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John S. Yeomans

John S. Yeomans

D-Index & Metrics

Neuroscience

D-Index
49
Citations
7577
World Ranking
6040
National Ranking
351

Overview

John S. Yeomans is affiliated with the University of Toronto in Canada. Their work is rooted in an academic environment that supports a range of scientific inquiries and research activities.

Although specific details regarding their recent papers, including titles, years, and publication venues, are not available, the affiliation suggests engagement with diverse scholarly communities.

There is no detailed information on frequent co-authors or publication venues connected to their research, nor are there records of book publications or awards won.

Likewise, precise fields, subfields, or main topics of study related to John S. Yeomans have not been documented in the available data.

Given the limited explicit information on research output or thematic focus, the profile notes the scientist's position within an established institution known for a broad scope of academic disciplines.

Best Publications

  • The acoustic startle reflex: neurons and connections.

    John S. Yeomans;Paul W. Frankland

  • Brain stem circuits mediating prepulse inhibition of the startle reflex

    Markus Fendt;Liang Li;John S. Yeomans

  • A portrait of the substrate for self-stimulation.

    C. R. Gallistel;Peter Shizgal;John S. Yeomans

  • Tactile, acoustic and vestibular systems sum to elicit the startle reflex

    John S Yeomans;Liang Li;Brian W Scott;Paul W Frankland

  • Role of Tegmental Cholinergic Neurons in Dopaminergic Activation, Antimuscarinic Psychosis and Schizophrenia

    John S Yeomans

  • Behavioral methods for inferring anatomical linkage between rewarding brain stimulation sites.

    Shizgal P;Bielajew C;Corbett D;Skelton R

  • CBP Histone Acetyltransferase Activity Regulates Embryonic Neural Differentiation in the Normal and Rubinstein-Taybi Syndrome Brain

    Jing Wang;Ian C.G. Weaver;Andrée Gauthier-Fisher;Haoran Wang

  • Rewarding brain stimulation: role of tegmental cholinergic neurons that activate dopamine neurons.

    John S. Yeomans;Anuradha Mathur;Maria Tampakeras

  • Principles of Brain Stimulation

    John Stanton Yeomans

  • Both nicotinic and muscarinic receptors in ventral tegmental area contribute to brain-stimulation reward.

    John Yeomans;Marco Baptista

  • Ultrasonic vocalizations induced by sex and amphetamine in M2, M4, M5 muscarinic and D2 dopamine receptor knockout mice.

    Haoran Wang;Shuyin Liang;Jeffrey Burgdorf;Jurgen Wess

  • M5 muscarinic receptors are required for prolonged accumbal dopamine release after electrical stimulation of the pons in mice.

    Gina L. Forster;John S. Yeomans;Junichi Takeuchi;Charles D. Blaha

  • Cholinergic involvement in lateral hypothalamic rewarding brain stimulation

    John S. Yeomans;Ora Kofman;Virginia McFarlane

  • The absolute refractory periods of self-stimulation neurons

    Unknown

  • Quantitative measurement of neural post-stimulation excitability with behavioral methods

    Unknown

  • M5 muscarinic receptors are needed for slow activation of dopamine neurons and for rewarding brain stimulation

    John Yeomans;Gina Forster;Charles Blaha

  • Increased striatal dopamine efflux follows scopolamine administered systemically or to the tegmental pedunculopontine nucleus

    C.A Chapman;J.S Yeomans;C.D Blaha;J.R Blackburn

  • Excitability properties of medial forebrain bundle axons of A9 and A10 dopamine cells.

    J.S. Yeomans;N.T. Maidment;B.S. Bunney

  • Activation of Amygdala CholecystokininB Receptors Potentiates the Acoustic Startle Response in the Rat

    Paul W. Frankland;Sheena A. Josselyn;Jacques Bradwejn;Franco J. Vaccarino

  • Duplication of GTF2I results in separation anxiety in mice and humans.

    Carolyn B. Mervis;Joana Dida;Emily Lam;Nicole A. Crawford-Zelli

  • Midbrain pathways for prepulse inhibition and startle activation in rat.

    J.S. Yeomans;J. Lee;M.H. Yeomans;S. Steidl

  • Brain-Stimulation Reward Thresholds Raised by an Antisense Oligonucleotide for the M5 Muscarinic Receptor Infused near Dopamine Cells

    John S. Yeomans;Junichi Takeuchi;Marco Baptista;Donna D. Flynn

Frequent Co-Authors

Charles D. Blaha
Charles D. Blaha Mayo Clinic
Paul W. Frankland
Paul W. Frankland University of Toronto
Gina L. Forster
Gina L. Forster University of South Dakota
Martin R. Ralph
Martin R. Ralph University of Toronto
Sheena A. Josselyn
Sheena A. Josselyn University of Toronto
Franco J. Vaccarino
Franco J. Vaccarino University of Guelph
Steven R. Laviolette
Steven R. Laviolette University of Western Ontario
Jacques Bradwejn
Jacques Bradwejn University of Ottawa
Robert D. Hawkins
Robert D. Hawkins Columbia University
David L. Kaplan
David L. Kaplan Tufts University

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