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Final Motor System2010-10-01 06:264.1 MB
Final Motor System2010-10-01 06:264.1 MB

... Reticulospinal Tract The reticular formation makes up a central core through much of the brainstem. It contains many different nuclear groups. Pontine and medullary nuclei projects to the anterior horn of the spinal cord at all spinal levels. Functions: maintainence of posture and is also responsib ...
Loss of IP receptor function in neuropeptide Drosophila
Loss of IP receptor function in neuropeptide Drosophila

... adult itpr mutants suggested a role for IP3 mediated calcium signaling in modulating ILP release and secretion. However, significant differences were observed between the phenotypes of itpr mutant animals rescued by expression of an itpr+ cDNA as compared with rescue by over-expression of Drosophila ...
Ramayya, A. G., Zaghloul, K. A., Weidemann, C. T., Baltuch, G. H.
Ramayya, A. G., Zaghloul, K. A., Weidemann, C. T., Baltuch, G. H.

... activity using the WaveClus software package (Quiroga et al., 2005). We band-pass filtered each voltage recording from 400 to 5000 Hz and manually removed periods of motion artifact. We identified spike events as positive or negative deflections in the voltage trace that crossed a threshold that was ...
An Evolutionary Framework for Replicating Neurophysiological Data
An Evolutionary Framework for Replicating Neurophysiological Data

... the known, somewhat incomplete properties of a real structure in the brain. In the present case, we begin with a pre-specified network topology that defines the coarse-grained connectivity structure among several groups of neurons (Figure 1). The goal of parameter tuning is to adjust the details of ...
Adaptation of Firing Rate and Spike
Adaptation of Firing Rate and Spike

... (⬃500 –2000 Hz) (Rubel and Parks, 1975). Cells were accepted for analysis if the resting membrane potential was more negative than ⫺55 mV. NM neurons increase firing rate in response to noisy depolarizing current To investigate the possibility of spike frequency adaptation in NM neurons, voltage res ...
Physiology and mathematical modeling of the auditory system
Physiology and mathematical modeling of the auditory system

... It is hard to imagine what the world would be like if it was put on “mute”. For most people the vast and diverse stream of auditory information is an indispensable part of the environment perception. Our auditory system, among other things, allows us to understand speech, appreciate music, and locat ...
Responses of primate frontal cortex neurons during natural vocal
Responses of primate frontal cortex neurons during natural vocal

... To address this issue we recorded the activity of single frontal cortex neurons in common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) during naturally occurring long-distance vocal exchanges known as antiphonal calling (Fig. 1, A and B). This vocal behavior is ideally suited for neurophysiological experiments ai ...
Chapter 02 - Neurons and Glia
Chapter 02 - Neurons and Glia

... similar because both contain cytoskeleton elements and mitochondria. Explain the difference between the two (polyribosomes are seen in dendrites, as discovered by Oswald Steward). Discussion Point: Discuss the following case study and explain how the dendritic spines of mentally retarded children re ...
The organization of the cortical motor system: new concepts
The organization of the cortical motor system: new concepts

... mates and, more recently, (and with much less detail) in humans, that cortical motor organization is much more complex than thought previously. Among the new aspects of motor organization some are particularly important. We list them straight away, at the onset of this review, in order to make it cl ...
Masking, conscious access, and the blind spot of introspection
Masking, conscious access, and the blind spot of introspection

... I will show that introspection is often a valid source of information that, combined with neuroimaging methods, can provide a window into the architecture underlying conscious processing. A first series of masking experiments probed introspective reports of target visibility. Visibility reports prov ...
9.2 - 4ubiology
9.2 - 4ubiology

...  Intensity of impulse & speed of transmission remain the same.  Known as the all-or-none response. ...
Lecoq J, Savall J, Vucinic D, Grewe BF, Kim H, Li
Lecoq J, Savall J, Vucinic D, Grewe BF, Kim H, Li

