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Neuronal Processing of Chemical Information in Crustaceans Chapter 7
Neuronal Processing of Chemical Information in Crustaceans Chapter 7

... detection and ingestion; only very little is known in other behavioral contexts, such as predator avoidance, orientation in the habitat, interactions with symbiotic partners, or intraspecific communication by pheromones. From recent behavioral and neuroanatomical studies, two important concepts abou ...
Notch resolves mixed neural identities in the
Notch resolves mixed neural identities in the

... selection of a neural progenitor from a pool of competent cells through the regulation of proneural genes (Lewis, 1996). By controlling this process, Notch signaling affects the timing of cell birth and differentiation. A correlation has been observed between the timing of cell birth and the identit ...
Document
Document

... clustered at the tip of the spiny anteater’s snout. The researchers made this discovery by exposing small areas of (5) the snout to extremely weak electrical fields and recording the transmission of resulting nervous activity to the brain. While it is true that tactile receptors, another kind of sen ...
Synapse
Synapse

... • During rest, both the pre. and postsynaptic membrane have R.M.P is about -70 mV. • Stim. of presynaptic neuron → generation of AP → AP reaches the synaptic knob→ transient opening of the VGCa2+ channels  Ca2+ influx → Ca2+ causes the vesicles to fuse with the knob membrane at active zones  vesic ...
Human frequency-following response: representation of pitch
Human frequency-following response: representation of pitch

... hypothesis. In their electrophysiological study, Cariani and Delgutte (1996) recorded responses of cat auditory nerve ¢bers and combined interval distributions from many ¢bers to form an estimate of population interval distribution in the entire auditory nerve. Many deep correspondences between feat ...
Local integration 2
Local integration 2

... 2 levels of organization Large-scale neural activity, revealed by fMRI • ways of identifying specialization in neural areas, as a function of blood oxygen levels Fine-grained receptivity of individual neurons, as revealed in single-unit recordings The large-scale activity results from the collectiv ...
Short title: Thalamocortical computations during tactile sensation
Short title: Thalamocortical computations during tactile sensation

... threshold. Suppression of self-movement signals is therefore implemented by inhibition within ...
Scientific Basis of Pain
Scientific Basis of Pain

... Pain Perception • Perception of and reaction to pain are influenced by social and environmental cues, as well as by cultural norms and personal experience • Both cortical and limbic systems are involved in conscious awareness (perception) of pain • Recognition of location, intensity, and quality of ...
PERSPECTIVES
PERSPECTIVES

... between the observed action they responded to and the executed action that triggered their discharge. It therefore seems that there are three interconnected areas in the monkey brain that contain neurons that are responsive to biological movements. These areas differ in their motor properties. In F5 ...
Role of Cerebral Cortex in Voluntary Movements
Role of Cerebral Cortex in Voluntary Movements

... Figure 3 also shows that the motor cortex receives convergent input signals from a multitude of sources. Central input is received from several cortical areas including premotor, SMA, parietal area 5, and from two, major, central reentrant loops.11 Motor cortex is also influenced by two, major, sens ...
Neuronal sources of hedgehog modulate neurogenesis in the adult
Neuronal sources of hedgehog modulate neurogenesis in the adult

... nkx2.1 and arx were originally cloned and isolated during an RNAi screen aimed at identifying planarian transcription factors with potential roles in neuronal specification. A unique behavioral defect was observed in all nkx2.1(RNAi) animals, characterized by tonic muscular contractions that bend th ...
Synaptic Plasticity and Connectivity Requirements to
Synaptic Plasticity and Connectivity Requirements to

... see the experimental procedures). Any cell responding equally to all four stimulus-pairs is least selective (giving a measure of 0) while any cell responding to a single stimulus-pair is the most selective (giving a measure of 3). A concrete example of a single neuron (Figure 2A,B) is useful for und ...
Attractor concretion as a mechanism for the formation of context
Attractor concretion as a mechanism for the formation of context

... reduces to selecting the action leading to the state with the highest value. But how does the brain create representations of these mental states in the first place? We propose a mechanism for the creation of mental states that contain information about the temporal statistics of the events in a part ...
formalin perfusion for correlative light- and
formalin perfusion for correlative light- and

