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Neuroscience

D-Index
50
Citations
11995
World Ranking
5666
National Ranking
2509

Research.com Recognitions

  • 1989 - William James Fellow Award, Association for Psychological Science (APA)
  • 1984 - Fellow of John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation
  • 1978 - APA Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Psychology, American Psychological Association
  • 1974 - Member of the National Academy of Sciences
  • 1963 - Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Overview

Philip Teitelbaum is affiliated with Dalhousie University in Canada. Their academic career has been recognized through multiple awards and honors by various scientific organizations and associations.

Notable awards received by Philip Teitelbaum include the William James Fellow Award from the Association for Psychological Science in 1989 and the APA Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Psychology granted by the American Psychological Association in 1978. They were also named a Fellow of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation in 1984.

Earlier recognition of their work came with election as a Member of the National Academy of Sciences in 1974 and being designated a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in 1963.

The documentation of Philip Teitelbaum's published output and specifics on research topics, fields of study, and frequent collaborators is not provided. Similarly, detailed records of recent papers, coauthors, and publication venues are unavailable in the source data.

Philip Teitelbaum remains an active researcher with ongoing affiliation at Dalhousie University.

Best Publications

  • Movement analysis in infancy may be useful for early diagnosis of autism

    Philip Teitelbaum;Osnat Teitelbaum;Jennifer Nye;Joshua Fryman

  • Further analysis of sensory inattention following lateral hypothalamic damage in rats.

    John F. Marshall;Philip Teitelbaum

  • Sensory Neglect Produced by Lateral Hypothalamic Damage

    John F. Marshall;Blair H. Turner;Philip Teitelbaum

  • Hypothalamic control of feeding and self-stimulation.

    Bartley G. Hoebel;Philip Teitelbaum

  • Movement Analysis in Infancy May Be Useful for Early Diagnosis of Autism

    Philip Teitelbaum;O Snat Teitelbaum;Jennifer Nye;Joshua Fryman

  • Sensory control of hypothalamic hyperphagia.

    Philip Teitelbaum

  • Weight regulation in normal and hypothalamic hyperphagic rats.

    Bartley G. Hoebel;Philip Teitelbaum

  • Morphine versus haloperidol catalepsy in the rat: a behavioral analysis of postural support mechanisms

    Marc De Ryck;Timothy J Schallert;Philip Teitelbaum

  • Random and food-directed activity in hyperphagic and normal rats.

    Philip Teitelbaum

  • Somnolence, akinesia, and sensory activation of motivated behavior in the lateral hypothalamic syndrome.

    David R. Levitt;Philip Teitelbaum

  • Excessive bracing reactions and their control by atropine and L-DOPA in an animal analog of Parkinsonism.

    Timothy J Schallert;Marc De Ryck;Marc De Ryck;Ian Q. Whishaw;Ian Q. Whishaw;Victor D. Ramirez;Victor D. Ramirez

  • Compulsive, abnormal walking caused by anticholinergics in akinetic, 6-hydroxydopamine-treated rats.

    Timothy Schallert;Ian Q. Whishaw;Victor D. Ramirez;Philip Teitelbaùm

  • Specific loss of the hypoglycemic control of feeding in recovered lateral rats.

    Unknown

  • Eshkol–Wachman movement notation in diagnosis: The early detection of Asperger's syndrome

    Osnat Teitelbaum;Tom Benton;Prithvi K. Shah;Andrea Prince

  • Regulation of food intake in the absence of taste, smell, and other oropharyngeal sensations.

    Alan N. Epstein;Philip Teitelbaum

  • Atropine stereotypy as a behavioral trap: A movement subsystem and electroencephalographic analysis.

    Timothy J Schallert;Marc de Ryck;Philip Teitelbaum

  • A proposed natural geometry of recovery from akinesia in the lateral hypothalamic rat

    Ilan Golani;David L. Wolgin;Philip Teitelbaum

  • Absolute behavioral taste thresholds in the rat.

    Soon Duk Koh;Philip Teitelbaum

  • The postures of catecholamine-depletion catalepsy: Their possible adaptive value in thermoregulation

    Timothy Schallert;Ian Q. Whishaw;Marc De Ryck;Philip Teitelbaum

  • The effect of amphetamine on forced drinking in the rat.

    Philip Teitelbaum;Peter Derks

  • Dissociation between learning and remembering in rats with lesions in the lateral hypothalamus.

    Myrna Schwartz;Philip Teitelbaum

  • A comparison of the eating in response to hypothermic and glucoprivic challenges after nigral 6-hydroxydopamine and lateral hypothalamic electrolytic lesions in rats.

    John F. Marshall;Philip Teitelbaum

Frequent Co-Authors

Sergio M. Pellis
Sergio M. Pellis University of Lethbridge
Vivien C. Pellis
Vivien C. Pellis University of Lethbridge
Timothy J Schallert
Timothy J Schallert The University of Texas at Austin
Ian Q. Whishaw
Ian Q. Whishaw University of Lethbridge
Victor D. Ramirez
Victor D. Ramirez University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Paul Rozin
Paul Rozin University of Pennsylvania
Henry Szechtman
Henry Szechtman McMaster University
Haim Einat
Haim Einat Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
Michael Potegal
Michael Potegal University of Minnesota
John F. Marshall
John F. Marshall University of California, Irvine

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