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Neuron-Glia Interactions of Rat Hippocampal Cells in vitro: Glial
Neuron-Glia Interactions of Rat Hippocampal Cells in vitro: Glial

... Dialux 20 EB microscope, a Hipad Digitizer, an IBM PC and the Bioquant System IV (R&M Biometrics Inc., Nashville, TN). The distribution of glial cells with a bipolar shape, bearing processes 30-50 pm in length, of elongated cells with processes longer than 50 pm or stellate cells with 3 or more proc ...
Chapter 11-自律神經及體運動神經系統檔案
Chapter 11-自律神經及體運動神經系統檔案

... 自體免疫疾病— a disease in which the immune system 免疫系統 attacks proteins that are normal components of body tissues  In myasthenia gravis, the immune system produces antibodies 抗體 against acetylcholine receptors at the neuromuscular junctions  decrease in the number of functional receptors on the cell s ...
Chapter 15 Autonomic NS
Chapter 15 Autonomic NS

... Autonomic Nervous System - Regulate activity of smooth muscle, cardiac muscle & certain glands - Structures involved General visceral afferent neurons General visceral efferent neurons Integration center within the brain - Receives input from limbic system and other regions of the cerebrum ...
supplemental figures
supplemental figures

... Figure S5. Example of isolated unit sorted using MClust software. (a) Spike waveforms of the unit recorded with four channels of a tetrode. (b) Auto-correlogram of the unit with 4 millisecond binsize. (c) Auto-correlogram of the unit with 1 millisecond binsize. ...
Nervous System - Discovery Education
Nervous System - Discovery Education

... system every second travel along special cells called neurons or nerve cells. You are born with all the neurons you will ever have, for these special cells can not duplicate themselves like other body cells. Don’t worry, there are more than enough neurons to last a lifetime. In fact, these cells die ...
Reference frames for representing the location of visual and tactile
Reference frames for representing the location of visual and tactile

... often interspersed with cells with intermediate properties. For instance, most auditory RFs in the SC are intermediate between eye- and headcentered: that is, when the eyes move, the auditory RFs shift only partially with the eye9,10. This type of visual-auditory RF is also reported in the lateral i ...
Introducing Psychology
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... – Principle that different sensory modalities exist because signals received by the sense organs stimulate different nerve pathways leading to different areas of the brain – If possible, allows for sensory substitution – Sensory crossover also occurs in synesthesia where stimulation of one sense con ...
lmmunocytochemical Mapping of 18236, A Brain
lmmunocytochemical Mapping of 18236, A Brain

... have generally begun with comparative analysis of its chemical or functional differences with cells of other organ systems, Likewise, attempts to clarify the uniquely complex structural organization of the brain were first approached through empirically derived cell staining methods supplemented lat ...
Organization of Inhibitory Frequency Receptive Fields in Cat Primary
Organization of Inhibitory Frequency Receptive Fields in Cat Primary

... analyzing complex spectral patterns, whereas ventral A1 (A1v) appears better suited for analyzing narrowband sounds. However, these studies were based on single-tone stimuli and did not consider how neuronal responses to tones are modulated when the tones are part of a more complex acoustic environm ...
neurons
neurons

... Receive messages from other neurons. Axon: Long single extension of a neuron, covered with myelin [MY-uh-lin] sheath to insulate and speed up messages through neurons. Terminal Branches of axon: Branched endings of an axon that transmit messages to other neurons. ...
Release of chemical transmitters from cell bodies and dendrites of
Release of chemical transmitters from cell bodies and dendrites of

... fusion requires longer-lasting depolarization than that required for release of synaptic clear vesicles [23]; in addition, calcium entry occurs through different sets of channels [24]. In response to depolarization, electrondense vesicles in chromaffin cells are transported actively towards the plas ...
Denes et al. 2007 - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
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... the animals: a Linnean tercentenary celebration’. ...
Compete to Compute
Compete to Compute

