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The Nervous System
The Nervous System

... able to release neurotransmitters to affect the potential of the next neurons.  STIMULATION or INHIBITION of postsynaptic membranes can occur.  A neuron is on the receiving end of many synapses -- some may be giving inhibitory and some may give stimulatory impulses. Whether or not the neuron they ...
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... 4. The interaction between neurotransmitters and receptors is very specific, like a lock and key. A specific receptor (a “lock”) can only be stimulated by a specific neurotransmitter (a “key”). 5. This interaction creates a signal called a postsynaptic potential (PSP) that might make action potentia ...
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... MOMENT AND VANIHES. WHEN CENTER SPOT DISAPPEARS EYES TURN TO POSITION WHERE THE TARGET WAS. THERE ARE NEURONS WHICH KEEP INFORMATION WHERE THE ...
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Spinal cord worksheet

... sensory fibers 1.The network of nerves that supplies the upper extremities________________ 2.Degeneration of nerves supplying the extremities____________ 3.A neuron that relays information within the CNS________________ 4.The type of response exemplified by the knee jerk__________________ 5.The netw ...
Homework - Stethographics, Inc.
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... involving patients injected with Botox or Myobloc. The reports detailed cases of muscle weakness, difficulty swallowing or aspiration pneumonia, a serious condition caused by breathing a foreign material into the lungs. Reports to the FDA do not prove a product caused a particular problem, but the a ...
Homework 3 - Stethographics, Inc.
Homework 3 - Stethographics, Inc.

... involving patients injected with Botox or Myobloc. The reports detailed cases of muscle weakness, difficulty swallowing or aspiration pneumonia, a serious condition caused by breathing a foreign material into the lungs. Reports to the FDA do not prove a product caused a particular problem, but the a ...
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... all work together to allow us to think. • Thinking is manipulating information in order to make sense of it and thereby make determinations as to what to do about it. ...
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Step Up To: Psychology

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... biological basis of learning and memory. Individual experiences result in unique patterns of neural activity, which reverberate through neural loops. This causes structural changes in the synapses to occur. These changes make firing in the loop more likely in the future. In other words, synapses bec ...
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Step Up To: Psychology

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Object recognition in clutter: selectivity and invariance

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Principles of Computational Modeling in NeuroscienceDavid Sterratt
Principles of Computational Modeling in NeuroscienceDavid Sterratt

... (small pieces of dendrite, axon or soma) as compartments, which are simple geometric objects such as spheres or cylinders. It then presents approaches for using real neuronal morphology as the basis of the model. After that, it considers in detail methods and issues of parameter estimation for deter ...
Dependence of the input-firing rate curve of neural cells on
Dependence of the input-firing rate curve of neural cells on

... other neurons. This creates such a big and complex network that is almost impossible computes its exact behaviour. With the help of Neural Mass Modeling this is possible in some way. In Neural Mass Modelling, the average behaviour of a group of neurons is used. These so called populations are connec ...
Step Up To: Psychology
Step Up To: Psychology

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neuroplasticity 2016
neuroplasticity 2016

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NVCC Bio 211 - gserianne.com
NVCC Bio 211 - gserianne.com

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Object Recognition and Learning using the BioRC Biomimetic Real
Object Recognition and Learning using the BioRC Biomimetic Real

... Moderately-Large Neurons – a hypothetical argument If we decide instead to model the same exact computation with simpler neurons that only have 300 inputs, there are “N choose M” or “10,000 choose 300” combinations of inputs that make the neural circuit fire at the final output. Thus, we require N!/ ...
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Single-unit recording

In neuroscience, single-unit recordings provide a method of measuring the electro-physiological responses of single neurons using a microelectrode system. When a neuron generates an action potential, the signal propagates down the neuron as a current which flows in and out of the cell through excitable membrane regions in the soma and axon. A microelectrode is inserted into the brain, where it can record the rate of change in voltage with respect to time. These microelectrodes must be fine-tipped, high-impedance conductors; they are primarily glass micro-pipettes or metal microelectrodes made of platinum or tungsten. Microelectrodes can be carefully placed within (or close to) the cell membrane, allowing the ability to record intracellularly or extracellularly.Single-unit recordings are widely used in cognitive science, where it permits the analysis of human cognition and cortical mapping. This information can then be applied to brain machine interface (BMI) technologies for brain control of external devices.
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