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lmmunohistochemical Localization of Neuronal Nicotinic Receptors
lmmunohistochemical Localization of Neuronal Nicotinic Receptors

... are structurally unrelated (Kubo et al., 1986a, b) to nicotinic ACh receptors (AChR, Noda et al., 1983a, b), which act by regulating directly the opening of a cation channel that is an intrinsic component of the molecule. Furthermore, subtypesof neuronal AChRs have been identified on the basisof pha ...
Dorsal spinal cord stimulation obtunds the capacity of intrathoracic
Dorsal spinal cord stimulation obtunds the capacity of intrathoracic

... power 1401 data acquisition system) and analyzed using the Spike 2 software package (Cambridge Electronics Design). Ganglionic loci were identified from which action potentials with signal to noise ratios greater than 3:1 could be recorded. The activity generated by individual neuronal somata was id ...
GABAergic Influence on Taste Information in the Central Gustatory
GABAergic Influence on Taste Information in the Central Gustatory

... concentration-dependent manner; 96% of tested neurons responded to muscimol (GABAA agonist) in a similar manner. Baclofen (GABAB agonist) was tested on 11 neurons with no effects. GABAA antagonists picrotoxin and BICM blocked these GABA responses in a concentration-dependent manner. These results s ...
The Neuroscientist
The Neuroscientist

... major challenges to sensory neuroscience obtaining the ultimate goal of understanding how neural firing patterns in the brain give rise to perception. Keywords auditory cortex, sound, vocalization, parallel, hearing, tuning, single neuron The organ of Corti, located within the cochlea, is the sensor ...
Color Vision Theories
Color Vision Theories

... • 1872 - Hering proposed a theory of color vision to account for perceptual or psychological aspects of color vision. 1) The perception of yellow in the 560 - 580 nm range. 2) Negative after-images are complements of induction stimuli. 3) The Bezold-Brucke effect: The perceived hues of monochromatic ...
Evolution of Association Pallial Areas: In Birds E
Evolution of Association Pallial Areas: In Birds E

... proposed changes to the avian brain nomenclature and renamed many avian telencephalic structures [3,5]. The classical avian brain nomenclature dated back to 1900 and was based on Edinger’s model of brain evolution. According to his formulation, vertebrate brain evolution consisted of a series of add ...
Simulation of signal flow in 3D reconstructions of an anatomically
Simulation of signal flow in 3D reconstructions of an anatomically

... volumes of tissue. Specifically, we determined the number and 3D distribution of neuron somata within an average barrel column in rat vibrissal cortex (Meyer, Wimmer, & Oberlaender et al., 2010; Oberlaender et al., submitted for publication). A second requirement comprises 3D reconstructions of dend ...
mechanisms and biological role of thalamocortical oscillations
mechanisms and biological role of thalamocortical oscillations

... Neocortical neurons reveal at least four distinct electrophysiological types (see Fig. 3): (a) regular-spiking (RS), (b) intrinsically-bursting (IB), (c) fast-rhythmic-bursting (FRB) and (d) fast-spiking (FS, Fig. 3) (Connors and Gutnick 1990; Gray and McCormick 1996; McCormick et al. 1985; Steriade ...
Name
Name

... 4. _____ When repolarization has occurred, an impulse cannot be conducted. 5. _____ The action potential is an all-or-none response. 6. _____ In an adult, the nervous system is replete with both electrical and chemical synapses. 7. _____ Rapid succession stimulation of a postsynaptic neuron by a syn ...
Article
Article

... network. Each line represents the voltage of a single neuron in response to two identical events separated by 100 ms. The first 100 lines represent 100 Ex units (out of 400), and the remaining lines represent 25 Inh units (out of 100). Each input produces a depolarization across all neurons in the n ...
Effects of Correlated Input on Development of Structure in an
Effects of Correlated Input on Development of Structure in an

... with a power law like decay (Craigmile 2003). This is as opposed to a shortrange process in which the coupling of values decays rapidly the further apart they are in time (or in space). One can establish whether a process shows LRTCs by estimating its Hurst coefficient, H, with “ 12 < H < 1 correspo ...
Imaging Brain Slices
Imaging Brain Slices

