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Neuroscience

D-Index
33
Citations
4471
World Ranking
9456
National Ranking
3998

Overview

Bernard G. Schreurs is affiliated with West Virginia University in the United States. Their research spans multiple areas within medicine and neuroscience, focusing primarily on neurology, physiology, endocrine and autonomic systems, and molecular biology. The work involves exploring mechanisms related to neuroinflammation, neurodegeneration, and brain disorders, with specific attention to topics such as neuroscience of respiration and sleep, tryptophan and brain disorders, Alzheimer's disease research and treatments, health disparities and outcomes, migration, aging, and tourism studies, as well as global health workforce issues.

The following papers represent recent scholarly contributions by Bernard G. Schreurs:

  • Intermittent systemic exposure to lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammation disrupts hippocampal long-term potentiation and impairs cognition in aging male mice, 2022, Brain Behavior and Immunity
  • Health Disparities in Appalachian and Other Rural Communities, 2023, The International Journal of Aging and Human Development
  • Disruption of rat deep cerebellar perineuronal net alters eyeblink conditioning and neuronal electrophysiology, 2020, Neurobiology of Learning and Memory
  • Highlighting the value of Alzheimer's disease-focused registries: lessons learned from cancer surveillance, 2023, Frontiers in Aging
  • The Role of Cerebellar Intrinsic Neuronal Excitability, Synaptic Plasticity, and Perineuronal Nets in Eyeblink Conditioning, 2024, Biology

Bernard G. Schreurs collaborates frequently with several researchers, including:

  • Desheng Wang
  • Deidre E. O'Dell
  • Carrie A. Smith-Bell
  • Ezekiel A. Irewole
  • Logan Bays

Their work is often published in journals such as:

  • Neurobiology of Learning and Memory
  • Brain Behavior and Immunity
  • The International Journal of Aging and Human Development
  • Frontiers in Aging
  • Biology

Bernard G. Schreurs' main areas of study include:

  • Medicine
  • Neuroscience

Subfields of interest encompass:

  • Neurology
  • Physiology
  • Endocrine and Autonomic Systems
  • Molecular Biology
  • Biological Psychiatry

Prominent research topics addressed in their publications involve:

  • Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
  • Neuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms
  • Tryptophan and brain disorders
  • Alzheimer's disease research and treatments
  • Health disparities and outcomes
  • Migration, Aging, and Tourism Studies
  • Global Health Workforce Issues

Best Publications

  • Trace amounts of copper in water induce β-amyloid plaques and learning deficits in a rabbit model of Alzheimer's disease

    D. Larry Sparks;Bernard G. Schreurs

  • A functional anatomical study of associative learning in humans

    Susan E. Molchan;Trey Sunderland;A. R. McIntosh;Peter Herscovitch

  • Intracellular correlates of acquisition and long-term memory of classical conditioning in Purkinje cell dendrites in slices of rabbit cerebellar lobule HVI.

    Bernard G. Schreurs;Pavel A. Gusev;Daniel Tomsic;Daniel L. Alkon

  • Learning-specific differences in Purkinje-cell dendrites of lobule HVI (Lobulus simplex): intracellular recording in a rabbit cerebellar slice.

    Bernard G. Schreurs;Juan V. .anchez-Andres;Daniel L. Alkon

  • Lateralization and behavioral correlation of changes in regional cerebral blood flow with classical conditioning of the human eyeblink response.

    Bernard G. Schreurs;Anthony R. Mcintosh;Marcel Bahro;Peter Herscovitch

  • Pairing-specific long-term depression of Purkinje cell excitatory postsynaptic potentials results from a classical conditioning procedure in the rabbit cerebellar slice

    Bernard G. Schreurs;M. Matthew Oh;Daniel L. Alkon

  • Trace copper levels in the drinking water, but not zinc or aluminum influence CNS Alzheimer-like pathology.

    D L Sparks;R Friedland;S Petanceska;S Petanceska;S Petanceska;B G Schreurs

  • The effects of cholesterol on learning and memory

    Bernard G. Schreurs

  • DENDRITIC EXCITABILITY MICROZONES AND OCCLUDED LONG-TERM DEPRESSION AFTER CLASSICAL CONDITIONING OF THE RABBIT'S NICTITATING MEMBRANE RESPONSE

    Bernard G. Schreurs;Daniel Tomsic;Pavel A. Gusev;Daniel L. Alkon

  • Rabbit cerebellar slice analysis of long-term depression and its role in classical conditioning.

    Bernard G. Schreurs;Daniel L. Alkon

  • Kinetic and frequency-domain properties of reflex and conditioned eyelid responses in the rabbit.

    Agnès Gruart;Bernard G. Schreurs;Eduardo Domínguez del Toro;JoséMaría Delgado-García

  • Gene expression profiles during long-term memory consolidation

    Sebastiano Cavallaro;Bernard G. Schreurs;Weiqin Zhao;Velia D'Agata

  • Temporal primacy overrides prior training in serial compound conditioning of the rabbit’s nictitating membrane response

    E. James Kehoe;Bernard G. Schreurs;Peita Graham

  • US-US conditioning of the rabbit’s nictitating membrane response: Emergence of a conditioned response without alpha conditioning

    Bernard G. Schreurs;Daniel L. Alkon

  • Contraction of neuronal branching volume: an anatomic correlate of Pavlovian conditioning.

    D L Alkon;H Ikeno;J Dworkin;D L McPhie

  • Conditioning-Specific Modification of the Rabbit's Unconditioned Nictitating Membrane Response

    Bernard G. Schreurs;M. Matthew Oh;Chie Hirashima;Daniel L. Alkon

  • Rural-Urban Differences in Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Diagnostic Prevalence in Kentucky and West Virginia.

    Erin L. Abner;Gregory A. Jicha;W. Jay Christian;Bernard G. Schreurs

  • Temporal patterns of the rabbit's nictitating membrane response to compound and component stimuli under mixed CS-US intervals.

    Kehoe Ej;Graham-Clarke P;Schreurs Bg

  • Tumor Necrosis Factor‐α (TNF‐α), Interferon‐γ, and Interleukin‐6 but Not TNF‐β Induce Differentiation of Neuroblastoma Cells: The Role of Nitric Oxide

    Etsuro Ito;Kotaro Oka;Carlos Collin;Bernard G. Schreurs

  • Calexcitin: A signaling protein that binds calcium and GTP, inhibits potassium channels, and enhances membrane excitability

    Thomas J. Nelson;Sebastiano Cavallaro;Chu-Li Yi;Donna McPhie

  • Cross-modal transfer as a function of initial training level in classical conditioning with the rabbit

    Bernard G. Schreurs;E. James Kehoe

  • A High-Cholesterol Diet Increases 27-Hydroxycholesterol and Modifies Estrogen Receptor Expression and Neurodegeneration in Rabbit Hippocampus.

    Sylwia W. Brooks;Ava C. Dykes;Bernard G. Schreurs

Frequent Co-Authors

Daniel L. Alkon
Daniel L. Alkon West Virginia University
E. James Kehoe
E. James Kehoe University of New South Wales
Louis D. Matzel
Louis D. Matzel Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Anthony R. McIntosh
Anthony R. McIntosh Simon Fraser University
Etsuro Ito
Etsuro Ito Waseda University
Rachael L. Neve
Rachael L. Neve Harvard University
Daniel R. Weinberger
Daniel R. Weinberger Johns Hopkins University
John H. Freeman
John H. Freeman University of Iowa
Giorgio A. Ascoli
Giorgio A. Ascoli George Mason University

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