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The NeuronDoctrine: A Revision of Functional
The NeuronDoctrine: A Revision of Functional

... the morphological neuron is a single functional entity, and all types of neurons are functionally similar or equivalent. Bullock(2) previously pointed out the inadequacy of this view, particularly with regard to invertebrate neurons. That this notion should have prevailed for so long in the mammalia ...
Trigeminal pathways handout
Trigeminal pathways handout

... 3. Diagram the corneal reflex: the afferent and efferent limbs as well as nuclei involved in the brainstem. 4. If a person does not blink, how would you determine if the problem were in the sensory (afferent) limb, motor (efferent) limb, or brainstem interconnections for the corneal reflex? 5. Expla ...
PRESENTATION NAME
PRESENTATION NAME

... – Chemicals that carry messages across the synapse to a dendrite of a receiving neuron • Excitatory messages – Increase likelihood that neuron will fire • Inhibitory messages – Decrease likelihood that neuron will fire ...
May 21, 04.doc
May 21, 04.doc

... GABA Receptor Subunits and Sensory Deprivation GABAA receptors subunits comprise a family of at least 17 subunits (Davies et al., 1997). Each subunit is expressed in a particular laminar pattern in SI and visual cortex (V1). For instance, in SI and V1, the α1 subunit, which is present in the majori ...
Dorsal Column Nuclei Neurons Recorded in a Brain Stem–Spinal
Dorsal Column Nuclei Neurons Recorded in a Brain Stem–Spinal

... preparation: characteristics and their responses to dorsal root stimulation. J Neurophysiol 84: 1361–1368, 2000. Recordings were obtained from dorsal column nucleus (DCN) neurons in a neonatal rat brain stem—spinal cord preparation to study their basic electrophysiological properties and responses t ...
Page 1 of 4 Further reading - New Scientist 20/07/2009 http://www
Page 1 of 4 Further reading - New Scientist 20/07/2009 http://www

... example, your brain isn't simply receiving information, it also predicts what it expects to hear and constantly revises its predictions based on what information comes next. These predictions strongly influence what you actually hear, allowing you, for instance, to make sense of distorted or partial ...
Stem Cells may Beat Riluzole in Treatment of Amyotrophic Lateral
Stem Cells may Beat Riluzole in Treatment of Amyotrophic Lateral

... sought to extend the life of patients of ALS, more so than the currently approved Rilutek already does. Perhaps the most important of these clinical trials are those studies involving the use of stem cells to treat ALS. Stem cells have the ability to differentiate into any cell type within the body ...
EFFECTS OF INTERLEUKM 1p ON JSOLATED RAT
EFFECTS OF INTERLEUKM 1p ON JSOLATED RAT

... (85%) of cells responding with depolarkations (29 of 34) were DIKcells. In ordet to detemine the ionic conductances involved in the IL4 P receptor mediated depolarkation. a further series of experiments using voltage clamp techniques were perfonned. The affects of IL43 on the non-selective cation cu ...
Document
Document

... 1) Sensory neurons: detect stimuli and transmit signals to the brain and the spinal cord 2) Interneurons: receive signals from sensory neurons and relay them within the brain and spinal cord 3) Motor neurons: pass messages from the nervous system to the other tissues in the body, such as muscles ...
IOSR Journal of Electronics and Communication Engineering (IOSR-JECE)
IOSR Journal of Electronics and Communication Engineering (IOSR-JECE)

... (5) Single unit activity (SUA) is measured intracortically with a microelectrode inserted into the tissue. Single-Unit Activity (SUA) The term single-unit refers to a single neuron. A single-unit activity is the signal of a discharging neuron which is intracortically measured by a microelectrode. Th ...
PPT - 서울대 Biointelligence lab
PPT - 서울대 Biointelligence lab

... information and how the signals are used by neuronal processes for the control of behavior “self-referencing system” “ongoing self-maintaining system” – so treating brain as an input-output system can have only limited success. Many studies in neuronal procedure and functional mechanism lacks “compr ...
Bischoff_Thesis - The USC Brain Project
Bischoff_Thesis - The USC Brain Project

