José Felipe Esquivelzeta RabellKU Leuven | ku leuven · Neuro-electronics Research Flanders (NERF)
José Felipe Esquivelzeta Rabell
Doctor of Psychology
I combine systems neuroscience and psychophysiology to unravel brain circuits and behavior
About
7
Publications
993
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
205
Citations
Introduction
José Felipe Esquivelzeta Rabell currently works at the Neuro-electronics Research Flanders (NERF), University of Leuven. José Felipe does research in Neuroscience (behavior, optogenetics, electrophysiology, pharmacology, viral tracing). Their most recent publication is 'Spontaneous Rapid Odor Source Localization Behavior Requires Interhemispheric Communication'.
Publications
Publications (7)
In this issue, Gill et al. apply holographic optogenetic stimulation in the olfactory bulb to control select neuronal ensembles in 3D. This approach allows them to dissociate the contribution of temporal spike features and spike rate to stimulus detection.
Dopamine neurons mediate the association of conditioned stimuli (CS) with reward (unconditioned stimuli, US) by signaling the discrepancy between predicted and actual reward during the US. Some theoretical models suggest that learning is also influenced by the salience or associability of the CS. A hallmark of CS associability models is that they c...
Background:
Respiratory rate is an essential parameter in biomedical research and clinical applications. Most respiration measurement techniques in preclinical animal models require surgical implantation of sensors. Current clinical measurement modalities typically involve attachment of sensors to the patient, causing discomfort. We have previousl...
Navigation, finding food sources, and avoiding danger critically depend on the identification and spatial localization of airborne chemicals. When monitoring the olfactory environment, rodents spontaneously engage in active olfactory sampling behavior, also referred to as exploratory sniffing [1]. Exploratory sniffing is characterized by stereotypi...