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Selectivity and Tolerance - Center for Neural Science
Selectivity and Tolerance - Center for Neural Science

... creases in selectivity is suggested by tuning for stimuli more complex than simple line segments in V2, V4, and posterior IT (Gallant et al., 1993; Pasupathy and Connor, 1999; Brincat and Connor, 2004; Anzai et al., 2007), as well as IT neurons that appear to be highly selective for complex objects ...
Efferent connections of the parabigeminal nucleus to the amygdala
Efferent connections of the parabigeminal nucleus to the amygdala

... populations, as already indicated in Figs. 1c, e. On the contralateral side (Fig. 1h), the cells of origin of these two pathways are mixed. There are apparently three populations: neurons that project only to the Am, cells that project only to the SC (a smaller number), and double-labeled neurons th ...
Functions of the Nervous System 1. Sensory input 2. Integration 3
Functions of the Nervous System 1. Sensory input 2. Integration 3

... • Vital to regeneration of damaged peripheral nerve fibers ...
ECM Proteins Influence Cell Morphology and Function in Rat Neural
ECM Proteins Influence Cell Morphology and Function in Rat Neural

... dye, Fluo3AM. Cultures were loaded with Fluo3AM (2 uM) for 40 minutes at 37°C. The 96-well coated plates were rinsed with saline using the robot and were placed on the fluorimeter to obtain a “control” reading. Neurotransmitter solutions (Glutamate, Kainate, GABA, and Acetylcholine, 100 uM) were the ...
[PDF]
[PDF]

... length, branch number, and dendritic end number for each eGFPþ neuron. Neurons were selected for analysis based on expression of eGFP throughout the cell body and its processes. Cells were excluded if they exhibit excessive overlapping with adjacent eGFP expressing neurons, their morphology is not i ...
Lecture 3 NS_2015
Lecture 3 NS_2015

... - most of the synapses used in the CNS for signal transmission - the first neuron (presynaptic) secretes at its nerve ending a chemical substance – neurotransmitter / transmitter substance, that diffuses into the synaptic cleft to act on receptor proteins in the membrane of the next neuron (postsyna ...
Rapid Alterations in Diffusion-weighted Images with Anatomic
Rapid Alterations in Diffusion-weighted Images with Anatomic

... seizure-related brain alterations (7, 8). Diffusionweighted imaging has been used in several studies with the kainic acid (an excitatory amino acid) model of TLE. As early as 1 hour, at 5 hours (8), and 12 hours (7) after kainic acid injection, the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) decreased in t ...
evolutionary perspectives on language and brain plasticity
evolutionary perspectives on language and brain plasticity

... any of the millions of possible changes would produce enhanced function are essentially zero. Technological progress is the result of redesign where the engineers involved must pay very close attention to all the detailed ways that their innovations interact with one another and the other parts of t ...
GABA suppresses neurogenesis in the adult
GABA suppresses neurogenesis in the adult

... GABAB receptors are heterodimers composed of GABAB1 and GABAB2 (Gabbr1 and Gabbr2 – Mouse Genome Informatics) subunits, both of which are required for normal receptor function (Ulrich and Bettler, 2007). Accordingly, mice lacking the GABAB1 subunit (Gabbr1−/−; hereafter GABAB1−/−) show a complete ab ...
Brain Waves Volunteer Instructor Guide
Brain Waves Volunteer Instructor Guide

... An object produces sound when it vibrates in matter. Matter is a solid, such as dirt; a liquid, such as water; or a gas, such as air. Most of the time we hear sounds traveling through the air. The ear is divided into three parts: outer ear, middle ear, and inner ear. The outer ear (pinna) collects s ...
The Location of Extrinsic Afferent and Efferent Neurons Innervating
The Location of Extrinsic Afferent and Efferent Neurons Innervating

... rather than projecting directly to the gut. It is not known if these ganglia exist in the rat. In the dog they could not be identified at dissection, and were only recognised at light microscopic level by the presence of labelled cells. Further retrograde labelling studies are required to explore th ...
PhD Thesis - Laboratory of Cerebral Cortex Development
PhD Thesis - Laboratory of Cerebral Cortex Development

