
Document
... On-Center and Off-Center Bipolar Cells Any cone signals vertically to both off-center and on-center bipolar cell. Rod cells only signal through on-center bipolar cells. http://webvision.med.utah.edu/book/part-v-phototransduction-in-rods-and-cones/bipolar-cell-pathways-in-the-vertebrate-retina/ ...
... On-Center and Off-Center Bipolar Cells Any cone signals vertically to both off-center and on-center bipolar cell. Rod cells only signal through on-center bipolar cells. http://webvision.med.utah.edu/book/part-v-phototransduction-in-rods-and-cones/bipolar-cell-pathways-in-the-vertebrate-retina/ ...
My Big List Thing
... o Peripheral nervous system (PNS): nervous system outside of brain and spinal cord; majority of neurons are here Neurite: extension of cell body of neuron; can be axon or dendrite; typically used re: immature neurons due to difficulty in determining which is being observed Neuropilin: receptors in n ...
... o Peripheral nervous system (PNS): nervous system outside of brain and spinal cord; majority of neurons are here Neurite: extension of cell body of neuron; can be axon or dendrite; typically used re: immature neurons due to difficulty in determining which is being observed Neuropilin: receptors in n ...
Chapter 2
... Transmits information to and from the central nervous system All nerves and neurons that are not contained in the brain and spinal cord but that run through the body itself 1. Somatic nervous system - carries sensory info from the senses to CNS & from the CNS to the voluntary muscles. a) Sensory pat ...
... Transmits information to and from the central nervous system All nerves and neurons that are not contained in the brain and spinal cord but that run through the body itself 1. Somatic nervous system - carries sensory info from the senses to CNS & from the CNS to the voluntary muscles. a) Sensory pat ...
Introduction to the Nervous System and Nerve Tissue
... 1. Oligodendrocytes: form the myelin sheath of the CNS ...
... 1. Oligodendrocytes: form the myelin sheath of the CNS ...
Nervous System
... smooth muscle, cardiac muscles, and glands. – Which would be considered the involuntary nervous system? Why? ...
... smooth muscle, cardiac muscles, and glands. – Which would be considered the involuntary nervous system? Why? ...
The Nervous System crossword
... 1. The peripheral nervous system connects everything to the brain and spinal cord. 3. The cells of the nervous system are called neurones. 4. What is the name of the membrane bound structure found in the body of the cell? [Nucleus] 6. The small space between two nerve cells is called the synaptic cl ...
... 1. The peripheral nervous system connects everything to the brain and spinal cord. 3. The cells of the nervous system are called neurones. 4. What is the name of the membrane bound structure found in the body of the cell? [Nucleus] 6. The small space between two nerve cells is called the synaptic cl ...
Developmental plasticity: Pruning
... temporally correlates with postmortem findings of increased synaptic pruning during adolescence and early adulthood. The primary cause for loss of GM density is unknown. It may be driven at least partially by the process of synaptic pruning, together with trophic glial and vascular changes and or ce ...
... temporally correlates with postmortem findings of increased synaptic pruning during adolescence and early adulthood. The primary cause for loss of GM density is unknown. It may be driven at least partially by the process of synaptic pruning, together with trophic glial and vascular changes and or ce ...
The Human Body Systems
... 1. Receive information about what’s happening to the body (both inside & out) 2. Responds to those internal and environmental stimuli 3. Maintains homeostasis B. The Neuron – the basic unit of structure & function 1. Cells that carry information to, from & through the brain by way of nerve impulses. ...
... 1. Receive information about what’s happening to the body (both inside & out) 2. Responds to those internal and environmental stimuli 3. Maintains homeostasis B. The Neuron – the basic unit of structure & function 1. Cells that carry information to, from & through the brain by way of nerve impulses. ...
Embryology Complete
... Decidua Capsularis: the surrounding rest of the blastocyst Gastrula Stage: embryonic development has progressed to this by the time that implantation has occurred The 3 primary germ layers are present and are beginning to differentiate Within 6 weeks, nearly all the body organ systems are formed by ...
... Decidua Capsularis: the surrounding rest of the blastocyst Gastrula Stage: embryonic development has progressed to this by the time that implantation has occurred The 3 primary germ layers are present and are beginning to differentiate Within 6 weeks, nearly all the body organ systems are formed by ...
Development of CNS
... (Some slides are modified versions of Prof. Alan Harvey’s Neuroscience lecture at ANHB and Dr. Joanne Britto’s Dev Neuroscience lecture from 2003) ...
... (Some slides are modified versions of Prof. Alan Harvey’s Neuroscience lecture at ANHB and Dr. Joanne Britto’s Dev Neuroscience lecture from 2003) ...
The Journal of Neuroscience
... Correction: In the April 9, 2008 issue’s “This Week in the Journal” summary of the Development/Plasticity/Repair article by Coate et al., there was an error in the third sentence. The term “DP cells” should have been “EP cells.” Thus, the sentence should have read “This week, Coate et al. report tha ...
... Correction: In the April 9, 2008 issue’s “This Week in the Journal” summary of the Development/Plasticity/Repair article by Coate et al., there was an error in the third sentence. The term “DP cells” should have been “EP cells.” Thus, the sentence should have read “This week, Coate et al. report tha ...
179 - Edmund Rolls
... produces a representation of objects which shows invariance with respect to, for example, translation, size, and view, as shown by recordings from single neurons in the temporal lobe (see Rolls 1992; Tanaka 1988). In a recent paper, Rolls (1992) reviews much of this work, with specific regard t o th ...
... produces a representation of objects which shows invariance with respect to, for example, translation, size, and view, as shown by recordings from single neurons in the temporal lobe (see Rolls 1992; Tanaka 1988). In a recent paper, Rolls (1992) reviews much of this work, with specific regard t o th ...
Chapter #1 - eLearning
... pieces of the puzzle that were already known at the time – he, however, was the only one to put them all together. ...
... pieces of the puzzle that were already known at the time – he, however, was the only one to put them all together. ...
Answers to WHAT DID YOU LEARN questions
... lacrimal fluid and delivers it into the nasal cavity. The fibrous tunic, the external layer of the eye wall, is composed of the anterior cornea and the posterior sclera. The cornea refracts incoming light rays into the interior of the eye, while the tough, white sclera provides for eye shape and pro ...
... lacrimal fluid and delivers it into the nasal cavity. The fibrous tunic, the external layer of the eye wall, is composed of the anterior cornea and the posterior sclera. The cornea refracts incoming light rays into the interior of the eye, while the tough, white sclera provides for eye shape and pro ...
Subventricular zone

The subventricular zone (SVZ) is a paired brain structure situated throughout the lateral walls of the lateral ventricles. It is composed of four distinct layers of variable thickness and cell density, as well as cellular composition. Along with the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, the SVZ is one of two places where neurogenesis has been found to occur in the adult mammalian brain.