Skip to content
  • Home
  • Book Bag: 0 items (Full)
    • English
    • 日本語
    • 中文(简体)
    • 中文(繁體)
    • اللغة العربية
  • About
Advanced
  • Modulating chronic stress
  • Cite this
  • Text this
  • Print
  • Export Record
    • Export to RefWorks
    • Export to EndNoteWeb
    • Export to EndNote
  • Add to Book Bag Remove from Book Bag
  • Permanent link

Modulating chronic stress

Social rank differentially influences how male and female mice respond to chronic stress.

Bibliographic Details
Published in:eLife
Main Authors: Debra A Bangasser, Evelyn Ordoñes Sanchez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eLife Sciences Publications Ltd 2020-11-01
Subjects:
sex differences
stress
social behavior
social dominance
chronic mild stress
principal component analysis
Online Access:https://elifesciences.org/articles/63996
  • Holdings
  • Description
  • Similar Items
  • Staff View

Internet

https://elifesciences.org/articles/63996

Similar Items

  • What it takes to be at the top: The interrelationship between chronic social stress and social dominance
    by: Merima Šabanović, et al.
    Published: (2020-12-01)
  • Neonatal testosterone partially organizes sex differences in stress-induced emotionality in mice
    by: Marianne L. Seney, et al.
    Published: (2012-05-01)
  • Microglia reactivity is brain region and sex specific in the context of chronic stress
    by: Ariel Y. Zhang, et al.
    Published: (2025-09-01)
  • Chronic Unpredictable Mild Stress Model of Depression: Possible Sources of Poor Reproducibility and Latent Variables
    by: Dmitrii D. Markov, et al.
    Published: (2022-11-01)
  • Sex-dependent astrocyte reactivity: Unveiling chronic stress-induced morphological changes across multiple brain regions
    by: Ariel Y. Zhang, et al.
    Published: (2024-10-01)

Search Options

  • Search History
  • Advanced Search

Find More

  • Browse the Catalog
  • Browse Alphabetically
  • Explore Channels
  • Course Reserves
  • New Items

Need Help?

  • Search Tips
  • Ask a Librarian
  • FAQs