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Dr. Campeau received his Ph.D. in Psychology from Yale University
in 1993. He was awarded a Post-doctoral Research Fellowship
from the Medical Research Council of Canada, which he held
in the laboratory of Professor Stanley J. Watson at the Mental
Health Research Institute of the University of Michigan until
August 1999. He has since joined the Department of Psychology
at the Boulder Campus of the University of Colorado.
Dr. Campeau's main research interests revolve around the
determination of the brain systems responsible for the perception
of stress. Related problems such as how repeated stress influence
the general physical and psychological health and disease
of humans and animals are important foci of his research.
Another area of interest includes the general problem of learning
and memory, and how the brain achieves these very important
functions.
Selected Publications:
Campeaus, S., & Watson, S.J. (2000). Connections of some
auditory-responsive posterior thalamic nuclei putatively involved
in activation of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenocortical
axis in response to audiogenic stress in rats: an anterograde
and retrograde tract tracing study combined with Fos expression.
Journal of Comparative Neurology, 423: 345-357.
Campeau, S., Day, H.E.W., Helmreich, D.L., Kollack-Walker,
S., & Watson, S.J. (1998). Principles of psychoneuroendocrinology.
In C. Nemeroff (Ed.), The Psychiatric Clinics of North America.
Psychoneuroendocrinology (Vol. 21, num. 2), (pp. 259-276).
Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Co.
Day, H.E.W., Campeau, S., Akil, H., & Watson, S.J. (1997).
Distribution of alpha-1A, alpha-1B and alpha-1D adrenergic
receptor mRNAs in the rat brain and spinal cord. Journal of
Chemical Neuroanatomy, 13: 115-139.
Campeau, S., & Watson, S.J. (1997). Neuroendocrine and behavioral
responses and brain pattern of c-fos induction associated
with audiogenic stress. Journal of Neuroendocrinology, 9:
577-588.
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