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Stimulation-Induced Functional Decoupling (SIFD)
Stimulation-Induced Functional Decoupling (SIFD)

... Why? : Complex systems imply numerous interactions between the elements of the system: analytical solving is difficult or impossible. ...
Perceptual and Semantic Contributions to
Perceptual and Semantic Contributions to

... identical sounds and for repetitions of the semantically identically sounds (see Supplementary Fig. S1b and S1c, respectively). Once again, no statistically reliable differences were observed. Stimuli were likewise analyzed in terms of their mean harmonics-tonoise ratio (HNR), which was calculated u ...
Mechanisms of cell migration in the nervous system
Mechanisms of cell migration in the nervous system

... others retract (Fig. 2 A, i). A dilation in front of the nucleus, containing the centrosome and Golgi, translocates to the branch point and then into the dominant process, with the nucleus following behind (Fig. 2 A, ii–iii). Competition between different branches also steers pontine neurons from ta ...
Chapter 5: Sensation and Perception SW
Chapter 5: Sensation and Perception SW

... to be detected 50% of the time. Another way to think about this is by asking how dim can a light be or how soft can a sound be and still be detected half of the time. The sensitivity of our sensory receptors can be quite amazing. It has been estimated that on a clear night, the most sensitive sensor ...
Visual Fields
Visual Fields

... and then discuss when they are warranted and what the printouts mean. What Are Visual Fields? Visual fields may be defined as “The space or range within which objects are visible to the immobile eye at a given time.”1 Visual fields are usually described in degrees from the point of fixation. In an i ...
Chapter 11: The Auditory and Vestibular Systems
Chapter 11: The Auditory and Vestibular Systems

... Copyright © 2007 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins ...
Organization of Visual Inputs to the Inferior Temporal and Posterior
Organization of Visual Inputs to the Inferior Temporal and Posterior

... wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGAHRP; 0.2 pi/injection) was injected into the inferior temporal cortex. In all cases, the injection volumes listed were greater than the effective injection volumes, as we observed considerable amounts of tracer leaking out of the cortex ...
chapter_1
chapter_1

... The neuron activity is an all-or-nothing process, ie., the activation of the neuron is binary. A certain fixed number of synapses (>1) must be excited within a period of latent addition for a neuron to be excited. The only significant delay within the nervous system is synaptic delay. The activity o ...
SC&SN-07
SC&SN-07

... 2. Motor (efferent) neuron ...
Gross Appearance of Cerebellum
Gross Appearance of Cerebellum

... Efferents fibers: projects to the fastigial and interposed nuclei → vestibular nuclei, reticular formation and red nucleus → vestibulospinal tract, reticulospinal tract and rubrospinal tract → motor neurons of anterior horn ...
Motor areas of the frontal lobe by Jarrod Blinch
Motor areas of the frontal lobe by Jarrod Blinch

... [email protected] “If our brains were simple enough for us to understand them, we'd be so simple that we couldn't.” ― Ian Stewart As a motor control researcher in cognitive psychology, I use a behavioural approach to study how humans produce movements. Specifically, I record the intricacie ...
The beginning of connectomics: a commentary on White
The beginning of connectomics: a commentary on White

... resolving power of the light microscope. The idea was to reconstruct a nervous system from serial section electron micrographs, learning in the process how all the neurons were connected to each other via synapses, and thus produce the wiring diagram. This experimental approach was severely limiting ...
THE SPINAL CORD
THE SPINAL CORD

... of the leg at the knee. At the same time as the quadriceps contracts there is a reciprocal inhibition of the antagonistic muscles, the flexors of the knee. The inhibition of the flexors is mediated by polysynaptic reflex arcs, and since the motor neurons for the flexors are located in more caudal s ...
File
File

