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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 ...
Mirror neurons responding to the observation of ingestive and
Mirror neurons responding to the observation of ingestive and

... Mirror neurons for mouth actions in F5 a three-dimensional (3-D) system. This system is constituted of two video-cameras (xc-999p, SONY), a 3-D to 2-D switching box (vrmux2p, VREX), a card and a 3-D projector (VR2100, VREX). Several different hand and mouth actions performed by the experimenter or ...
Running Improves Pattern Separation during Novel Object
Running Improves Pattern Separation during Novel Object

... sample phase. Subsequently, one of the objects was exchanged by a new object and memory was assessed by comparing the time spent exploring the novel object as compared with the time spent exploring the familiar object during a 5 min test phase. One week before the NOR experiments, the animals experi ...
Organization of Visual Areas in Macaque and
Organization of Visual Areas in Macaque and

... estimated boundary between regions dominated by different modalities, based on the analysis of Felleman and Van Essen (1991). These boundaries are not sharply defined, as there is considerable intermixing of function in transitional regions between modalities. The blending of colors on the maps in F ...
Multimodal Integration in Rostral Fastigial Nucleus Provides an
Multimodal Integration in Rostral Fastigial Nucleus Provides an

... (The MathWorks) programming environment for analysis. Recorded gaze, head, and body position signals were digitally filtered with zero phase at 60 Hz using a 51st order finite-impulse-response filter with a Hamming window. Eye position was calculated from the difference between gaze and head positio ...
Chapter 49 and 50 Presentations-Sensory and Motor Mechanisms
Chapter 49 and 50 Presentations-Sensory and Motor Mechanisms

... neuron, all the fibers within the motor unit contract as a group.  Motor units contain as many as a few muscle fibers or as many as a few hundred.  The strength of the contraction is governed by the number of muscle fibers the motor neuron controls. ...
04 narc John neuron
04 narc John neuron

... greatly reduce activity. We now report that, in contrast to these other monoaminergic “REM-off” cell groups, histamine neurons are active in cataplexy at a level similar to or greater than that in quiet waking. We hypothesize that the activity of histamine cells is linked to the maintenance of wakin ...
Chemicals in and Around the Cell.
Chemicals in and Around the Cell.

... same as the real thing, but you can get past some cognitive barriers by making connections to the student’s current experience. A simplistic (and probably not entirely accurate) explanation If you are having trouble understanding Excitatory (EPSP) and Inhibitory (IPSP) Postsynaptic Potentials, you m ...
Orientation Preference Patterns in Mammalian Visual Cortex: A Wire
Orientation Preference Patterns in Mammalian Visual Cortex: A Wire

... the fact that each individual neuron is well tuned for orientation. The situation in rat V1 raises a question about the relation between the tuning of neuronal response and the tuning of the connection function. Although they are related, these two tunings do not have to coincide. This is because co ...
Validation of In Vivo Mouse Brain Fiber Tracking
Validation of In Vivo Mouse Brain Fiber Tracking

... the fiber assignment by continuous tracking (FACT) algorithm. A brain mask was created and a tracking of the whole brain axonal pathways was performed. Seed points were placed in the VPM and SBF that were identified in high resolution T2-weighted images co-registered over the b0 image. The fibers co ...
Full text
Full text

... cycle. This area of the hypothalamus was established as the centre of somatostatin synthesis in many species including sheep [reviewed by 13]. This suggests that NPY terminals located in this area can be involved in some other regulations associated with the somatotrophic axis. Such implications wer ...
www.goertzel.org/dynapsyc/2007/mirrorself.pdf
www.goertzel.org/dynapsyc/2007/mirrorself.pdf

... is, they are part of the dynamics of the self as well as part of the interactions between self and actual others. The key point is that human self is intrinsically not autonomous and independent, but rather is intrinsically dialogic and intersubjective. Another way to phrase this is in terms of “emp ...
Sample
Sample

... same as the real thing, but you can get past some cognitive barriers by making connections to the student’s current experience. A simplistic (and probably not entirely accurate) explanation If you are having trouble understanding Excitatory (EPSP) and Inhibitory (IPSP) Postsynaptic Potentials, you m ...
Olfaction in Invertebrates: Manduca. In: Squire LR (ed). Encyclopedia of Neuroscience, vol 7, pp 49-57. Oxford: Academic Press.
Olfaction in Invertebrates: Manduca. In: Squire LR (ed). Encyclopedia of Neuroscience, vol 7, pp 49-57. Oxford: Academic Press.

