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The neurophysiological correlates of motor tics following focal
The neurophysiological correlates of motor tics following focal

... rates at some striatal sites. Additional control bicuculline microinjections were made into the GPe, which is the adjacent nucleus to the striatum. ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... by humans. • Biological neural systems can capture highly parallel computations based on representations that are distributed over many neurons. • They learn and generalize from training data; no need for programming it all... • They are very noise tolerant – better resistance than symbolic systems. ...
The role of eyes in early face processing: A rapid adaptation study of
The role of eyes in early face processing: A rapid adaptation study of

... According to the OSH, larger adaptation effects should be found for inverted than upright adaptors regardless of the category. Thus, in response to S2, a decreased activation should be found for inverted compared to upright adaptors, for each adaptor category tested: houses, mouths, eyes, faces, eye ...
Dopamine is produced in the rat spinal cord and regulates
Dopamine is produced in the rat spinal cord and regulates

... neurons and the pontine micturition center. Here we show that DA is produced in the rat spinal cord and modulates the bladder reflex. We observed numerous tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)+ neurons in the autonomic nuclei and superficial dorsal horn in L6–S3 spinal segments. These neurons are dopamine-β-hydro ...
Neurodegenerative Changes in the Motor Cortex and Cerebellum in Wistar... Following Acute Pneumococcal Meningitis
Neurodegenerative Changes in the Motor Cortex and Cerebellum in Wistar... Following Acute Pneumococcal Meningitis

... the motor cortex part of the brain concerned with motor function and cerebellar cortex concerned with motor function, equilibrium and balance. Neuronal damage was very severe in both the regions. In the case of cerebral cortex there was 60-70% neuronal loss was documented. Further the surviving neu ...
pain impulses
pain impulses

... Pain Perceptions – based on expectations, past experience, anxiety, suggestions ◦ Affective – one’s emotional factors that can affect pain experience ◦ Behavioral – how one expresses or controls pain ◦ Cognitive – one’s beliefs (attitudes) about pain ...
Reverse engineering the lordosis behavior circuit.
Reverse engineering the lordosis behavior circuit.

... identification of the brain sites mediating estrogen influences and of the sensory modalities for triggering the behavior, leading to the recognition of the neural circuit that mediates the behavior. Neurophysiological and molecular analyses of this circuit proved that specific biochemical reactions in ...
The Different Neural Correlates of Action and Functional Knowledge
The Different Neural Correlates of Action and Functional Knowledge

... distinction between them has been recently supported by neuropsychological evidence. In general, the use of an object and the way it is manipulated do not bear any relationship. The distinction between these two aspects is supported by the classical neuropsychological distinction between semantic de ...
A simulation of parahippocampal and hippocampal structures guiding spatial navigation of
A simulation of parahippocampal and hippocampal structures guiding spatial navigation of

... As shown on the left side of Figure 6, one phase of theta could provide appropriate dynamics for encoding. Effective encoding would require strong excitatory input conveying information about sensory input from entorhinal cortex. In experimental work, current source density analysis (Brankack et al. ...
Molecular anatomical investigation of the 2
Molecular anatomical investigation of the 2

... research has shown that DGL-α is also concentrated in a perisynaptic annulus (see in details the Results section), which was confirmed by others (Yoshida et al., 2006). The Homer scaffold proteins are important to provide a platform for the macromolecular complex involved in 2-AG synthesis (Brakeman ...
Autonomic nervous system
Autonomic nervous system

... Synapse on postganglionic neuron in chain ganglion then return to spinal nerve and follow its branch to the skin Ascend or descend within sympathetic trunk, synapse with a postganglionic neuron within a chain ganglion, and return to spinal nerve at that level and follow branches to skin ...
Slide 8
Slide 8

... Image from licensed Microsoft word ...
Adaptive Gain and Optimal Performance
Adaptive Gain and Optimal Performance

... mechanisms. The importance of arousal is undeniable: It is closely related to other phenomena such as sleep, attention, anxiety, stress, and motivation. Dampened arousal leads to drowsiness and, in the limit, sleep. Heightened arousal (brought on by the sudden appearance of an environmentally salien ...
Your Nervous System - Springfield Public Schools
Your Nervous System - Springfield Public Schools

... the diameter of a ping-pong ball is 3.8 cm. (The length of the model’s axon can be calculated using the ratio: 0.1 mm/1,000 mm ⫽ 38 mm/x. When solving for x, x ⫽ (38 ⫻ 1,000) ⫼ 0.1 ⫽ 380,000 mm. The axon would be 380 m long.) ...
Temporal fate specification and neural progenitor competence
Temporal fate specification and neural progenitor competence

