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07-Control of Movement
07-Control of Movement

... Renshaw Cells An inhibitory ...
Nerve cells in the human ciliary muscle: ultrastructural and
Nerve cells in the human ciliary muscle: ultrastructural and

... from nerve cells outside the eye, intrinsic nerve cells are present in human ciliary muscle. Although these ciliary muscle nerve cells (Pkxus gangliosus ciliaris) were discovered more than one hundred years ago21"23 and were mentioned in several studies during the last few decades,24"28 nothing is k ...
New perspectives on the evolution of protochordate sensory and
New perspectives on the evolution of protochordate sensory and

... unusual in having a photolith, which functions as a combined light and gravity sensor and incorporates two types of sensory cells with apical and/or ciliary specializations. Though surface microvilli and other apical structures occur, fully developed rhabdomeric photoreceptors appear to be absent in ...
Unit 22.1: The Nervous System
Unit 22.1: The Nervous System

... A small child darts in front of your bike as you race down the street. You see the child and immediately react. You put on the brakes, steer away from the child, and yell out a warning—all in just a split second. How do you respond so quickly? Such rapid responses are controlled by your nervous syst ...
directory of functions - Stress Therapy Solutions
directory of functions - Stress Therapy Solutions

... o Processing emotions and self-reflections in decision making (Left) (15746230) o Inferential reasoning (9) (8541472, 11958963, 9175134) o Decision making (involving conflict and reward) (Right 10) (10516320) o Planning (Right 9) (11880658) o Calculation / numerical processes (12914254, 10678698) o ...
The Structure and Plasticity of the Proximal Axon of Hippocampal
The Structure and Plasticity of the Proximal Axon of Hippocampal

... Based on morphological characteristics, most common vertebrate neurons are classified into the following classes: multipolar, bipolar, and pseudo-unipolar (fig. 1). Multipolar neurons (fig. 1A) are the most common type in vertebrates and make up virtually all of the neurons of the central nervous sy ...
Discharge Patterns of Neurons in the Ventral Nucleus of the Lateral
Discharge Patterns of Neurons in the Ventral Nucleus of the Lateral

... peaks corresponded to the evenly spaced action potentials of a regular discharge. In unusual chopper neurons, the action potential associated with a particular peak could fail to occur during any one presentation of the stimulus. Unusual chopper neurons had a relatively irregular discharge. Phasic n ...
Functional circuitry underlying visual neglect
Functional circuitry underlying visual neglect

... phenomena inform us that sufficient neural circuitry exists both for detection of stimuli in the neglected hemifield and for producing orienting responses to the stimuli, but that the circuits are prevented from acting. As a consequence, a potential cure may be effected if the secondary circuits wer ...
Grid Cell Firing May Arise From Interference of Theta Frequency
Grid Cell Firing May Arise From Interference of Theta Frequency

... from experimental data, can be used to derive the model of grid cells presented by Burgess et al. (2005, 2007). This derivation demonstrates that the model is not just an ad hoc account for grid cell properties, but is specifically indicated by the pattern of experimental results described above. Oth ...
Estimating Fast Neural Input Using Anatomical and
Estimating Fast Neural Input Using Anatomical and

... goes via indirect neurons (I). Left: activity is recorded in neurons (S) that have a polysynaptic path to the target (T). Middle: activity is recorded in neurons that have a direct connection to (T). Some of those neurons may also send collaterals elsewhere, hence contributing to the indirect activi ...
Switching from automatic to controlled behavior: cortico - lsr
Switching from automatic to controlled behavior: cortico - lsr

... However, how the brain actually executes behavioral switching is not fully understood from the human data alone. The switching-associated reconfiguration of cognitive processes indicated by the psychological studies is probably composed of serial and parallel neuronal activity changes which occur wi ...
Constraints on Somatotopic Organization in the Primary Motor Cortex
Constraints on Somatotopic Organization in the Primary Motor Cortex

... wrote, “It must be emphasized . . . that this diagram is an inadequate representation of the localization pattern, since in a line drawing one cannot indicate the successive overlap which is so characteristic a feature of cortical representation. . . .” (Woolsey et al. 1952, p. 252). While the examp ...
evolution of the first nervous systems ii
evolution of the first nervous systems ii

