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Social Stress in Female Sprague-Dawley Rats: Open Field
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Title Information:simple
Social Stress in Female Sprague-Dawley Rats: Open Field
Social Stress in Female Sprague-Dawley Rats: Open Field
Name:Personal
Zachary Yaple Role :Text(marcrelator)
creator
Zachary Yaple Role :Text(marcrelator)
creator
Name:Personal
Dr. Gail Leedy Role :Text(marcrelator)
creator
Dr. Gail Leedy Role :Text(marcrelator)
creator
typeOfResource
text genre
Powerpoint/PDF
Origin Information
Place
Laramie, Wyoming
University of Wyoming (keyDate="yes")
4/24/2010
Laramie, Wyoming
University of Wyoming (keyDate="yes")
4/24/2010
Language:Text
Physical Description
born digital
born digital
abstract
Social stress has been shown to affect development of certain psychological disorders, especially depression. For the purpose of the etiology of depression, experimenters attempt to use non-human animals to encounter behavioral changes in open field cage experiments. Using this behavioral technique in female Sprague-Dawley rats, researchers are able to show behavioral alterations that support the idea that females experience chronic stress, via depression from social stress. note
From - Undergraduate Research Day 2010 - Celebration of Research - Abstracts
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Undergraduate Research Day
Undergraduate Research Day
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Title Information
Undergraduate Research Day 2010
Undergraduate Research Day 2010
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http://hdl.handle.net/10176/wyu:552
http://hdl.handle.net/10176/wyu:552
accessCondition:useAndReproduction
http://digital.uwyo.edu/copyright.htm
Record Information
languageOfCataloging
:Text(ISO639-2B)
English :Code(ISO639-2B)
eng
English :Code(ISO639-2B)
eng