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Chapter 12 Nervous System Review Assignment
Chapter 12 Nervous System Review Assignment

... ____ 27. After an action potential has occurred in a myelinated neuron, Na+ inside the axon diffuse along the membrane causing a. repolarization at the adjacent node of Ranvier. b. depolarization at the adjacent node of Ranvier. c. repolarization at the adjacent region of the membrane. d. depolariza ...
Neural representations of location composed of spatially periodic
Neural representations of location composed of spatially periodic

... periodic non-grid cells in both anatomical regions investigated. Although the overall percentage of all spatially periodic cells in mEC was lower (156/239, 65% in mEC; 89/112, 79% in PaS), the proportion of grid cells was much higher in mEC (75/156 or 48%) than in PaS (16/89 or 18%) despite the clos ...
Searching for lost memories, Sudoku, and related ills of the brain
Searching for lost memories, Sudoku, and related ills of the brain

... the tree-pruning procedure several times in succession, positing 'if I move here, then my opponent has (from the pattern-recognition process) only 4 reasonable moves. Examine each of them sequentially using the pattern-recognition procedure to suggest a few possibilities for my moves..... '. The ove ...
Mapping Function Onto Neuronal Morphology
Mapping Function Onto Neuronal Morphology

... of the neurons, the fitness functions, and the genetic algorithm. The sets of equations are only weakly connected. By this we mean that one set of equations provides only parameters, initial or boundary conditions to the other set of equations. There is, however, no continuous coupling with the stat ...
- Hayden Lab
- Hayden Lab

... orbitofrontal cortex (lOFC) (Padoa-Schioppa, 2009, 2013; Padoa-Schioppa and Assad, 2006). A key prediction of choice models is that representations of value in lOFC are stored in a common currency format and compared locally within lOFC (Padoa-Schioppa, 2011). We chose to record in the vmPFC rather ...
A High-Efficiency Protein Transduction System Demonstrating the
A High-Efficiency Protein Transduction System Demonstrating the

... into neurons and controlling subcellular localization of these substances within the neurons of brain slices would be advantageous in many experiments. Recently, a human immunodeficiency virus TAT protein transduction system has been shown to transduce biologically active proteins into cells (Nagaha ...
Notch signals and telencephalic fate
Notch signals and telencephalic fate

... 1990). Notch1, Notch3 and Delta1 (a Notch ligand) are expressed in the embryonic telencephalon during the period when regions segregate and commitment to cell types occurs (Lindsell et al., 1996). However, the role of these genes in forebrain development is still unclear. In this study, we have aske ...
Neural Crest Stem Cells from Adult Bone Marrow: A New
Neural Crest Stem Cells from Adult Bone Marrow: A New

... known organ in which two separate and distinct stem cells and dependent tissue systems not only coexist but functionally cooperate, defining hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) and mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) (reviewed by Bianco et al., 2001). MSC were first isolated from the bone marrow (BM-MSC) stem c ...
MOTOR SYSTEM – Muscle, LMC, Spinal cord mechanisms of control
MOTOR SYSTEM – Muscle, LMC, Spinal cord mechanisms of control

... Rule #2 – fixed sequence for firing rate of motoneurons; when first activated, a motoneuron may fire at 10 Hz; when it receives more excitation is will increase its firing up to 25 Hz - Increasing the discharge rate of an already active unit increases its force output until it reaches maximum force ...
Chapter 5
Chapter 5

... The nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain. ...
Developmental origin of shark electrosensory organs
Developmental origin of shark electrosensory organs

... skin and transmit them somatotopically to the brain. In chondrichthyans, the electrosensory system is composed of a cephalic network of ampullary organs, known as the ampullae of Lorenzini, that can detect extremely weak electric fields during hunting and navigation. Each ampullary organ consists of ...
Neurophysiology of Pain - International Pain School
Neurophysiology of Pain - International Pain School

... • This will help in – understanding the mechanism by which nociceptive signals are produced. – know the different regions of the nervous system involved in processing these signals. – learn how the different medications and treatment for pain management work. ...
Cues that hippocampal place cells encode
Cues that hippocampal place cells encode

