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The affective and cognitive processing of touch, oral texture, and
The affective and cognitive processing of touch, oral texture, and

... ratings made to warm (41 8C) and cold (12 8C) stimuli, and combinations of warm and cold stimuli, applied to the hand (Rolls et al., 2008b). Activations in the lateral and some more anterior parts of the orbitofrontal cortex were correlated with the unpleasantness of the stimuli. In contrast, activa ...
Sympathetic Trunk Ganglia
Sympathetic Trunk Ganglia

... • Bladder, reproductive organs, and distal large intestine The Role of the Adrenal Medulla in the Sympathetic Division ...
An Olfactory Sensory Map in the Fly Brain
An Olfactory Sensory Map in the Fly Brain

... as in vertebrates, a topographic map of odor quality is represented in the antennal lobe. However, in the absence of the genes encoding the receptor molecules, it has not been possible to define a physical basis for this spatial map. In this study we have identified the “complete” family of Drosophi ...
Cerebellar control of the inferior olive
Cerebellar control of the inferior olive

... pain around the eye, for instance, would thus be expected to cause an increased climbing fibre input to Purkinje cells controlling the orbicularis oculi muscle that would disinhibit the nuclear cells and cause a prolonged blink or a prolonged facilitation of the blink reflex (50). Whatever its funct ...
NeuroD2 Is Necessary for Development and Survival of Central
NeuroD2 Is Necessary for Development and Survival of Central

... tonic clonic seizures at doses that were subthreshold for wild-type littermates (black arrows). An “X” is shown for each time the animal exhibited the behavior. Observations were made by an investigator that was blinded to mouse genotype. To avoid multiple recordings of the same seizure, each behavi ...
Chapter 48 Presentation
Chapter 48 Presentation

...  This equation applies to any membrane that is permeable to a single type of ion.  All you need to know is the ion concentration inside and outside of the membrane.  A minus sign indicates the inside is more negative than the outside. travismulthaupt.com ...
Neural coding of basic reward terms of animal
Neural coding of basic reward terms of animal

... [6] and requires in some situations the uncertainty of the reinforcer [7]. Uncertainty is different from probability; it is highest at probability (p)¼0.5 and decreases toward lower and higher probabilities, where reward absence or presence becomes increasingly certain. Uncertainty can be assessed a ...
MSH-induced inhibition of oxytocin cells
MSH-induced inhibition of oxytocin cells

... inhibition was recognized when five or more consecutive bins each contained fewer spikes than expected from the prestimulation control, and peristimulus excitation when five or more consecutive bins contained more than the expected number of spikes. The response amplitude was defined as the number o ...
Smell Prism - Systems Neuroscience Course, MEDS 371, Univ
Smell Prism - Systems Neuroscience Course, MEDS 371, Univ

... Olfactory sensory neurons (OSN) have dendrites with cilia containing a G-protiencoupled OR and axons that communicate to the olfactory bulb. OSN can regenerate, giving them an unusual ability to recover from injury. OSN located in separate regions use 4 subfamilies of OR, individual OSN express sing ...
Nociceptors: the sensors of the pain pathway
Nociceptors: the sensors of the pain pathway

... in model systems that an animal’s behavior is due to its perception of pain (15, 17). Although the morphology of sensory nociceptive nerve endings is highly conserved in animals from rodents to humans  (5, 9, 17–19), cutaneous nociceptors are an extremely heterogeneous group of neurons housed in per ...
Evolutionary Convergence in Nervous Systems: Insights from
Evolutionary Convergence in Nervous Systems: Insights from

... phyla [Edwards and Palka, 1991; Katz and Harris-Warrick, 1999]. Nevertheless, small changes in neural circuits are common and can lead to profound differences in function [Nishikawa, 1997; Katz and Harris-Warrick, 1999]. At first glance, evolutionary convergence may appear to complicate evolutionary ...
Artificial Neural Networks Introduction to connectionism
Artificial Neural Networks Introduction to connectionism

