NYU Dataset
Transcriptionally Defined Amygdala Subpopulations Play Distinct Roles in Innate Social Behaviors
Part of: Lin Lab |
Part of: Oxytocin U19 BRAIN Initiative |
UID: 10661
- Description
Social behaviors, such as mating, fighting, and parenting, are innate and supported by dedicated neural circuits. However, the molecular identities of these circuits and how they are established developmentally and shaped by experience remain unknown. This study demonstrate that medial amygdala cells originating from two embryonically parcellated developmental lineages have distinct response patterns and functions in social behavior in male mice. This dataset contains fiber photometry recording data, raw representative images, and behavior annotations. The publication also includes raw values associated with each figure.
Access
- Restrictions
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Free to All
- Instructions
- Fiber photometry recording data, raw representative images, and behavior annotations including custom-written MATLAB code used in the study can be downloaded from Zenodo. Source data for figures in the associated publication can be found on PubMed Central (PMC) under Supplementary Materials.
pCLAMP
- Grant Support
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Leon Levy Fellowship in Neuroscience/Leon Levy FoundationMathers Foundation/Mathers FoundationCaroline Fredricka Holdship Charitable Trust/PNC Charitable TrustsNYU Dean’s Undergraduate Research Fund/NYU College of Arts & ScienceCollegiate Research Initiative/New York University
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