... Whitney Laboratory for Marine Bioscience, University of Florida The conspicuous body plan of ctenophores (comb jellies) simultaneously makes these animals very easy to identify as ctenophores, and very difficult to classify in relation to other animals. Early phylogenetic studies based on gene seque ...
Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling
Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling

... This is because resistance to the flow of electrical current is inversely proportional to the crosssectional area of a conductor (such as a wire or an axon). o In invertebrates, the conduction speed varies from several centimeters per second in very narrow axons to about 30 m/sec in the giant axons ...
CHAPTER 5 SIGNALLING IN NEURONS
CHAPTER 5 SIGNALLING IN NEURONS

... One of the main functions of neurons is to communicate with other neurons. An individual neuron may receive information from many different sources. Its job is to evaluate this information and "make a decision" as to whether to send out information to all of its target neurons, or whether to remain ...
Auditory Neurons in the Dorsal Cortex of the Inferior Colliculus
Auditory Neurons in the Dorsal Cortex of the Inferior Colliculus

... the auditory nerve. The cochlear nucleus is subdivided into ventral and dorsal divisions (VCN and DCN, respectively). The ventral division can be further subdivided into the anterior ventral cochlear nucleus (AVCN), and the posterior ventral cochlear nucleus (PVCN). Each division of the CN receives ...
Primitive Roles for Inhibitory Interneurons in Developing Frog Spinal
Primitive Roles for Inhibitory Interneurons in Developing Frog Spinal

... simpler networks in developing lower vertebrates may offer insights into basic organization. To investigate the function of spinal inhibitory interneurons in Xenopus tadpoles, paired whole-cell recordings were used. We show directly that one class of interneuron, with distinctive anatomy, produces g ...
PDF
PDF

... Presumably, destabilization selectively separates some raft components from each other and permits others to interact. The GSI + Qa has its primary effect on raft domains that contain the Notch-1 inhibitor of dendritic growth and not on F-secretase substrates such as ErbB-4 and EphA4 that simulate d ...
download file
download file

... response. The frequency at which this threshold response occurred was defined as the characteristic frequency (CF). For 10, 20, 30, and 40 dB above threshold, the lowest and highest tone frequencies that elicited a reliable response and were contiguous with the rest of the frequencies within the ban ...
Questions - rlsmart.net
Questions - rlsmart.net

... it is likely that there are many different causes of cot death. Some people think that it could be because a baby’s simple reflexes have not matured properly. This is how doctors think this may happen: • When a fetus detects that oxygen in its blood is low, its reflex response makes it move around l ...
Datasheet - Creative Diagnostics
Datasheet - Creative Diagnostics

... other?Clostridium?genus species, it is?Gram-positive, and its appearance on a?gram stain?resemblestennis rackets?or drumsticks. C. tetani?is found as?spores?in soil or in the?gastrointestinal tractof animals.?C. tetani?produces a potent biological toxin,?tetanospasmin, and is the causative agent oft ...
Lecture Outline
Lecture Outline

... This is because resistance to the flow of electrical current is inversely proportional to the crosssectional area of a conductor (such as a wire or an axon). o In invertebrates, the conduction speed varies from several centimeters per second in very narrow axons to about 30 m/sec in the giant axons ...
Tick-borne flaviviruses alter membrane structure and replicate in
Tick-borne flaviviruses alter membrane structure and replicate in

... causing encephalitic diseases in humans. Common symptoms are headaches, vomiting, ataxia and paralysis. Differences in neurological symptoms have been reported in the infections caused by each virus. JEV infection triggers acute spasms and development of a dull pathognomonic Parkinsonian syndrome (O ...
Rapid Critical Period Induction by Tonic Inhibition in Visual Cortex
Rapid Critical Period Induction by Tonic Inhibition in Visual Cortex

... changes later in adulthood, indicating an irreversible developmental process defines the transient sensitivity to MD. Typically plasticity is absent at eye opening, peaks at ⬃4 weeks, and gradually declines over weeks (rodents: Fagiolini et al., 1994; Gordon and Stryker, 1996; Fagiolini and Hensch, ...
Photoreception
Photoreception

... Neurons can then synthesize glutamate from glutamine (Hertz, 1979, Pow and Crook, 1996). Thus, histological techniques are used to identify potential glutamatergic neurons by labeling neurons containing glutamate (through immunocytochemistry) and neurons that take up glutamate (through autoradiograp ...
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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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