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Skip to Search Results- 25Aging
- 6Vasoconstriction
- 3Exercise training
- 3Sympathetic nervous system
- 2Amygdala subnuclei
- 2Blood pressure
- 1Abdualla, Radya Y
- 1Aghamohammadi Sereshki, Arash
- 1Alaazi, Dominic A
- 1Bhullar, Khushwant Singh
- 1Caballero, Hebert S
- 1Chaudhary, Ketul R
- 4Department of Psychology
- 4Physical Education and Recreation
- 3Department of Medicine
- 3Neuroscience
- 2Centre for Neuroscience
- 2Department of Biochemistry
- 3Dixon, Roger (Psychology)
- 2Cummine, Jacqueline (Communication Sciences and Disorders)
- 1Ben Zvi, Ehud (History & Classics)
- 1Boliek, Carol (Communication Sciences and Disorders)
- 1Brown, Norman R. (Psychology)
- 1Darren DeLorey, PhD Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation; Rehabilitation Medicine
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Spring 2022
Background: Carbon monoxide alters cardiovascular function through its actions as a signaling molecule and by limiting oxygen delivery in the blood, favouring pro-dilatory and anti-constrictor effects within the vasculature. The impacts of mild carbon monoxide exposure on vascular responses to...
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Transition Theory: Evidence from Personal Transitions and Their Role in the Contents and Organization of Autobiographical Memories
DownloadFall 2017
The retrieval curve of autobiographical memories across the lifespan is not an Ebbinghaus forgetting curve; it peaks at adolescence and early adulthood. One mainstream theory of autobiographical memory uses “the self” to explain the reminiscence bump and other phenomena in the field. In this...
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Βeta-adrenergic receptors and opposition of evoked sympathetic vasoconstriction: Effects of sex and exercise training
DownloadFall 2016
Stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system evokes the release of neurotransmitters and produces vasoconstriction that is primarily mediated by the binding of norepinephrine (NE) to alpha-adrenergic receptors. However, NE may also bind to beta (β)-adrenergic receptors and produce vasodilation...