].
236 nts the basic unit of odor sampling, yet how sniffing shapes odor representations remains poorly unde
237                                      Whether sniffing shapes the neural code for odors remains unclea
238                                           GC/SNIFFING showed that linalool oxide, 2-ethyl hexanol, ph
239 d transdiaphragmatic pressure during maximal sniffs (Sn Pes, Sn Pdi) and cervical magnetic phrenic ne
240  routinely engage in bouts of high-frequency sniffing spanning several seconds; the impact of such re
241             These data show that rats adjust sniff strategies as a function of odorant sorptiveness a
242 under conditions that prevented compensatory sniffing strategies, the patients also exhibited a contr
243           These data suggest that modulating sniff strength does not shape odor representations suffi
244 ird, we asked whether rats actively modulate sniff strength during an odor discrimination task.
245 hanges in flow rate can alter ORN responses, sniff strength has negligible effect on odor representat
246                     Second, we asked whether sniff strength shapes odor representations by imaging fr
247                      First, we asked whether sniff strength shapes odor representations in vivo by im
248    This review paper investigates artificial sniffing technologies used as chemical sensors for point
249  measure of anxiety, and in the female urine sniffing test (FUST), a measure of motivation and reward
250 (LH) paradigm-as well as in the female urine sniffing test (FUST), a measure of sex-related reward-se
251 ed in two different models, the female urine sniffing test and the saccharine preference test.
252 airflow, more sniffs, and lower frequency of sniffing than HS-detecting counterparts.
253 n, imagery of pleasant odors involved larger sniffs than imagery of unpleasant odors, suggesting that
254 ion, a healthy olfactomotor system generates sniffs that are (1) sufficiently vigorous and (2) invers
255                                Patients used sniffs that were concentration invariant.
256 gered pursuit behaviors (e.g., investigatory sniffing) that interfered with goal-directed lever press
257 positive correlation between the tendency to sniff the stimulus mouse and size of the CC relative to
258 nsmission correlates with more time spent in sniffing the anogenital area of stressed mice, and the a
259                       The average time spent sniffing the intruder was indistinguishable between the
260 actory tasks, i.e., the more poorly patients sniffed, the worse their performance on olfaction tests
261                                              Sniffing, the active control of breathing beyond passive
262 cs of receptor neuron activation by the same sniffs, the MT response was shorter and faster, reflecti
263                   We found that humans often sniff their own hands, and selectively increase this beh
264  young controls used concentration-dependent sniffs, there was a trend in that direction only for age
265 e mice, as indicated by reduced female urine sniffing time and saccharin preference, and behavioral d
266 al trace detection technology, dogs actively sniff to acquire an odor sample.
267 a sniff-evoked response were consistent from sniff to sniff but varied across cells.
268 y studied in a few cases, we have used patch sniffing to examine ATP release from Xenopus spinal neur
269 rmation from the outside world, with rodents sniffing to smell and whisking to feel.
270 se it is impossible for them to inspire air (sniff) to convey odorants to the olfactory epithelium.
271 risk sex practices and sharing of nasal drug-sniffing "tools" might be important HCV transmission rou
272 risk sex-practices and sharing of nasal drug-sniffing 'tools' might be important HCV transmission rou
273                     In multivariate analysis sniff trans-diaphragmatic and esophageal pressure, twitc
274                          Here we show, using sniff-triggered, dynamic, 2-D, optogenetic stimulation o
275 ors, including head up head bobbing, rearing/sniffing, turning, and grooming behavior.
276   Here I describe a mechanism for underwater sniffing used by the semi-aquatic star-nosed mole (Condy
277                   To test this, we monitored sniffing using a thermocouple in the nasal cavity and wh
278                         Furthermore, reduced sniff velocity predicted poorer detection thresholds in
279                          Finally, increasing sniff vigor improved olfactory performance in those pati
280 ested the effect of intentionally increasing sniff vigor on olfactory performance in 20 additional pa
281 aintains a feedback mechanism that regulates sniff volume in relation to odor concentration.
282 g on these cases, where making the periscope-sniff was apparently caused by seeing the first gesture,
283 lenged this view in suggesting that a single sniff was sufficient for optimal olfactory discriminatio
284                   This reciprocal display of sniffing was found to be dependent upon the rat's social
285                                              Sniffing was mediated by the olfactory system, as eviden
286 hen one elephant in a group gave a periscope-sniff, we recorded the location and orientation of the n
287               By measuring odorant-dependent sniffing, we gain a sensitive measure of olfactory funct
288  able to see the first signaller's periscope-sniff were often a considerable distance behind it, furt
289 ensities and the timing of input relative to sniffing were discriminated through one glomerulus.
290 vert impairments in the ability to engage in sniffing were evident in any group, suggesting preservat
291                                    Patients' sniffs were lower in overall airflow velocity and volume
292 ory system, as evidenced by the abolition of sniffing when the lateral olfactory tracts, were cut and
293 aled the external aerodynamics during canine sniffing, where ventral-laterally expired air jets entra
294 ly increased locomotion, head movements, and sniffing, whereas after 5.0 mg/kg behavioral responding
295 ot a static one, but rather evolves across a sniff, whereby for difficult discriminations of similar
296 g, rat, rabbit, dog and monkey indicate that sniffing (whether or not an odorant is present) induces
297  D1 antagonist inhibited apomorphine-induced sniffing/whisking, whereas other motor behaviors were un
298 inuous passive exposures by monitoring their sniffing with whole-body plethysmography.
299 ased locomotor activity, oral movements, and sniffing) with an onset ranging from immediate to 20 min
300 iple whisks within a sniff cycle or multiple sniffs within a whisk cycle-always at the same preferred

 
Page Top