... situations distal visual stimuli were emphasized whereas local cues were minimized by randomizing their locations, by making them irrelevant to task performance (O’Keefe and Speakman, 1987; O’Keefe and Burgess, 1996), and sometimes by randomizing the location of ongoing behavior relevant to those cu ...
When the Sun Prickles Your Nose: An EEG Study Identifying
When the Sun Prickles Your Nose: An EEG Study Identifying

... performed on a regular cubic grid at 5 mm resolution, producing a total of 6392 cortical grey matter voxels. sLORETA provides an estimation of the solution of the inverse problem by taking into account the well-known effects of the head as a volume conductor. Conventional LORETA and modern sLORETA a ...
From/To LTM - Ohio University
From/To LTM - Ohio University

...  Short term memory (STM) and long term memory (LTM): two major types of memories in neurobiological research of human brain.  They occupy different regions of the human brain, have different structural organization.  They interact with each other.  Input information go through the STM so that it ...
Auditory Hallucinations as a Separate Entitity
Auditory Hallucinations as a Separate Entitity

... A significant feature of the auditory pathway is that low rates of impulse firing continue even in the absence of sound all the way from the cochlear nerve fibres to the auditory cortex with the continuous movement of the basilar membrane. How can we discriminate frequencies of sounds? In the audito ...
The Nervous System
The Nervous System

... immediate area of the injection, epidural anesthesia may be difficult to achieve in the upper cervical, midthoracic, and lumbar regions, where the epidural space is extremely narrow. Caudal anesthesia involves the introduction of anesthetics into the epidural space of the sacrum. Injection at this s ...
Different levels of Ih determine distinct temporal integration in
Different levels of Ih determine distinct temporal integration in

... whereas I h exhibits similar voltage-dependent and kinetic properties in both classes of neurons. Bursting and regular-spiking neurons display similar morphology. The difference in I h between the two classes of neurons is not responsible for the distinct firing patterns, as neither pharmacological ...
22. ANS.Neuroscience
22. ANS.Neuroscience

...  Targets: Lacrimal gland, nasal & palatine mucosal gland ...
ANS.Neuroscience.09
ANS.Neuroscience.09

...  Targets: Lacrimal gland, nasal & palatine mucosal gland ...
Tactile orientation perception: an ideal observer analysis of human
Tactile orientation perception: an ideal observer analysis of human

... have elliptical RFs (Pruszynski and Johansson 2014; VegaBermudez and Johnson 1999) with aspect ratios that are similar, on average, to those of S1 cortical neurons (Sripati et al. 2006b). Elongated RFs, however, seem to be somewhat more prevalent in cortex than in the periphery. Sripati et al. (2006 ...
Whisker movements evoked by stimulation of single pyramidal cells
Whisker movements evoked by stimulation of single pyramidal cells

... backwards-and-forwards sweeps, which we refer to as a ‘whisking burst’, beginning after a variable latency of 0.05–2.0 s. The peak of the evoked movement was delayed (0.3 s to 50% of the amplitude) and the movement lasted for several seconds (Fig. 1e). We quantified the peak-to-peak amplitude of mov ...
Two-photon imaging and analysis of neural network dynamics
Two-photon imaging and analysis of neural network dynamics

... number of neurons imaged. Obviously, it is desirable to image large populations at high speed in order to reveal neuronal spike trains across the population with good temporal precision, at best with millisecond resolution. However, because the number of photons is limited in such optical recordings ...
Lecture 22
Lecture 22

... scanning laser videos show the complex movement of different regions; profiles: red is outward movement of the tympanum and green is inward movement ...
CLM  UMR-S 839 INSERM/UPMC Institut du Fer a Moulin
CLM UMR-S 839 INSERM/UPMC Institut du Fer a Moulin

... underlies nearly every aspect of nervous system function. Recent advances in molecular, electrophysiological, in vivo imaging techniques, as wells as circuit interrogation in behaving animals have led to a rapid enhancement in our understanding of the mechanisms that causally link structure, functio ...
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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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