Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Quintana GR" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Identification and comprehensive characterization of moral disapproval and behavioral dysregulation-based pornography-use profiles across 42 countries Bothe B; Tóth-Király I; Popova N; Nagy L; Koós M; Demetrovics Z; Potenza MN; Kraus SW; Ballester-Arnal R; Batthyány D; Bergeron S; Billieux J; Briken P; Burkauskas J; Cárdenas-López G; Carvalho J; Castro-Calvo J; Chen L; Ciocca G; Corazza O; Csako RI; Czakó A; Fernandez DP; Fernandez EF; Fujiwara H; Fuss J; Gabrhelík R; Gewirtz-Meydan A; Gjoneska B; Gola M; Hashim HT; Islam MS; Ismail M; Jiménez-Martínez MC; Jurin T; Kalina O; Klein V; Költo A; Lee CT; Lee SK; Lewczuk K; Lin CY; Lochner C; López-Alvarado S; Lukavská K; Mayta-Tristán P; Miller DJ; Orosová O; Orosz G; Ponce FP; Quintana GR; Quintero Garzola GC; Ramos-Diaz J; Rigaud K; Rousseau A; Scanavino MT; Schulmeyer MK; Sharan P; Shibata M; Shoib S; Sigre-Leirós V; Sniewski L; Spasovski O; Steibliene V; Stein DJ; Štulhofer A; Ünsal BC; Vaillancourt-Morel MP; Van Hout MC; Grubbs JB; 39945767
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Acute caffeine reverses the disruptive effects of chronic fluoxetine on the sexual behavior of female and male rats. González Cautela BV; Quintana GR; Akerman J; Pfaus JG; 33242109
PSYCHOLOGY
3 Conditioning of Sexual Interests and Paraphilias in Humans Is Difficult to See, Virtually Impossible to Test, and Probably Exactly How It Happens: A Comment on Hsu and Bailey (2020). Pfaus JG, Quintana GR, Mac Cionnaith CE, Gerson CA, Dubé S, Coria-Avila GA 32462414
CSBN
4 The non-aromatizable androgen dihydrotestosterone (DHT) facilitates sexual behavior in ovariectomized female rats primed with estradiol. Maseroli E, Santangelo A, Lara-Fontes B, Quintana GR, Mac Cionnaith CE, Casarrubea M, Ricca V, Maggi M, Vignozzi L, Pfaus JG 32087523
PSYCHOLOGY
5 Correction to: Differential disruption of conditioned ejaculatory preference in the male rat based on different sensory modalities by micro-infusions of naloxone to the medial preoptic area or ventral tegmental area. Quintana GR, Birrel M, Marceau S, Kalantari N, Bowden J, Bachoura Y, Borduas E, Lemay V, Payne JW, Cionnaith CM, Pfaus JG 31919562
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Behavior is the ultimate arbiter: An alternative explanation for the inhibitory effect of fluoxetine on the ovulatory homolog model of orgasm in rabbits. Quintana GR, Mac Cionnaith CE, Pfaus JG 31796602
CSBN
7 Effect of CS preexposure on the conditioned ejaculatory preference of the male rat: behavioral analyses and neural correlates. Quintana GR, Jackson M, Nasr M, Pfaus JG 30224554
CSBN
8 First sexual experiences determine the development of conditioned ejaculatory preference in male rats. Quintana GR, Guizar A, Rassi S, Pfaus JG 30224555
CSBN
9 Differential disruption of conditioned ejaculatory preference in the male rat based on different sensory modalities by micro-infusions of naloxone to the medial preoptic area or ventral tegmental area. Quintana GR, Birrel M, Marceau S, Kalantari N, Bowden J, Bachoura Y, Borduas E, Lemay V, Payne JW, Cionnaith CM, Pfaus JG 31359118
PSYCHOLOGY
10 The whole versus the sum of some of the parts: toward resolving the apparent controversy of clitoral versus vaginal orgasms. Pfaus JG, Quintana GR, Mac Cionnaith C, Parada M 27791968
CSBN
11 Do rats have orgasms? Pfaus JG, Scardochio T, Parada M, Gerson C, Quintana GR, Coria-Avila GA 27799081
CSBN
12 Effects of ovarian hormones on the emission of 50-kHz ultrasonic vocalizations during distributed clitoral stimulation in the rat. Gerson CA, Mac Cionnaith CE, Quintana GR, Pfaus JG 30690029
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Do rats have orgasms?
Authors:Pfaus JGScardochio TParada MGerson CQuintana GRCoria-Avila GA
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27799081?dopt=Abstract
Publication:
Keywords:
PMID:27799081 Category:Socioaffect Neurosci Psychol Date Added:2019-05-31
Dept Affiliation: CSBN
1 Department of Psychology, Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Concordia University, Montréal, QC, Canada; jim.pfaus@concordia.ca.
2 Department of Psychology, Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Concordia University, Montréal, QC, Canada.
3 Laboratory for the Biopsychosocial Study of Sexuality, Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montréal, QC, Canada.
4 Montréal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montréal, QC, Canada.
5 Centro de Investigaciones Cerebrales, Universidad Veracruzana, Xalapa, VER, México.

Description:

Do rats have orgasms?

Socioaffect Neurosci Psychol. 2016;6:31883

Authors: Pfaus JG, Scardochio T, Parada M, Gerson C, Quintana GR, Coria-Avila GA

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although humans experience orgasms with a degree of statistical regularity, they remain among the most enigmatic of sexual responses; difficult to define and even more difficult to study empirically. The question of whether animals experience orgasms is hampered by similar lack of definition and the additional necessity of making inferences from behavioral responses.

METHOD: Here we define three behavioral criteria, based on dimensions of the subjective experience of human orgasms described by Mah and Binik, to infer orgasm-like responses (OLRs) in other species: 1) physiological criteria that include pelvic floor and anal muscle contractions that stimulate seminal emission and/or ejaculation in the male, or that stimulate uterine and cervical contractions in the female; 2) short-term behavioral changes that reflect immediate awareness of a pleasurable hedonic reward state during copulation; and 3) long-term behavioral changes that depend on the reward state induced by the OLR, including sexual satiety, the strengthening of patterns of sexual arousal and desire in subsequent copulations, and the generation of conditioned place and partner preferences for contextual and partner-related cues associated with the reward state. We then examine whether physiological and behavioral data from observations of male and female rats during copulation, and in sexually-conditioned place- and partner-preference paradigms, are consistent with these criteria.

RESULTS: Both male and female rats display behavioral patterns consistent with OLRs.

CONCLUSIONS: The ability to infer OLRs in rats offers new possibilities to study the phenomenon in neurobiological and molecular detail, and to provide both comparative and translational perspectives that would be useful for both basic and clinical research.

PMID: 27799081 [PubMed]





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