
Lin Tian
Articles
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Jan 22, 2025 |
chemistry-europe.onlinelibrary.wiley.com | Qian Chen |Lin Tian |Wei Ren |Xirui Zhang
Supporting Information As a service to our authors and readers, this journal provides supporting information supplied by the authors. Such materials are peer reviewed and may be re-organized for online delivery, but are not copy-edited or typeset. Technical support issues arising from supporting information (other than missing files) should be addressed to the authors.
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Oct 13, 2024 |
nature.com | Daniel Gibson |Ayano Matsushima |Cynthia Schofield |Patlapa Sompolpong |Kathy Tran |Lin Tian
AbstractWe recorded dopamine release signals in centromedial and centrolateral sectors of the striatum as mice learned consecutive versions of visual cue-outcome conditioning tasks. Dopamine release responses differed for the centromedial and centrolateral sites. In neither sector could these be accounted for by classic reinforcement learning alone as classically applied to the activity of nigral dopamine-containing neurons.
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Mar 25, 2024 |
sciencedirect.com | Lin Tian |Zhiyong Guo
More than 100 million tons of fibres are produced annually, a doubling compared with 20 years ago (Textile Exchange, 2021). Much of this production is used for textiles made of natural or synthetic yarns or mixtures, with the majority being either polyester (PES) (52%) or cotton (30%) (Textile Exchange, 2021).
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Feb 12, 2024 |
knowledge.insead.edu | Lin Tian
Economic models are often built on assumptions. One of the most fundamental of those is that firms are always going to behave rationally. In other words, organisations will make decisions that maximise profit, increase efficiency or reduce risks for their own firm. But do they really, and do they always do so in every situation?
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Jan 18, 2024 |
cell.com | Mai-Anh T Vu |Eleanor Brown |Michelle J Wen |Christian A Noggle |Eleanor Brown |Zicheng Zhang | +11 more
Highlights•A new customizable, targeted, and dense micro-fiber array approach for behaving mice•Measurements and manipulations of distributed neural dynamics over large 3D volumes•Modality-specific patterns of striatum-wide dopamine release in response to salient stimuli•Spatial mapping of a behavioral function via serially targeted striatum stimulationsSummaryNeural population dynamics relevant to behavior vary over multiple spatial and temporal scales across three-dimensional volumes.
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