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Enhanced Modulation of Neuronal Activity during
Enhanced Modulation of Neuronal Activity during

... GP might regulate eye movements through the nigro-collicular descending circuitry and through the basal ganglia--thalamocortical pathways. Keywords: antisaccade, globus pallidus, inactivation, physiology, primate ...
Neural Mechanisms of Bias and Sensitivity in Hiroshi Nishida Muneyoshi Takahashi
Neural Mechanisms of Bias and Sensitivity in Hiroshi Nishida Muneyoshi Takahashi

... reaction time during decision making. An important merit of reaction-time analysis is that it increases the statistical power, especially when considering neural activity on a trial-by-trial basis. The Linear Approach to Threshold with Ergodic Rate model (LATER model) is one model for the analysis o ...
learning, Memory, and Cognition: Animal Perspectives
learning, Memory, and Cognition: Animal Perspectives

... ated with olfactory imprinting take place at the critical age. Exposure to benzaldehyde at days 2-5 of adult life, but not at 8-1 I, causes behavioral adaptation as well as structural changes in DM2 and V glomeruli. These examples show that (i) animals often exhibit innate preferences for signals al ...
Organization of the primary somatosensory cortex and wing
Organization of the primary somatosensory cortex and wing

... marked the border of receptive Welds that were centered in the dactylopatagium, and was excluded from receptive Welds that were centered in the plagiopatagium. In only a few cases and only at suprathreshold stimulus intensities, receptive Welds crossed the D5 border. Results of somatosensory mapping ...
Cortico-Basal Ganglia Interactions in Huntington`s Disease
Cortico-Basal Ganglia Interactions in Huntington`s Disease

... The striatum (caudate nucleus and putamen) receives major excitatory glutamatergic inputs from the cerebral cortex. The cortical information, which is passed to the striatum from the primary motor, primary sensory, premotor and associative motor cortices, can be processed through two different route ...
Get PDF - Wiley Online Library
Get PDF - Wiley Online Library

... www.abcam.com) at 4°C overnight. Then, the sections were incubated with Alexa Fluor 488- or 594-conjugated anti-IgG secondary antibodies and counterstained with bis-benzamide (Molecular Probes) to visualize the entire population of cells. Fluorescent images were acquired using a Zeiss LSM510 confoca ...
Guide to the CERAD Form
Guide to the CERAD Form

... cortex respectively. The pathology is graded as none = 0, sparse (one or two affected neurons per section) =1, moderate (several affected neurons per section) = 3 and severe (many affected neurons per section) = 5. snlhi and snlerc record the presence or absence of severe neuronal loss in the hippoc ...
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Motor systems Basal ganglia

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How different are the visual representations used for object
How different are the visual representations used for object

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48_Lectures_PPT
48_Lectures_PPT

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ch. 6 pdf - TeacherWeb
ch. 6 pdf - TeacherWeb

... strings of long, thin cells called neurons (see Figure 6.2). Chemicalelectrical signals travel down the neurons much as flame travels along a firecracker fuse. The main difference is that the neuron can fire (burn) over and over again, hundreds of times a minute. Transmission between neurons, or ner ...
Development of neuromotor prostheses
Development of neuromotor prostheses

... subcortical structures is very difficult with these materials and the manufacturing process. Titanium and other metal-based arrays, being explored in our group, can be electromachined into a variety of shapes and lengths (Fofonoff et al., 2002) which may address some of these issues. Other electrode ...
P-GAP-43 Is Enriched in Horizontal Cell
P-GAP-43 Is Enriched in Horizontal Cell

... radial glial cells maintains their radial process during cell division (Miyata and others 2001, 2004; Tamamaki 2002). Thus, the basal daughter cell of a horizontal cell division remains attached to the basement membrane and often differentiates directly into a neuron, whereas the apical daughter rem ...
Sustained conditioned responses in prelimbic prefrontal neurons are
Sustained conditioned responses in prelimbic prefrontal neurons are

... 75 dB, 30 s) immediately followed by fear conditioning consisting of five tone presentations that coterminated with mild footshocks (0.4 mA, 0.5 s). At the end of the conditioning phase, rats were transported to their homecages, and 2 h later they were brought back to the same operant chamber to rec ...
Body and Behavior - Miami East Local Schools
Body and Behavior - Miami East Local Schools

... strings of long, thin cells called neurons (see Figure 6.2). Chemicalelectrical signals travel down the neurons much as flame travels along a firecracker fuse. The main difference is that the neuron can fire (burn) over and over again, hundreds of times a minute. Transmission between neurons, or ner ...
The neural mechanisms of perceptual filling-in
The neural mechanisms of perceptual filling-in

... Steady fixation and stabilized retinal image. Filling-in also occurs in the normal visual field where there is no deficit of visual inputs. In one example, stabilization of the border of a surface on the retina causes fillingin. For instance, when steady fixation is maintained, the contrast of an ob ...
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A Computational Model of the Amygdala Nuclei`s Role in - laral

... most influential models on classical conditioning, those based on “temporaldifference reward prediction error” [3, 4] , suffer of several limitations. The main reason is that they have been developed within the machine learning framework with the aim of building artificial machines capable of autono ...
Chapter 13 Student Guide
Chapter 13 Student Guide

... Copyright © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. ...
Prosjektoppgave - Mirror neurons_ver4.2
Prosjektoppgave - Mirror neurons_ver4.2

... study the activity the motor neurons in a behavioral setting, where one could distinguish between stimulus associated responses from the activity related movements. The monkey was trained to retrieve objects of different shapes and sizes from a box, with a variable delay after a stimulus presentatio ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... • Your brain triggers six trillion electrical signals through your neurons every second to operate your body and allow you freedom of thought, movement and life. • How much is six trillion? Well, six trillion pennies stacked end-on-end, would go from the earth to the moon, 243,000 miles, twentyfour ...
Title - HAL
Title - HAL

... Neuronal dendrites display an astonishing diversity in shape. This part of the nerve cells is important for several reasons. Firstly, it strongly influences the information processing performed by the cell, though how this influence is exercised is still debated. Secondly, the shape of dendritic arb ...
Cell Density in the Border Zone Around Old Small Human Brain
Cell Density in the Border Zone Around Old Small Human Brain

... coronal and the horizontal planes at various distances from the margin of the infarct. Corresponding counting points in the contralateral hemisphere served as control. On light microscopy, the infarcted cortex was irregularly shaped, but on serial sections the bulging parts appeared to be cut off fr ...
CONTROL OF MOVEMENT BY THE BRAIN A. PRIMARY MOTOR
CONTROL OF MOVEMENT BY THE BRAIN A. PRIMARY MOTOR

... and maintainance of motor skills Function: Acquisition ______________________________________ - likely uses timing and feedback functions for accuracy. - NEVER INITIATES MOVEMENT Cerebellum receives inputs from: - ____________________ primary motor cortex - _________________ vestibular nuclei - ____ ...
The elusive crypt olfactory receptor neuron
The elusive crypt olfactory receptor neuron

... to a triple-barreled stimulus pipette (WPI), as described previously in detail (Schmachtenberg and Bacigalupo, 2004). Amino acids were applied as a mixture of the L-isomers of alanine, arginine, asparagine, glutamate, glycine, methionine, phenylalanine and tyrosine at a concentration of 1 mmol l–1 e ...
Reticular formation
Reticular formation

... cholinergic arm of the reticular activating system (RAS), is known to modulate arousal, waking and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Prenatal exposure to cigarette smoke induces marked changes in cells in the cholinergic arm of the RAS, making them more excitable. Preterm birth induces persistent dele ...
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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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