... The roles of the later candidate temporal-identity factors Pdm and Cas have been characterized in multiple neuroblast lineages, with different results in each lineage tested. In the NB7‑1 lineage (FIG. 1b), Pdm is necessary and sufficient to specify the U4 motor neuron fate, and Pdm and Cas together ...
Discharge Rate of Substantia Nigra Pars Reticulata Neurons Is
Discharge Rate of Substantia Nigra Pars Reticulata Neurons Is

... injection, in 1-s bins, filtered with a 20-s Gaussian. The rate and SD in the first 30 s were used as a reference. First, the earliest time the rate deviated by ⬎3 SD from the reference was detected. Then the latest time there was a deviation of ⬎1 SD from the reference, occurring earlier than the 3 ...
letter - Hanks Lab
letter - Hanks Lab

... far. Contrary to current views3,5,7–9, this suggests that premotor activity in the frontal cortex does not have a role in the accumulation process, but instead has a more categorical function, such as transforming accumulated evidence into a discrete choice. To probe causally the role of FOF activit ...
Structure and function of ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) brains
Structure and function of ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) brains

... are wingless and even the alate sexuals are poor fliers compared to wasps and bees. This obviously shapes the motor output (controlling leg instead of wing movements), but it also affects sensory input: flight relies predominantly on vision and also on information about air-currents, gravity and acc ...
BvP neurons exhibit a larger variety in statistics of inter
BvP neurons exhibit a larger variety in statistics of inter

... statistics, sweeping input parameters over the entire region in order to avoid the normalization problem of input parameters. Thus, this study provides new systematic knowledge of differences between the neuron classes for fluctuating inputs, which has not been yet clarified by the conventional stud ...
Culture of primary rat hippocampal neurons
Culture of primary rat hippocampal neurons

... Many important aspects of neural function are mediated by local signals that impinge on only one part of the cell. For example, growth cones at the tips of axons are sensitive to directional cues provided by gradients of chemoattractants and chemorepellants, which guide the axons to their targets (O ...
Mechanisms for generating and compensating for the
Mechanisms for generating and compensating for the

... whether similar interactions between cognition and saccades could be found at the level of microsaccades. These results ushered in a new array of queries about the brain mechanisms associated with microsaccades. Thus, the hallmark of the first decade of the twentyfirst century was a renewed interest i ...
Brain Oscillations Control Timing of Single
Brain Oscillations Control Timing of Single

... 5Functional Neurosurgery Unit, Tel-Aviv Medical Center and Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv 69978, Israel ...
Viral vector-based tools advance knowledge of basal ganglia
Viral vector-based tools advance knowledge of basal ganglia

... which will also affect how these neurons respond to inputs (Bolam et al. 2000; Ellens and Leventhal 2013). Furthermore, some of these GABAergic neurons corelease a peptide, for example, somatostatin, which affects responses at postsynaptic neurons (Gittis et al. 2014; Lévesque and Parent 2005; Smith ...
Some insights into computational models of (patho)physiological
Some insights into computational models of (patho)physiological

... the most complex system in nature. Therefore understanding its functions offers a great challenge to biological and physical sciences. Neurobiological research yields new and detailed knowledge at a very high rate but it is becoming clear that to understand how the brain works it is not enough to ac ...
Eye Movements - Center for Neural Science
Eye Movements - Center for Neural Science

... evolved specialized retinas that can be effectively employed only if the direction of gaze can be shifted. Primates, for example, have a highly specialized central region of the retina known as the fovea. The fovea can gather visual information from only 18 of the visual world, but the photoreceptor ...
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Feature detection (nervous system)

Feature detection is a process by which the nervous system sorts or filters complex natural stimuli in order to extract behaviorally relevant cues that have a high probability of being associated with important objects or organisms in their environment, as opposed to irrelevant background or noise. Feature detectors are individual neurons – or groups of neurons – in the brain which code for perceptually significant stimuli. Early in the sensory pathway feature detectors tend to have simple properties; later they become more and more complex as the features to which they respond become more and more specific. For example, simple cells in the visual cortex of the domestic cat (Felis catus), respond to edges – a feature which is more likely to occur in objects and organisms in the environment. By contrast, the background of a natural visual environment tends to be noisy – emphasizing high spatial frequencies but lacking in extended edges. Responding selectively to an extended edge – either a bright line on a dark background, or the reverse – highlights objects that are near or very large. Edge detectors are useful to a cat, because edges do not occur often in the background “noise” of the visual environment, which is of little consequence to the animal.
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