... system from E8.5 is the regionalization along the antero-posterior axis (A/P). By E10.0 forebrain midbrain, hindbrain and spinal cord domains are formed. The patterning of this region is associated with precise antero-posterior expression domains or gradients of several regulatory genes coding for t ...
Neuronal morphology in the African elephant (Loxodonta africana
Neuronal morphology in the African elephant (Loxodonta africana

... Deep pyramidal neurons were qualitatively described according to nomenclature found in previous neuromorphological research (e.g., Ngowyang 1932; Ferrer et al. 1986a, b). Descriptions for each neuron used qualitative criteria, such as cortical location, size, dendritic field patterns, presence of sp ...
Neurologic Assessment
Neurologic Assessment

... Biceps reflex Triceps reflex Brachioradialis reflex Quadriceps reflex Achilles reflex (“ankle jerk”) ...
Oligodendrocytes and CNS Myelin Are Nonpermissive Substrates
Oligodendrocytes and CNS Myelin Are Nonpermissive Substrates

... the differentiated CNS may lack cellular or substrateconstituents conducive for neurite growth during development (Liesi, 1985a; Carbonetto et al., 1987) or it may contain components that are nonpermissive or inhibitory for nerve fiber regeneration. In the presentstudy, dissociatedsympathetic, senso ...
06 Motor Systems
06 Motor Systems

... Behavior Neuromuscular junction ...
Lecture 14 (Chapter 13) Last Quiz The Adult Spinal Cord Gross
Lecture 14 (Chapter 13) Last Quiz The Adult Spinal Cord Gross

... There are several ways to classify reflexes but most common is by complexity of the neural circuit: monosynaptic vs polysynaptic ...
From Sensation to Perception
From Sensation to Perception

... – ability to recognize patterns in stimuli (e.g., ...
excitation and inhibition of the reflex eye withdrawal of the crab
excitation and inhibition of the reflex eye withdrawal of the crab

... appreciable trend over the 420 burst period. In some preparations a second smaller unit appeared which responded in approximately the same way as the large motor neuron. It gave spontaneous bursts of impulses and was excited by tegumentary nerve stimulation (Fig. 2c, e, / ) . The spontaneous bursts ...
Transient Storage of a Tactile Memory Trace in Primary
Transient Storage of a Tactile Memory Trace in Primary

... precise temporal resolution. TMS was delivered using a Magstim (Whitland, UK) rapid magnetic stimulator with a figure-eight (double 70 mm) coil, which can induce a maximum magnetic field of 2.2 tesla at the scalp site. Individual resting excitability thresholds of stimulation were previously determi ...
BOLD fMRI study of ultrahigh frequency encoding in the
BOLD fMRI study of ultrahigh frequency encoding in the

... Many vertebrates communicate with ultrahigh frequency (UHF) vocalizations to limit auditory detection by predators. The mechanisms underlying the neural encoding of such UHF sounds may provide important insights for understanding neural processing of other complex sounds (e.g. human speeches). In th ...
Experience-dependent corticofugal adjustment
Experience-dependent corticofugal adjustment

... observed in the central nucleus of the IC by Yan and Suga (11), we delivered ASr in the same way as in that research. The BFs of single or multiple IC neurons were measured before and after 30-min delivery of ASr. (Step 2) To examine whether auditory experience based on associative learning evokes a ...
Vestibular Function and Anatomy April 2004
Vestibular Function and Anatomy April 2004

... specific gravity close to that of the endolymph and is not responsive to gravity. The structure of the utricle and saccule is different from the semicircular canals. These organs are also referred to as the otolith organs. The sensory portion of the otolith organs is the macula. The cilia from the h ...
Taste & Smell Pre-lab Web questions
Taste & Smell Pre-lab Web questions

... learn how the olfactory system works. ...
Physiology Ch 45 p543-557 [4-25
Physiology Ch 45 p543-557 [4-25

... mesencephalon, cerebellum, thalamus, and areas of cerebral cortex Motor Part of Nervous System – Effectors – body activities controlled by contraction of skeletal and smooth muscles, and secretion of active chemicals by exocrine and endocrine glands; called motor functions of nervous system and the ...
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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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