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Viscoelastic Properties of the Rat Brain in the Horizontal Plane
Viscoelastic Properties of the Rat Brain in the Horizontal Plane

... Traumatic brain injury is a devastating societal problem that causes approximately 50,000 deaths along with  $76.5 billion in direct and indirect costs in the United States each year[1].  The progression of brain injury after a  traumatic event involves a complex array of pathological processes[2].  ...
Brain Development Article and Questions
Brain Development Article and Questions

... child’s earliest years can have effects that last a lifetime. Thanks to recent advances in technology, we have a clearer understanding of how these effects are related to early brain development. Neuroscientists can now identify patterns in brain activity that appear to be associated with some types ...
Mutual Interests, Different Lenses: Current
Mutual Interests, Different Lenses: Current

... on culturally variable language. Some sociologists thought he could have gone further into the social; Leslie Brothers did so in Friday’s Footprint: How Society Shapes the Human Mind (1977). At times this volume reads like a symbolic interactionist approach to neuroscience. Herein the material brain ...
From Nerve Cells to Cognition: The Internal
From Nerve Cells to Cognition: The Internal

... perceptual and motor processes. From these microelectrode studies we have been able to see that the mechanisms of perception are much the same in humans, monkeys, and even simpler animals. These cellular studies in monkeys also made it possible to identify the importance of different combinations of ...
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Document

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Attention and Consciousness
Attention and Consciousness

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Determinants of learning
Determinants of learning

... must rely on active listening, use open-ended questions 2- Structured interviews: use direct open-ended questions. 3- Questionnaires: use checklist 4- Observations: watching the learner perform a task is an excellent way of assessing a skill 5- Patient charts: physicians’ notes, nurses’ notes, ….etc ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

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PDF - 6 pages - Scholastic Heads Up

... teens may focus more on rewards and less on risks when making decisions—which can increase risks for using drugs. PET scans have shown how using drugs can cause changes in the way brain cells function.) 3. How might findings from brain research, such as the ABCD study, help doctors in their jobs? (D ...
Cells of the Brain
Cells of the Brain

... learn about the world around them and form memories of events that have taken place. Learning and memory formation alters the structure of the nervous system primarily by affecting the strength of particular synapses. Memories are stored in the brain in stages. Small pieces of new information are pr ...
Activity Overview Continued - The University of Texas Health
Activity Overview Continued - The University of Texas Health

... which helps control voluntary movement. Just behind this area, in the front part the parietal lobe, is the sensory area which also receives information about temperature, touch, pressure, and pain. The sensory and motor areas communicate with each other to control input of sensations from the body a ...
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Doc - Shaw Chiropractic Group

... Why do many whiplash injured patients report so much pain in the absence of objective findings? This is a question that has been asked by doctors, lawyers and judges since the beginning of whiplash history. Some people will tell you that our scientific methods are lacking in sensitivity to identify ...
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Psy I Brain and Behavior PPT 2016

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Your Brain

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Development of neuromotor prostheses
Development of neuromotor prostheses

... or decode this activity into an output signal and then couple that output to assistive devices or to the muscles as quickly and accurately, as the intact nervous system. The idea that such an NMP could be produced still seems to be at the realm of science fiction. However, recent advances of neurosc ...
大腦神經解剖與建置
大腦神經解剖與建置

... and sent to the appropriate cerebral centers for further processing. Through the hypthalamus 下視丘 control of the pituitary gland 腦下垂 體, it regulates hunger and thirst, plays a role in sexual and mating behavior, and controls the fight-or-flight response. It is also the source of posterior pituitary h ...
Surgery Intern Boot Camp: Pain Management
Surgery Intern Boot Camp: Pain Management

... Chronic Pain Patients Managing pain control expectations preop is helpful. Make sure that your patient understands that if their pain score is 8/10 prior to surgery, it won’t be 1/10 after surgery.  Help patients understand how side effects may limit the doses of opiates that we give them. ...
Transient Blindness after Minor Head Injury: A Case Report
Transient Blindness after Minor Head Injury: A Case Report

... of dizziness and complete loss of vision. On examination, his blood pressure and pulse were within ...
The impact of brain science on education
The impact of brain science on education

... The understanding of how the brain works in relation to maths is in its relative infancy. We do know that infants are born with a sense of numbers and by the age of three are demonstrating this by the way they point, count in order, use their fingers and link simple numbers to quantities. The resear ...
Visual field testing
Visual field testing

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Psychosurgery: Treating Neurobiological Disorders with
Psychosurgery: Treating Neurobiological Disorders with

... over the entire cortex of the dog brain. A relationship between emotion and brain structure was also illustrated by Goltz et al. who described the calming effect of temporal cortex removal in dogs [10]. Autopsy studies of the brains of demented patients by Luys and those of patients with language di ...
System Architecture of ERS/ERD
System Architecture of ERS/ERD

... • Electrodes recording from the brain are used to send information to computers so that mechanical functions can be performed. • BCI devices aim to restore function in patients suffering from loss of motor control e.g. stroke, spinal cord injury, multiple sclerosis (MS) and amyotrophic lateral scler ...
Cervico-Thoracic
Cervico-Thoracic

... both arms straight forward, palms up eyes closed  Who can not stand may be tested for a pronator drift in the sitting position  In either case a normal person can hold this arm position well ...
Baby`s Brain Begins Now: Conception to Age 3
Baby`s Brain Begins Now: Conception to Age 3

... Waiting here inside the axon terminals are a group of storage sites, called vesicles, that contain chemicals manufactured and delivered by the cell body. When the electrical charge arrives at the axon terminal, it causes these vesicles to fuse with the terminal’s cell membrane, spilling their conten ...
Lateral Geniculate nucleus
Lateral Geniculate nucleus

... The pretectum bilateral projections to the Edinger-Westphal nuclei ensure that both eyes react to light: shining a light into each eye can elicit a direct and a consensual pupillary reflex. This light reflex tells us about one’s visual pathways status. ...
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Dual consciousness

Dual consciousness is a concept developed by Frantz Fanon in his book Black Skins, White Masks. It deals with the nature of the colonized subject, and the way in which they must simultaneously embrace two different cultural identities. It is mostly used in discussions of post-colonialism, but is also important to other fields within critical theory.For a more complete understanding- the original concept ""double consciousness"" was used and explained in depth years before by W. E. B. Du Bois. Here “double consciousnesses,” which according to Du Bois means a “sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others”. References----Edles, Laura Desfor, and Scott Appelrouth. Sociological Theory in the Classical Era: Text and Readings. Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press, 2005.
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