... In studies of the normal and degenerating nervous system it is often essential that the details found by electron microscopy should be correlated with those found by the standard techniques of light microscopy. Such problems as, for example, deciding what type of cell lies post-synaptically to a deg ...
Temporal and spatial alterations in GPi neuronal encoding might
Temporal and spatial alterations in GPi neuronal encoding might

... (–t2 ⁄ (2s2)) ⁄ (s2P)), where s determined the kernel width, controlling the degree of smoothing. We took s ¼ 0.25 ⁄ F, where F is the mean firing rate of the neuron over the recording period (Baker & Gerstein, 2001). The mean firing rate of the neuron across n trials (n > 15), and aligned on the cor ...
The neuron Label the following terms: Soma Axon terminal Axon
The neuron Label the following terms: Soma Axon terminal Axon

... 6. Interneuron     7. Body  (Soma)     8. Dendrite     9. Axon   10. Action  Potential     11. Myelin  Sheath  (Myelin)     12. Afferent  Neuron     13. Threshold     14.  Neurotransmitter     15. Efferent  Neurons   16. Axon  Terminal     17. ...
The honeybee as a model for understanding the basis of cognition
The honeybee as a model for understanding the basis of cognition

... lead to richer crosstalk between sensory inputs and more centralized processing of higher order functions in the honeybee. The digital three-dimensional standard atlas of the bee brain (BOX 1) provides a useful reference for identify­ing and classifying neurons, as well as for determining their cont ...
Glutamate Receptors Form Hot Spots on Apical Dendrites of
Glutamate Receptors Form Hot Spots on Apical Dendrites of

... Patch-pipette recordings were obtained from the somata of layer V pyramidal neurons in parasagittal neocortical slices (300 ␮m thick) from 15- to 25-day-old male Sprague-Dawley rats, as described previously (Dodt et al. 1998). Individual neurons were visualized using the newly developed infrared “gr ...
1) Answers: (a), (b), and (d)
1) Answers: (a), (b), and (d)

... represent information that is closely related to activity in the autonomic nervous systems because autonomic responses to food and eating behaviour only occur if hunger is present. Hypothalamic neurons can learn to respond to the sight of previously neutral stimulus (a container) from which the anim ...
Lecture 11 - Websupport1
Lecture 11 - Websupport1

... • Are performed by the cerebral cortex and involve complex interactions • Involve conscious and unconscious information processing • Are subject to modification and adjustment over time ...
Imaging development and plasticity in the mouse visual system
Imaging development and plasticity in the mouse visual system

... In Chapter 4, I explored OD plasticity in greater detail by monitoring network activity at the level of individual neurons with in vivo two-photon imaging of calcium signals. Monitoring calcium transients associated with neuronal activity in up to hundred cells simultaneously, enabled me to examine ...
Representation of Number in Animals and Humans: A Neural Model
Representation of Number in Animals and Humans: A Neural Model

... strongly to) a specific number of objects. The critical properties of these number-selective neurons are the following. First, they act like filters over numerosity: Neurons that are most responsive to a particular numerosity x also react somewhat weaker to numerosities x  1 and x + 1, still somew ...
Presence of vesicular glutamate transporter-2 in
Presence of vesicular glutamate transporter-2 in

... accumulation of grain clusters in several diencephalic nuclei, including the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMH; Fig. 1A) and the PVa (Fig. 1B). The ARH contained only few VGLUT2 neurons, most of which were localized laterally within the nucleus. These glutamatergic cells were labelled lightly o ...
2.1.2. The Purpose: Acquaint the student by subject to neurologies
2.1.2. The Purpose: Acquaint the student by subject to neurologies

...  somatosensory neurons in the dorsal horns (although many sensory neurons are located outside the spinal cord, in the spinal ganglia);  nociceptive sensory neurons in the dorsal horns that receive and transmit impulses mainly from pain and temperature fibers; and  autonomic neurons in the lateral ...
Chapter 16: The Autonomic System and Higher
Chapter 16: The Autonomic System and Higher

... VII. ...
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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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