... 1. receives signals from other neurons (or sensors) 2. processes (integrates) incoming signals 3. sends the processed signal to other neurons (or muscles) ...
Vestibular System
Vestibular System

... Pressure waves of air (20 to 20,000 Hz in man; up to 40,000 Hz in the dog &100,000 Hz in the bat) can be interpreted as sound. Sound has subjective properties that correspond to parameters of physics: pitch = wave frequency = Hz = Hertz = cycles/sec., volume = amplitude from the low point to the hig ...
emotional learning: a computational model of the amygdala
emotional learning: a computational model of the amygdala

... describes yet another version of the theory. In some respects, the learning model proposed by Grossberg (1987) is also an instance of the two-process idea. The goal of the present work is to show that ¢ndings from neurophysiology can be used to give new insights into the emotional process in a two-p ...
Long?Term, Stable Differentiation of Human Embryonic Stem Cell
Long?Term, Stable Differentiation of Human Embryonic Stem Cell

... Multiple-antigen ICC confirmed further the predominant phenotypes of P2 NPs (Fig. 3E). For example, nestin was found to colocalize extensively with musashi-1 and vimentin, a pattern confirming the neural stemness of our NPs, whereas these cells were negative for pax6, an early marker of neuroepitheliu ...
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8: Control of Movement Biological Bases of Behavior

... appearance, but exhibit rhythmic contractions like that of single-unit smooth muscle ...
Control of Movement
Control of Movement

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BCI - Department of Computer Science
BCI - Department of Computer Science

... (c) A Computer based decoder is used, which translates this activity into commands for muscle control. ...
REVIEW ARTICLE
REVIEW ARTICLE

... (which have no intracellular Ca2+ stores) have very small apical dendrites and give tonic responses. The exact connection between the Ca2+ stores and temporal processing in pyramidal cells is unknown. Electrosensory input to basilar pyramidal cells: coincidence detection On the basis of the response ...
Neural representation of object orientation: A dissociation between
Neural representation of object orientation: A dissociation between

... For each ROI (V1, LO, and pFs) potential hemispheric differences were assessed with a 2 (Hemisphere: Right vs. left) × 4 (Condition: Identical, OPA, EVA, Different) repeated-measures ANOVA. No main effects or interactions involving hemisphere were observed, so all subsequent analyses collapsed acros ...
Selectivity for the Shape, Size, and Orientation of Objects for
Selectivity for the Shape, Size, and Orientation of Objects for

... neurons in the inferior parietal lobule are related to hand manipulation or grasping as well as to visually guided reaching (Hyvärinen and Poranen 1974; Mountcastle et al. 1975). Recently we studied a group of neurons that were related to visually guided hand-manipulation tasks in the anterior part ...
The Brain - Personal
The Brain - Personal

... • Receive inputs from multiple sensory areas • Send outputs to multiple areas, including the premotor cortex • Allow us to give meaning to information received, store it as memory, compare it to previous experience, and decide on action to ...
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of

... Simulation 1 – Neurophysiological Properties of the Neuron You now have at least a working knowledge of action-potential generation in the squid giant axon. Early investigators of the mammalian brain imagined that the central nervous system (CNS) consisted of a complex interconnected network of neur ...
Optometric Management Of A Patient With Parietal Lobe Injury
Optometric Management Of A Patient With Parietal Lobe Injury

... central gyrus and posterior parietal lobe) and frontal lobes. These projections incorporate somatosensory, vestibular, and visual sensorimotor contributions towards stabilizing balance.1,23 Symptoms of vestibular dysfunction, depending upon the specific etiology, may include any or all of the follow ...
MSc Thesis Template Document
MSc Thesis Template Document

... Figure 40 Synapse or Syndesis or Synapsis .................................................................................. 37 Figure 41 The Synaptic Gap at a Synapse .................................................................................... 38 Figure 42 Neurons: Synapses in the Neural Ne ...
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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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