... perceptual distances correlate well with physiological distances. It was concluded that the functional groups of the primary and secondary aliphatic alcohols, aldehydes, and ketones, and carbon-chain lengths, are inner dimensions of the honeybee olfactory space and that neural activity in the AL ref ...
Orexinergic Input to Dopaminergic Neurons of the Human Ventral
Orexinergic Input to Dopaminergic Neurons of the Human Ventral

... profoundly influenced by an orexinergic input from the lateral hypothalamus to the VTA. Because the existence and significance of an analogous orexigenic regulatory mechanism acting in the human VTA have been elusive, here we addressed the possibility that orexinergic neurons provide direct input to ...
Characterization of peripheral osmoreceptors - diss.fu
Characterization of peripheral osmoreceptors - diss.fu

... gain of systemic water or electrolytes results in changes in ECF osmolality which causes water to flow across cell membranes in order to reach an osmotic equilibrium between the cell’s cytoplasm and the ECF (Strange 2004). This leads to changes in cell volume and intracellular ionic strength. A hype ...
Arabidopsis thaliana, a plant model organism for
Arabidopsis thaliana, a plant model organism for

... reflect the function of individual neurons which are highly specialized cells, neural tissues made up of many neurons function as an entity possibly in much the same way as a plant. It is also possible that within each plant cell there are microtubule-based domains which are each analogous to a sing ...
Chapter 02: Neurons and Glia
Chapter 02: Neurons and Glia

... • Dendrites – “Antennae” of neurons – Dendritic tree – Synapse—receptors – Dendritic spines • Postsynaptic (receives signals from axon terminal) ...
CASE 5
CASE 5

... A good understanding of the autonomic nervous system is imperative in treating many medical conditions, such as asthma. Different cells throughout the body have different ANS receptors with differing agonist and antagonist properties, and medications targeting specific receptors can selectively reli ...
The Effects of Short-term and Long-term Learning on the Responses
The Effects of Short-term and Long-term Learning on the Responses

... et al., 2003). Removing parts of the parietal cortex, however, does not seem to affect the learning of new associations or the retention of familiar ones (Pisella et al., 2000; Rushworth, Nixon, & Passingham, 1997). As an example, LIP neurons can become sensitive to colors if they have been arbitrar ...
Void fraction and flow regime determination by means of MCNP
Void fraction and flow regime determination by means of MCNP

... Fig. 2. The counts of these energies and summation of counts of all energies (total count) of the spectra at the four detectors at every void fraction in every regime are selected as the input of the network. Void fraction values and a number of regime types are considered as network outputs. Two se ...
Synchronization of Fast (30-40 Hz)
Synchronization of Fast (30-40 Hz)

... degree of resemblance and phase sign as well as the time-lags separating the waves. The autocorrelation function indicates the main period of the oscillation (at the abscissa of the first secondary peak) and the strength of the oscillation (as a function of the number of secondary peaks visible in t ...
The Features and Functions of Neuronal Assemblies: Possible
The Features and Functions of Neuronal Assemblies: Possible

... to each of these parameters, they still reflect the summed output of veritable dynamics of population activity. Assemblies will to some extent feature specific spatio-temporal profiles determined by the network-specific cytoarchitecture of particular brain regions: for example, fast, low amplitude r ...
Genetic Analysis of Brain Circuits Underlying Pheromone Signaling
Genetic Analysis of Brain Circuits Underlying Pheromone Signaling

... are excreted to the outside by an individual and received by a second individual of the same species in which they release a specific reaction, for example a definite behavior or developmental process” (31). Pheromones have been shown in insect, fish, and mammal to trigger genetically preprogrammed set ...
Glial Cells: The Other Cells of the Nervous System
Glial Cells: The Other Cells of the Nervous System

... The neurons and the glia In the brain and spinal cord are bathed in cerebrospinal fluid that maintains a regulated ionic milieu in the tissue. In most areas of the brain, blood components such as cells and large proteins are not allowed to freely permeate the brain tissue. This barrier is called the ...
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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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