نتایج جستجو برای: Food anticipatory activity (FAA)

تعداد نتایج: 1380115  

Journal: :iranian journal of veterinary research 2009
m. s. heydarnejad g. j. purser

food anticipatory activity (faa) was assessed in rainbow trout ( oncorhynchus mykiss ) in two small raceways using demand-feeding (t2) and hand-feeding (t2). the fish of both raceways were subjected to restricted feeding (rf) at two times in two places and the fish distribution and/or trigger actuation, total agonistic behaviour between fish, and swimming speed were measured. food anticipatory ...

G. J. Purser M. S. Heydarnejad,

Food anticipatory activity (FAA) was assessed in rainbow trout ( Oncorhynchus mykiss ) in two small raceways using demand-feeding (T2) and hand-feeding (t2). The fish of both raceways were subjected to restricted feeding (RF) at two times in two places and the fish distribution and/or trigger actuation, total agonistic behaviour between fish, and swimming speed were measured. Food anticipatory ...

2012
Breno T. S. Carneiro John F. Araujo

Mammals exhibit daily anticipatory activity to cycles of food availability. Studies on such food anticipatory activity (FAA) have been conducted mainly in nocturnal rodents. They have identified FAA as the behavioral output of a food entrained oscillator (FEO), separate of the known light entrained oscillator (LEO) located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of hypothalamus. Here we briefly re...

2013
Danica F. Patton Maksim Parfyonov Sylviane Gourmelen Hanna Opiol Ilya Pavlovski Elliott G. Marchant Etienne Challet Ralph E. Mistlberger

Restricted daily feeding schedules entrain circadian oscillators that generate food anticipatory activity (FAA) rhythms in nocturnal rodents. The location of food-entrainable oscillators (FEOs) necessary for FAA remains uncertain. The most common procedure for inducing circadian FAA is to limit food access to a few hours in the middle of the light period, when activity levels are normally low. ...

2017
Alex M Gavrila Suzanne Hood Barry Robinson Shimon Amir

Food anticipatory activity (FAA) refers to a daily rhythm of locomotor activity that emerges under conditions of food restriction, whereby animals develop an intense, predictable period of activity in the few hours leading up to a predictable, daily delivery of food. The neural mechanisms by which FAA is regulated are not yet fully understood. Although a number of brain regions appear to be inv...

2011
Ana C. Ribeiro Giovanni Ceccarini Christophe Dupré Jeffrey M. Friedman Donald W. Pfaff Allyn L. Mark

Obese, leptin deficient obob mice have profoundly decreased activity and increased food seeking behavior. The decreased activity has been attributed to obesity. In mice, we tested the hypothesis that leptin increases total locomotor activity but inhibits food anticipatory activity. We also sought to determine if leptin induced increases in total locomotor activity are independent of changes in ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2009
Kai-Florian Storch Charles J Weitz

When food availability is restricted to a particular time each day, mammals exhibit food-anticipatory activity (FAA), a daily increase in locomotor activity preceding the presentation of food. Considerable historical evidence suggests that FAA is driven by a food-entrainable circadian clock distinct from the master clock of the suprachiasmatic nucleus. Multiple food-entrainable circadian clocks...

2014
Christian M Gallardo Martin Darvas Mia Oviatt Chris H Chang Mateusz Michalik Timothy F Huddy Emily E Meyer Scott A Shuster Antonio Aguayo Elizabeth M Hill Karun Kiani Jonathan Ikpeazu Johan S Martinez Mari Purpura Andrea N Smit Danica F Patton Ralph E Mistlberger Richard D Palmiter Andrew D Steele Leslie C Griffith

Daily rhythms of food anticipatory activity (FAA) are regulated independently of the suprachiasmatic nucleus, which mediates entrainment of rhythms to light, but the neural circuits that establish FAA remain elusive. In this study, we show that mice lacking the dopamine D1 receptor (D1R KO mice) manifest greatly reduced FAA, whereas mice lacking the dopamine D2 receptor have normal FAA. To dete...

2018
Antonio Aguayo Camille S Martin Timothy F Huddy Maya Ogawa-Okada Jamie L Adkins Andrew D Steele

Recent studies in mice have demonstrated a sexual dimorphism in circadian entrainment to scheduled feeding. On a time restricted diet, males tend to develop food anticipatory activity (FAA) sooner than females and with a higher amplitude of activity. The underlying cause of this sex difference remains unknown. One study suggests that sex hormones, both androgens and estrogens, modulate food ant...

2016
Danilo E. F. L. Flôres Crystal N. Bettilyon Lori Jia Shin Yamazaki

Rodents anticipate rewarding stimuli such as daily meals, mates, and stimulant drugs. When a single meal is provided daily at a fixed time of day, an increase in activity, known as food anticipatory activity (FAA), occurs several hours before feeding time. The factors affecting the expression of FAA have not been well-studied. Understanding these factors may provide clues to the undiscovered an...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید