Limitations in access to antipsychotic-naïve patients and in the incisiveness of studies that can be conducted on them, together with the inevitability of subsequent antipsychotic treatment, indicate an enduring role for animal models that can inform on the pathobiology of neuromotor abnormalities in schizophrenia and related psychotic illness. This review focusses particularly on genetically modified mouse models that involve genes associated with risk for schizophrenia and with mechanisms implicated in the neuromotor abnormalities evident in psychotic patients, as well as developmental models that seek to mirror the trajectory, phenomenology and putative pathophysiology of psychotic illness. Such abnormalities are inconsistent and subtle ...
Cognitive dysfunction is a core feature of schizophrenia. Growing evidence indicates that a wide var...
The modelling of neuropsychiatric disease using the mouse has provided a wealth of information regar...
Mouse models that recapitulate the full phenotypic spectrum of a psychiatric disorder, such as schiz...
In this review we consider the application of mutant mouse phenotypes to the study of psychotic illn...
Modelling negative symptoms in any animal model, particularly in mice mutant for genes related to sc...
The present series of review articles seeks to elaborate how current findings in mutant mice may inf...
Schizophrenia is a chronic, debilitating disorder with a complex behavioral and cognitive phenotype ...
Schizophrenia is a heritable disorder that may involve several common genes of small effect and/or r...
Recent clinical evidence for the effectiveness of new antipsychotic drugs that specifically target g...
Recent clinical evidence for the effectiveness of new antipsychotic drugs that specifically target g...
It is recognized that developing valid animal models is essential for the research on the neuro-biol...
Schizophrenia is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by positive, negative and cognitive imp...
Psychiatric symptoms are subjective by nature and tend to overlap between different disorders. The m...
Schizophrenia is a highly complex and heritable psychiatric disorder in which multiple genes and env...
Despite the obvious problems of modeling a disorder that is characterized by deficits in higher cogn...
Cognitive dysfunction is a core feature of schizophrenia. Growing evidence indicates that a wide var...
The modelling of neuropsychiatric disease using the mouse has provided a wealth of information regar...
Mouse models that recapitulate the full phenotypic spectrum of a psychiatric disorder, such as schiz...
In this review we consider the application of mutant mouse phenotypes to the study of psychotic illn...
Modelling negative symptoms in any animal model, particularly in mice mutant for genes related to sc...
The present series of review articles seeks to elaborate how current findings in mutant mice may inf...
Schizophrenia is a chronic, debilitating disorder with a complex behavioral and cognitive phenotype ...
Schizophrenia is a heritable disorder that may involve several common genes of small effect and/or r...
Recent clinical evidence for the effectiveness of new antipsychotic drugs that specifically target g...
Recent clinical evidence for the effectiveness of new antipsychotic drugs that specifically target g...
It is recognized that developing valid animal models is essential for the research on the neuro-biol...
Schizophrenia is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by positive, negative and cognitive imp...
Psychiatric symptoms are subjective by nature and tend to overlap between different disorders. The m...
Schizophrenia is a highly complex and heritable psychiatric disorder in which multiple genes and env...
Despite the obvious problems of modeling a disorder that is characterized by deficits in higher cogn...
Cognitive dysfunction is a core feature of schizophrenia. Growing evidence indicates that a wide var...
The modelling of neuropsychiatric disease using the mouse has provided a wealth of information regar...
Mouse models that recapitulate the full phenotypic spectrum of a psychiatric disorder, such as schiz...