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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Groman, Stephanie
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keywords Decision Making
overview Dr. Groman is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care at the University of Chicago. Her research program is investigating the neurobiological mechanisms of decision-making in normal and pathological states, with a particular interest in addiction. Her lab integrates behavioral paradigms with computational analyses, neuroimaging approaches, systems-level manipulations, and molecular analyses in rodents to generate mechanistic links between genes, signaling mechanisms, and behavior that can help us understand the pathology of addiction.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Groman, Stephanie
Item TypeName
Academic Article Behavioral characteristics and neural mechanisms mediating performance in a rodent version of the Balloon Analog Risk Task.
Academic Article Neurochemical and Behavioral Dissections of Decision-Making in a Rodent Multistage Task.
Academic Article Chronic Exposure to Methamphetamine Disrupts Reinforcement-Based Decision Making in Rats.
Academic Article Dopamine D3 Receptor Availability Is Associated with Inflexible Decision Making.
Academic Article Reinforcement learning detuned in addiction: integrative and translational approaches.
Academic Article Dysregulation of Decision Making Related to Metabotropic Glutamate 5, but Not Midbrain D3, Receptor Availability Following Cocaine Self-administration in Rats.
Academic Article Model-Free and Model-Based Influences in Addiction-Related Behaviors.
Academic Article The Neurobiology of Impulsive Decision-Making and Reinforcement Learning in Nonhuman Animals.
Academic Article Hypofrontality and Posterior Hyperactivity in Early Schizophrenia: Imaging and Behavior in a Preclinical Model.
Academic Article Model-Based Control in Dimensional Psychiatry.
Academic Article Introducing the PLOS ONE Collection on the neuroscience of reward and decision making.
Academic Article Adolescent reinforcement-learning trajectories predict cocaine-taking behaviors in adult male and female rats.
Grant Genomic mechanisms of decision-making and opioid use trajectories in the rat
Grant Circuit-level neurodevelopmental trajectories of decision-making computations across adolescence
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  • Decision Making