... related brain areas, we focused on the visual cortex. The mouse visual cortex contains at least ten distinct areas, each with its own retinotopic map12,13. To understand how these areas coordinate visual information processing, it is important to observe them at work simultaneously in the behaving a ...
Chap 14b Powerpoint
Chap 14b Powerpoint

... mental images of sight, sound, touch, and taste. ...
refractory period
refractory period

... electromagnetic), or chemical signals released by neurons and received by other neurons, muscle cells or gland cells. ...
The Basal Ganglia Anatomy, Physiology, etc. Overview
The Basal Ganglia Anatomy, Physiology, etc. Overview

... Inhibition (by the striatum) of the inhibitory projections of the GPe, results in the net reduction of  inhibition of the STN STN projects excitatory inputs to the SNr‐GPi complex (which inhibits the thalamus). The end‐result  is inhibition of the thalamus and, therefore, decreased stimulation of th ...
Thyroid Hormones
Thyroid Hormones

... Escobar, M. de, Ruiz-Marcos, A. & Escobar del Rey, F. (1983) Congenital Hypothyroidism, pp. 85-126 ...
Gustatory processing is dynamic and distributed Donald B
Gustatory processing is dynamic and distributed Donald B

... cross-correlations. The neuron pair analyzed here crosscorrelated strongly (and negatively) only in the presence of nicotine (orange line) and citric acid (green line). Peaked cross correlations were not found for sucrose (black), NaCl (maroon) or quinine (dark blue). When cross-correlations are tak ...
From autism to ADHD: computational simulations
From autism to ADHD: computational simulations

... Accommodation: basins of attractors shrink and vanish because neurons desynchronize due to the neural fatigue. This allows other neurons to synchronize on new stimuli, guided by Spat => V2 => V1 feedback. This leads to sudden spontaneous weakly related chains of thoughts. ...
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM

... Þ A concentration of nervous tissue in many animals forms a brain, an information-processing centre Þ Neurons are the basic units of the nervous system, they receive nerve impulses from other neurons via the cell body and dendrites Þ There are various types of glia, which help nourish, insulate, and ...
Challenges of understanding brain function by selective modulation
Challenges of understanding brain function by selective modulation

... network of various subnetworks involved in visual information processing). Abbreviations: exc., excitatory; exc. inh., excitatory and inhibitory; LGN, lateral geniculate nucleus. ...
Muscle
Muscle

... dystrophin. 430 kDa protein, critical component of muscle cytoskeleton (muscle just falls apart, degenerates without that protein) ...
Neural Networks 2 - Monash University
Neural Networks 2 - Monash University

...  Such a mapping allows neurons with similar tasks to communicate over especially short connection paths - important for a massively parallel system  Moreover, it results in the formation of topographic feature maps: – most important similarity relationships among the input signals are converted in ...
The Hypothalamus and Human Nervous System: A Primer
The Hypothalamus and Human Nervous System: A Primer

... The primary function of a neurotransmitter is to either: 1. Inhibit the transmission of a nerve impulse – inhibitory neurotransmitters. 2. Excite or stimulate the postsynaptic membrane – excitatory neurotransmitters. 3. Modulate or modify the release of a neurotransmitter – neuromodulators. Many neu ...
Environmental Causes of Central Nervous System Maldevelopment
Environmental Causes of Central Nervous System Maldevelopment

... the distribution of these elements in developing brain differs from the distribution seen in adults.51–54 This fact has led to the recognition that the signaling functions served by transmitter systems may differ at different stages of development. For example, the transmitters ␥-aminobutyric acid ( ...
THE SPECIAL SENSES
THE SPECIAL SENSES

... avascular connective tissue with two regions: the sclera and the cornea • The vascular tunic (uvea) is the middle layer and has three regions: the choroid, the ciliary body, and the iris • The sensory tunic (retina) is the innermost layer made up of two layers: the outer pigmented layer absorbs ligh ...
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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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