... neurons, and neural circuits because, while they are easily accessed by experimental manipulations such as drug applications, intracellular recordings, and optical imaging, they preserve many of the essential functional properties of these circuits. In this chapter, we describe techniques of live br ...
University of Groningen Ascending projections from spinal
University of Groningen Ascending projections from spinal

... thoroughly, but projections from the brainstem to the PAG had not yet been studied in such detail. In order to be able to place the pathways of the ‘emotional sensory system’ in perspective with other ascending tracts, an attempt was made to compare them to the pathway from the spinal cord to the th ...
Rostral Fastigial Nucleus Activity in the Alert Monkey During Three
Rostral Fastigial Nucleus Activity in the Alert Monkey During Three

... all eight major response vector orientations (ipsilateral or contralateral anterior canal, posterior canal, roll, and nose-down and noseup pitch) were found in FN on one side. Neurons with ipsilateral orientations were more numerous and on average more sensitive than those with contralateral orienta ...
Experience-Dependent Sharpening of Visual Shape Selectivity in
Experience-Dependent Sharpening of Visual Shape Selectivity in

... To measure the broadness of stimulus selectivity, we determined the number of stimuli (of 18) at each orientation that elicited a significant response greater than baseline according to a one-tailed t-test at P < 0.01. For this analysis, lower values indicate sharper tuning (i.e., a neuron that respo ...
charting the brain`s networks
charting the brain`s networks

... than 90 colours1. The researchers could then distinguish individual neurons in the brain’s dense tangles of otherwise identical neurons. Separately, the Brainstorm Consortium, which is composed of scientists from Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), in Cambridge, Massachusett ...
PDF
PDF

... the core of the cochlear nucleus. These rapidly conducting, myelinated axons convey acoustic information to the brain via the auditory nerve. In contrast, the shell represented by the GCD receives input from type II auditory nerve fibers (Brown et al., 1988a; Hurd et al., 1999). These unmyelinated a ...
Psychology
Psychology

... In adolescents, there are characteristic changes in sleep patterns due to the rapid physiological, emotional and social changes that take place. Ideally, teenagers need more sleep, but do not get the required amount of sleep and therefore cope with sleep debt. Biological ‘phase delay’ leads adolesce ...
CONTROL OF MOVEMENT BY THE BRAIN A. PRIMARY MOTOR
CONTROL OF MOVEMENT BY THE BRAIN A. PRIMARY MOTOR

... ____________ tract: leg muscles (programs or pattern generators in brainstem; species-specific motor programs). ...
Nervous_system_Tissue_Overview0
Nervous_system_Tissue_Overview0

... can conduct but cannot replicate  Have 3 specialized characteristics  Longevity: with nutrition, can live as long as you do  Amitotic: unable to reproduce themselves (so cannot be replaced) ...
Neuroscience Newsletter, May 2015 - MSc/PhD/MD
Neuroscience Newsletter, May 2015 - MSc/PhD/MD

... croissant” and the “Ofiomosaic model”, based on light microscopy imaging implied a growth from the outer surface of the myelin sheath and the involvement of the axon membrane rotation as an active force driving the myelination (Sobottka et al., 2011, Ioannidou et al., 2012). However, due to the phys ...
Introduction to the Nervous System
Introduction to the Nervous System

... of the nerves are associated with the special senses of smell, vision, hearing, and equilibrium and have only sensory fibers. Five other nerves are primarily motor in function but do have some sensory fibers for proprioception. The remaining four nerves consist of significant amounts of both sensory ...
Document
Document

... contract, injecting bile into the duodenum. (Bile breaks fats down into small particles so that they can be absorbed from the intestines.) ...
Response Differences in Monkey TE and Perirhinal Cortex: Stimulus
Response Differences in Monkey TE and Perirhinal Cortex: Stimulus

... selectivity for complex visual patterns and showing response modulations related to behavioral context in the sequential delayed matchto-sample (DMS) trials, attention, and stimulus familiarity. Here we identify physiological differences in the neuronal activity of these two areas. We recorded singl ...
spiking neuron models - Assets - Cambridge
spiking neuron models - Assets - Cambridge

... (or soma) of a postsynaptic cell is the synapse. The most common type of synapse in the vertebrate brain is a chemical synapse. At a chemical synapse, the axon terminal comes very close to the postsynaptic neuron, leaving only a tiny gap between pre- and postsynaptic cell membranes, called the synap ...
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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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