... • Indirect pathway is overactive (inhibits motor programs), direct pathway is less capable of responding to current motor command • Slower time constant and higher GPi inhibition -> SMA doesn’t know status of current motor program so doesn’t command the next movement ...
Visual field defect
Visual field defect

... Congruous: when the defect is not complete (does not occupy the entire half of the field) & the defect extends to the same angular meridian in both eyes. Complete homonymous hemianopia cannot be categorized as ‘’congruous’’ because it is complete. ...
neuronal types and their specification dynamics in
neuronal types and their specification dynamics in

... divisions share a similar architecture with inputs from the hypothalamus being transmitted first to pre-ganglionic neurons within the central nervous system and then to the postganglionic neurons in the peripheral nervous system or directly to the target organ. Autonomic neurons regulate organ funct ...
潓慭潴敳獮牯⁹祓瑳浥
潓慭潴敳獮牯⁹祓瑳浥

... process that divides into two processes a short distance from the cell, in a T-shaped configuration. One of these two processes travels to the receptor organs of the periphery, giving off numerous collateral branches along the way, so that a single ganglion cell receives input from multiple receptor ...
Neural structures involved in the control of movement
Neural structures involved in the control of movement

... 2nd: loss of striatal GABA/dynorphin/D1-R neurons (direct pathway) & cortical atrophy ...
11 Nervous a
11 Nervous a

... Long-lived, amitotic, and have a high metabolic rate ...
The concept of a reflex
The concept of a reflex

... CNS. Drawn in red, 4 is a motor neuron whose soma is in the ventral horn of the gray H of the spinal cord. The last element involved is 5, the effector organ, which in the case of this type of arc, will always be skeletal muscle. Here's how the system works: something impinges on the transducer, whi ...
Response Characteristics of Spinal Cord Dorsal Horn Neurons in
Response Characteristics of Spinal Cord Dorsal Horn Neurons in

... briefly (⬃1 s) sprayed onto the receptive field. ...
Horvitz, J.C. Stimulus-response and response
Horvitz, J.C. Stimulus-response and response

... synaptic plasticity in the striatum [28,30,32,157]. Today, available data help to shed light on the nature of input–output connectivity in the striatum, and the types of information likely transmitted by cortical inputs to striatal output cells. This paper will consider (1) the types of events signa ...
My Secret Role in True Happiness: A Story of a Neuron
My Secret Role in True Happiness: A Story of a Neuron

... make the surges of dopamine stop. Finally, I figured it out! As the dopamine continued coming, I sucked in several of my dopamine receptors so the amount of dopamine I took in would be reduced. Oh the relief! Finally the constant bombardment quieted. ...
Mechanisms underlying working memory for novel information
Mechanisms underlying working memory for novel information

... underlie working memory [11–13,57] and encoding into episodic memory [24,25,56]. Working memory Biophysical compartmental simulations of layer II non-stellate neurons [13] demonstrate how the Alonso current can underlie the sustained delay period spiking in the entorhinal cortex seen with extracellu ...
PDF
PDF

... Various experimental results (Cheng and Frank, 2008; Tye et al., 2008) have led to the idea that memories are distributed across a population of neurons. How does the mechanism of synaptic semblance (Figure 1A) lead to the concurrent firing of specific neurons during memory retrieval? This may be expl ...
ppt
ppt

...  Only neurons that can encode the goal of the motor behaviour with the greatest degree of generality can be considered to be crucial for action understanding STS  spatio-temporally adjacent visual representations of body part movements. not visual representations of the same motor goal achieved b ...
lateral horns of gray matter
lateral horns of gray matter

... Consists of several structures located around the third ventricle: thalamus, hypothalamus, optic chiasma, pineal gland, and several others Thalamus • Dumbbell-shaped mass of gray matter composed of many nuclei • Each lateral mass forms one lateral wall of the third ventricle • Intermediate mass exte ...
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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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