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Neuroscience

D-Index
33
Citations
4346
World Ranking
9459
National Ranking
4000

Overview

Michael R. Hunsaker is affiliated with the University of California, Davis in the United States. Their academic career is connected primarily to this institution.

Available data does not include specific details on their recent papers, frequent co-authors, publication venues, book publications, or awards won.

There is no information on main fields or subfields of study, nor on main topics of work related to Michael R. Hunsaker. Consequently, no listings can be provided in these categories.

This profile reflects all currently available information without assumptions beyond the documented facts.

Best Publications

  • The role of hippocampal subregions in detecting spatial novelty.

    Inah Lee;Michael R. Hunsaker;Raymond P. Kesner

  • The role of the dentate gyrus, CA3a,b, and CA3c for detecting spatial and environmental novelty

    Michael R. Hunsaker;Michael R. Hunsaker;Jenna S. Rosenberg;Raymond P. Kesner

  • The operation of pattern separation and pattern completion processes associated with different attributes or domains of memory

    Michael R. Hunsaker;Raymond P. Kesner

  • The interactions and dissociations of the dorsal hippocampus subregions: How the dentate gyrus, CA3, and CA1 process spatial information.

    Naomi J. Goodrich-Hunsaker;Michael R. Hunsaker;Raymond P. Kesner

  • Dissociations across the dorsal–ventral axis of CA3 and CA1 for encoding and retrieval of contextual and auditory-cued fear

    Michael R. Hunsaker;Raymond P. Kesner

  • Evaluating the differential roles of the dorsal dentate gyrus, dorsal CA3, and dorsal CA1 during a temporal ordering for spatial locations task.

    Michael R. Hunsaker;Raymond P. Kesner

  • The role of CA1 in the acquisition of an object-trace-odor paired associate task.

    Raymond P. Kesner;Michael R. Hunsaker;Paul E. Gilbert

  • Dissociations of the medial and lateral perforant path projections into dorsal DG, CA3, and CA1 for spatial and nonspatial (visual object) information processing.

    Michael R. Hunsaker;Graham G. Mooy;Jesse S. Swift;Raymond P. Kesner

  • Dissociating the Roles of Dorsal and Ventral CA1 for the Temporal Processing of Spatial Locations, Visual Objects, and Odors

    Michael R. Hunsaker;Paige M. Fieldsted;Jenna S. Rosenberg;Raymond P. Kesner

  • Neuropathological, clinical and molecular pathology in female fragile X premutation carriers with and without FXTAS

    Flora Tassone;Claudia M. Greco;Claudia M. Greco;Michael R. Hunsaker;Andreea L. Seritan

  • Effects of ventral and dorsal CA1 subregional lesions on trace fear conditioning.

    Jason L. Rogers;Michael R. Hunsaker;Raymond P. Kesner

  • Evaluating the temporal context of episodic memory: the role of CA3 and CA1.

    Michael R. Hunsaker;Bart Lee;Raymond P. Kesner

  • The temporal attributes of episodic memory.

    Raymond P. Kesner;Michael R. Hunsaker

  • Dissociating the role of the parietal cortex and dorsal hippocampus for spatial information processing.

    Naomi J. Goodrich-Hunsaker;Michael R. Hunsaker;Raymond P. Kesner

  • Widespread non-central nervous system organ pathology in fragile X premutation carriers with fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome and CGG knock-in mice

    Michael R. Hunsaker;Claudia M. Greco;Marian A. Spath;Arie P T Smits

  • The medial and lateral entorhinal cortex both contribute to contextual and item recognition memory: A test of the binding ofitems and context model

    Michael R. Hunsaker;Victoria Chen;Giang T. Tran;Raymond P. Kesner

  • The CA3 subregion of the hippocampus is critical for episodic memory processing by means of relational encoding in rats.

    Raymond P. Kesner;Michael R. Hunsaker;Matthew W. Warthen

  • Neuropathologic features in the hippocampus and cerebellum of three older men with fragile X syndrome.

    Claudia M Greco;Celestine S Navarro;Michael R Hunsaker;Izumi Maezawa

  • Disconnection analysis of CA3 and DG in mediating encoding but not retrieval in a spatial maze learning task.

    Taylor Jerman;Raymond P. Kesner;Michael R. Hunsaker

  • The role of the dorsal CA1 and ventral CA1 in memory for the temporal order of a sequence of odors

    Raymond P. Kesner;Michael R. Hunsaker;Warren Ziegler

  • Ubiquitin-Positive Intranuclear Inclusions in Neuronal and Glial Cells in a Mouse Model of the Fragile-X Premutation

    H. Jürgen Wenzel;Michael R. Hunsaker;Claudia M. Greco;Rob Willemsen;Rob Willemsen

Frequent Co-Authors

Raymond P. Kesner
Raymond P. Kesner University of Utah
Rob Willemsen
Rob Willemsen Erasmus University Rotterdam
Robert F. Berman
Robert F. Berman University of California, Davis
Paul J. Hagerman
Paul J. Hagerman University of California, Davis
Randi J Hagerman
Randi J Hagerman University of California, Davis
Cynthia M. Schumann
Cynthia M. Schumann University of California, Davis
David G. Amaral
David G. Amaral University of California, Davis
Paul E. Gilbert
Paul E. Gilbert San Diego State University
Janine M. LaSalle
Janine M. LaSalle University of California, Davis
Owen Carmichael
Owen Carmichael Pennington Biomedical Research Center

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Related Online Degrees & Career Pathways

Exploring neuroscience can open doors to various online degrees and rewarding career pathways in mental health, therapy, and research. For those starting their journey, a psychology degree online is a popular choice. It provides foundational knowledge in human behavior, which is closely connected to neuroscience concepts.

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Each of these online degrees offers flexible study options, making it easier to balance academics with work and personal commitments. Whatever your path, neuroscience provides a strong foundation for many impactful and evolving careers.

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