... cortical [3] and sub-cortical (e.g., hippocampus [1] and cerebellum [2]) regions of the brain exhibit a recurrent on-center, off-surround anatomy, wherein cells provide excitatory feedback to nearby cells, while scattering inhibitory signals over a broader range. Biological modeling has since tried ...
SELF AND OTHER
SELF AND OTHER

... Who ‘owns’ the behavior/ action? How does the brain code for ‘agency’? ...
The Biological Perspective - Virgil Zeigler-Hill
The Biological Perspective - Virgil Zeigler-Hill

... The Neural Impulse: The Action Potential  After the firing of an action potential, the membrane that allows sodium into the cell closes  It takes time before the neuron can fire again The absolute refractory period is the minimum length of time after an action potential during which another acti ...
Neuroanatomy Final Review Notes by Russ Beach
Neuroanatomy Final Review Notes by Russ Beach

... H. Bilateral Central scotoma: blow to back of head I. Visual agnosias: inability to recognize an object due to lesions in visual association areas ...
Chordate evolution and the origin of craniates
Chordate evolution and the origin of craniates

... invertebrates, such as annelids, arthropods, molluscs, platyhelminthes (including planaria), and nematodes. Type of neuron characterized by a cell body with one T-shaped process that develops from a bipolar neuron. In craniates, this type of neuron is sensory and has the cell body in a peripheral ga ...
Experiment HN-6: Hoffman Reflex using the Soleus Muscle
Experiment HN-6: Hoffman Reflex using the Soleus Muscle

... The Hoffman reflex is studied regularly in sports medicine research because of its changes in response to injuries and various therapies. An example of this is clear in people who have recently sprained their ankle. The very definition of a sprain injury is damage to a ligament, however, ligaments a ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... Consist of interneurons that transmit in from outside spinal cord into it Dorsal root contain sensory fibers ...
English  - SciELO México
English - SciELO México

... firing rate of basal amygdaline neurons. However, it is unknown whether 2-heptanone modifies the responsivity of medial amygdalinehippocampal connection. Therefore, we placed a group (n=10) of Wistar rats in a plexiglass cage impregnated with 2-heptanone. Rats from control group (n=10) were introduc ...
An alarm pheromone increases the responsivity of
An alarm pheromone increases the responsivity of

... firing rate of basal amygdaline neurons. However, it is unknown whether 2-heptanone modifies the responsivity of medial amygdalinehippocampal connection. Therefore, we placed a group (n=10) of Wistar rats in a plexiglass cage impregnated with 2-heptanone. Rats from control group (n=10) were introduc ...
Axons break in animals lacking β-spectrin
Axons break in animals lacking β-spectrin

... The proximal end has initiated a new growth cone (open arrowhead). At 48 h, the secondary growth has reached the dorsal cord, albeit by an aberrant posterior route (open arrowheads). (The new dorsal and posterior neuron is DVB [asterisks], which arises postembryonically and sends an axon ventrally t ...
Memory formation: from network structure to neural dynamics
Memory formation: from network structure to neural dynamics

... it is known that brain function is distributed over large neuronal ensembles, or, even more globally, between different brain modalities, it is important to understand how these ensembles self-organize to generate desired functions (movement, memory storage/recall, etc.) (Hebb 1949; Gerstein et al. ...
Extended PDF
Extended PDF

... labeling strategy. We quantified the size of clones labeled at different embryonic stages and found that the average clone size decreased progressively as development proceeded (Figure 1E), which is consistent with an overall reduction in the proliferative and neurogenic potential of progenitors ove ...
Précis of The Brain and Emotion
Précis of The Brain and Emotion

... appear to have been reconnected (compared to rodents) to place much more emphasis on cortical processing, taking place in areas such as the orbitofrontal cortex (see Chapter 2). The principle of the stage of sensory processing at which reward value is extracted and made explicit in the representatio ...
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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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