Publication Date
| In 2015 | 0 |
| Since 2014 | 1 |
| Since 2011 (last 5 years) | 4 |
| Since 2006 (last 10 years) | 6 |
| Since 1996 (last 20 years) | 8 |
Descriptor
| Entomology | 5 |
| Memory | 5 |
| Conditioning | 4 |
| Genetics | 4 |
| Stimuli | 4 |
| Animals | 3 |
| Associative Learning | 2 |
| Behavior | 2 |
| Biochemistry | 2 |
| Brain | 2 |
| More ▼ | |
Source
| Learning & Memory | 8 |
Author
| Gerber, Bertram | 8 |
| Tanimoto, Hiromu | 3 |
| Michels, Birgit | 2 |
| Pauli, Paul | 2 |
| Saumweber, Timo | 2 |
| Yarali, Ayse | 2 |
| Andreatta, Marta | 1 |
| Buchner, Erich | 1 |
| Chen, Yi-chun | 1 |
| Diegelmann, Soren | 1 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
| Journal Articles | 8 |
| Reports - Research | 7 |
| Reports - Evaluative | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Showing all 8 results
Gerber, Bertram; Yarali, Ayse; Diegelmann, Sören; Wotjak, Carsten T.; Pauli, Paul; Fendt, Marcus – Learning & Memory, 2014
Memories relating to a painful, negative event are adaptive and can be stored for a lifetime to support preemptive avoidance, escape, or attack behavior. However, under unfavorable circumstances such memories can become overwhelmingly powerful. They may trigger excessively negative psychological states and uncontrollable avoidance of locations,…
Descriptors: Pain, Learning Processes, Memory, Emotional Disturbances
Andreatta, Marta; Fendt, Markus; Muhlberger, Andreas; Wieser, Matthias J.; Imobersteg, Stefan; Yarali, Ayse; Gerber, Bertram; Pauli, Paul – Learning & Memory, 2012
Two things are worth remembering about an aversive event: What made it happen? What made it cease? If a stimulus precedes an aversive event, it becomes a signal for threat and will later elicit behavior indicating conditioned fear. However, if the stimulus is presented upon cessation of the aversive event, it elicits behavior indicating…
Descriptors: Memory, Fear, Rewards, Stimuli
Michels, Birgit; Chen, Yi-chun; Saumweber, Timo; Mishra, Dushyant; Tanimoto, Hiromu; Schmid, Benjamin; Engmann, Olivia; Gerber, Bertram – Learning & Memory, 2011
Synapsin is an evolutionarily conserved, presynaptic vesicular phosphoprotein. Here, we ask where and how synapsin functions in associative behavioral plasticity. Upon loss or reduction of synapsin in a deletion mutant or via RNAi, respectively, "Drosophila" larvae are impaired in odor-sugar associative learning. Acute global expression of…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Biochemistry, Genetics, Cytology
Schleyer, Michael; Saumweber, Timo; Nahrendorf, Wiebke; Fischer, Benjamin; von Alpen, Desiree; Pauls, Dennis; Thum, Andreas; Gerber, Bertram – Learning & Memory, 2011
Drosophila larvae combine a numerically simple brain, a correspondingly moderate behavioral complexity, and the availability of a rich toolbox for transgenic manipulation. This makes them attractive as a study case when trying to achieve a circuit-level understanding of behavior organization. From a series of behavioral experiments, we suggest a…
Descriptors: Entomology, Behavior, Expectation, Brain
Knapek, Stephan; Gerber, Bertram; Tanimoto, Hiromu – Learning & Memory, 2010
Odor-shock memory in "Drosophila melanogaster" consists of heterogeneous components each with different dynamics. We report that a null mutant for the evolutionarily conserved synaptic protein Synapsin entails a memory deficit selectively in early memory, leaving later memory as well as sensory motor function unaffected. Notably, a consolidated…
Descriptors: Memory, Olfactory Perception, Drug Use, Genetics
Kaun, Karla R.; Hendel, Thomas; Gerber, Bertram; Sokolowski, Marla B. – Learning & Memory, 2007
Animals must be able to find and evaluate food to ensure survival. The ability to associate a cue with the presence of food is advantageous because it allows an animal to quickly identify a situation associated with a good, bad, or even harmful food. Identifying genes underlying these natural learned responses is essential to understanding this…
Descriptors: Entomology, Genetics, Association (Psychology), Conditioning
Gerber, Bertram; Giurfa, Martin; Guerrieri, Fernando; Lachnit, Harald – Learning & Memory, 2005
Blocking occurs when previous training with a stimulus A reduces (blocks) subsequent learning about a stimulus B, when A and B are trained in compound. The question of whether blocking exists in olfactory conditioning of proboscis extension reflex (PER) in honeybees is under debate. The last published accounts on blocking in honeybees state that…
Descriptors: Perception, Stimuli, Conditioning, Control Groups
Michels, Birgit; Diegelmann, Soren; Tanimoto, Hiromu; Schwenkert, Isabell; Buchner, Erich; Gerber, Bertram – Learning & Memory, 2005
Synapsins are evolutionarily conserved, highly abundant vesicular phosphoproteins in presynaptic terminals. They are thought to regulate the recruitment of synaptic vesicles from the reserve pool to the readily-releasable pool, in particular when vesicle release is to be maintained at high spiking rates. As regulation of transmitter release is a…
Descriptors: Animals, Associative Learning, Role, Neurology

Peer reviewed
Direct link