... Specialized junctions called (gap junctions) allow the spread of current between two cells. Only 2-4nm separates the pre and postsynaptic membranes at the site of gap junctions (and the distance between the cells). Gap junctions are formed by (membrane brides) that are constructed from integral me ...
2011 - Università degli studi di Pavia
2011 - Università degli studi di Pavia

... from the mossy fibers and generating complex interactions in structures called glomeruli. The granule cells emit ascending axons reaching the molecular layer and forming the parallel fibers, contacting stellate and basket cell inhibitory interneurons, and the Purkinje cells. These send their output ...
Fig. 2 - eNeuro
Fig. 2 - eNeuro

... amplitude of which was adjusted individually during experiments. Membrane conductance was calculated as the March/April 2017, 4(2) e0073-17.2017 ...
Massively Parallel Recording of Unit and Local Field
Massively Parallel Recording of Unit and Local Field

... active circuit eliminated movement and other artifacts and greatly reduced the weight of the headgear. The precise geometry of the recording tips allowed for the estimation of the spatial location of the recorded neurons and for high-resolution estimation of extracellular current source density. Act ...
View/Open - eDiss - Georg-August
View/Open - eDiss - Georg-August

... communication is widespread among vertebrates and invertebrates which range from mating calls in insects to speech in humans. Sound can transmit broader messages like species identity or narrow messages like the effective state of a caller (Schehka 2009). Communication is a key area of animal behavi ...
The role of neuronal signaling in controlling cerebral blood flow
The role of neuronal signaling in controlling cerebral blood flow

... agents reach blood vessels by diVusion and produce relaxation of vascular smooth muscles. Considerable evidence has since accumulated supporting vasoactive consequences of neurotransmitter release, in particular for the synaptically released fast transmitters glutamate and GABA, but the mechanisms a ...
Behavioral flexibility is increased by optogenetic inhibition of
Behavioral flexibility is increased by optogenetic inhibition of

... by inhibition during feedback We investigated the effect on behavioral flexibility of optogenetic inhibition during specific time segments of a task that involved within-session switching of contingencies. Rats (n ¼ 8) were trained to criterion on tasks of increasing difficulty, initially learning t ...
Wired for reproduction: Organization and Development of Sexually
Wired for reproduction: Organization and Development of Sexually

... initiates ovulation in female mammals (see Gerall & Givon 1992 for review). Treatment of ovariectomized adult female rats with estrogen causes a massive surge in LH secretion, yet similar treatments in males fail to induce a similar response. This sexually dimorphic response to hormone treatment can ...
Functional Properties of Corticotectal Neurons in the Monkey`s
Functional Properties of Corticotectal Neurons in the Monkey`s

... that only - 19% of frontal eye field neurons have purely postsaccadic activity. The majority of neurons recorded from by Bruce and Goldberg in awake behaving monkeys had some form of activity that preceded visually guided saccadic eye movements, including a range of neuron activity from purely visua ...
Principles of Biology II Lab Manual
Principles of Biology II Lab Manual

... Introduction: In this lab we will explore the anatomy & physiology of the nervous system. Nervous systems are unique to animals, and are critical for detecting and interpreting information, making decisions, and regulating body functions and movements. Nervous systems are constructed from neurons an ...
NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS NEURONAL ACTIVITY DURING A
NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS NEURONAL ACTIVITY DURING A

... (CS) capable of evoking a conditioned response (CR) (Rescorla, 1988). In this fundamental form of learning the CS does not just evoke an automatic CR but is endowed with motivational value much like the US, such that the CS can support new learning (Gewirtz & Davis, 2000; Rizley & Rescorla, 1972). C ...
Rapid Changes in Synaptic Vesicle Cytochemistry
Rapid Changes in Synaptic Vesicle Cytochemistry

... ABstrAct Sympathetic neurons taken from rat superior cervical ganglia and grown in culture acquire cholinergic function under certain conditions. These cholinergic sympathetic neurons, however, retain a number of adrenergic properties, including the enzymes involved in the synthesis of norepinephrin ...
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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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