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1749-7221-5-5-S2
1749-7221-5-5-S2

... THIS PATIENT ARRIVED TO ME ONE YEAR AFTER AN INFECTED WOUND AT ELBOW WITH SEPTIC ARTHRITIS AND LOSS OF THE CUTANEOUS COVERING AND OF THE PROXIMAL 2/3 OF THE EXTENSOR MUSCLES OF WRIST AND HAND AFTER RECLAMATION OF THE SEPTIC LESION AND COVERAGE BY MEANS OF A FREE PARASCAPULAR FLAP, DIRECT NEUROTISATI ...
Negatively-Correlated Firing - Department of Computer Science
Negatively-Correlated Firing - Department of Computer Science

... interneurons are very common in the neocortex, and lateral inhibition has been shown to play an important role in sharpening the distinctions between similar inputs, where such inputs would otherwise invoke nearly the same response in neurons with only slightly different response properties. However ...
Linear Combinations of Optic Flow Vectors for Estimating Self
Linear Combinations of Optic Flow Vectors for Estimating Self

... study suggests that the output of such neurons could be directly used for self-motion estimation by simply combining them linearly at a later integration stage. As our experiments have shown, the achievable accuracy would probably be more than enough for head stabilization under closed loop conditio ...
Nervous System Spinal Cord and Nerves Spinal Cord
Nervous System Spinal Cord and Nerves Spinal Cord

... Centrally located gray matter consists of nerve cell bodies and processes Peripherally located white matter contains nerve tracts ...
Indian Journal of Fundamental and Applied Life Sciences ISSN
Indian Journal of Fundamental and Applied Life Sciences ISSN

... Figures (1-4). Discussion If injuries happen in the central nervous system, physiologic mechanisms will be activated and one can refer to the glial cells (Yan et al., 2009). Astrocytes are the most effective to control of neural cell and its survival by secretion of the factors such as TGFβ1, TGFβ2, ...
emboj200886-sup
emboj200886-sup

... position of the corpus callosum and the internal capsule. (B) Immunolabelling of horizontal brain sections illustrating the reduced density of Nrp1-expressing axons in the intermediate zone (black arrows) and extending from lateral cortical regions in the internal capsule (black asterisks) of Plexin ...
Slide 1 - Elsevier
Slide 1 - Elsevier

... FIGURE 35.1 Functional organization of the CNS control of breathing. Circuitry centered within the medulla oblongata of the brainstem (blue oval) generates an oscillating inspiratory–expiratory rhythm. Neurons within the oscillator circuit generate rhythmic respiratory motor output without requirin ...
Interneuron Transplantation as a Treatment for
Interneuron Transplantation as a Treatment for

... (tonic) inhibition is enhanced in nearby pyramidal neurons, but not in host interneurons. However, increases in tonic inhibition were only observed when extrasynaptic currents were pharmacologically isolated, not under physiological recording conditions (Baraban et al. 2009; Sebe et al. 2014b). Coll ...
3 - smw15.org
3 - smw15.org

...  Part of the limbic system; small area near the base of the brain  Conveys messages to the pituitary gland to alter the release of hormones  Associated with behaviors such as eating, drinking, sexual behavior and other motivated behaviors ...
HYPOTHALAMUS
HYPOTHALAMUS

... Plate 29 shows the relationship of troph-hormone producing cells to fenestrated capillaries in the anterior pituitary. The magno- and parvocellular cell groups producing the hypothalamic hormones receive a variety of stimuli from different parts of the brain, primarily within the hypothalamus, but ...
Efficient generation of hPSC-derived midbrain dopaminergic
Efficient generation of hPSC-derived midbrain dopaminergic

... cell fate, as 2D soft materials substantially promoted both hPSC differentiation into neuroectodermal lineages and adult neural stem cell differentiation into neurons21,22. Rheological measurements indicated that 10 wt% PNIPAAm-PEG hydrogels had a stiffness of ~1 kPa at 37 °C, a promising range for ...
Tangential Networks of Precocious Neurons and Early Axonal
Tangential Networks of Precocious Neurons and Early Axonal

... munoreactivity were seen in the rostral thalamus, where GAP43-positive cells and fibers were more abundant: only a few MAP2immunopositive cells were detected in the DTh at CS 17. The more mature intermediate zone of the VTh was composed partly of MAP2-positive cells and fibers. In the rostral basal ...
Visual Motion-Detection Circuits in Flies: Small
Visual Motion-Detection Circuits in Flies: Small

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Presentation

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05-Managing Stress
05-Managing Stress

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Contributions of cortical feedback to sensory processing in primary
Contributions of cortical feedback to sensory processing in primary

... superficial pyramidal cells up to the next higher cortical level to update internal models (reviewed in detail Friston, 2005; Clark, 2013). Several models in which neurons engage in probabilistic processing in order to infer the causes of their inputs have been proposed (e.g., Rao and Ballard, 1999; ...
The Two-Second Advantage
The Two-Second Advantage

... layer of the neocortex handle sensory perception and visual things by breaking the signals into very small, discrete elements. One cluster of cells can have small, unimportant jobs. The bottom cell passes it up to the next layer in the neocortex where the brain begins to process and combine signals ...
Skeletal, Muscular, & Nervous System
Skeletal, Muscular, & Nervous System

... Problems of the Muscular System Bruise – is an area of discolored skin that appears after an injury causes the blood vessels beneath the skin to rupture and leak Muscle sprain or strain – a strained muscles results when a muscle is stretched or partially torn as a result of overexertion ...
Neurons and Neural Networks: Computational Models CAMS
Neurons and Neural Networks: Computational Models CAMS

... results in the production of complex networks from otherwise disjoined neurons. Neurons produce action potentials, or fire, when integrated inputs to the neuron reach a threshold value. In general, increased levels of input above this threshold cause an increase in the action potential (firing) freq ...
30 Hearing - Semantic Scholar
30 Hearing - Semantic Scholar

... into electrical signals and forwards them to the brain. The cochlea, however, is not simply a passive detector. Our ability to recognize small differences in sounds stems from the auditory system's capacity to distinguish among frequency components and to inform us of both the tones present and thei ...
Emergence of Mirror Neurons in a Model of Gaze Following
Emergence of Mirror Neurons in a Model of Gaze Following

... component of humans’ social interaction abilities. Gaze following emerges in a progressive fashion during the first two years of life [16]. While pre-cursors of gaze following can be observed in newborns, some gaze following behaviors do not emerge until 18 month or later. For example, while young i ...
A direct quantitative relationship between the functional properties of
A direct quantitative relationship between the functional properties of

... Brief presentations of dynamic random dot stimuli were used to evaluate human brain responses to different strengths of motion signal (coherence) using BOLD contrast fMRI. For each trial, patches of coherently moving dots were presented either side of fixation (Methods and Fig. 1a). Each patch moved ...
Nerve activates contraction
Nerve activates contraction

... can • What do you think the major functions of the nervous system are? • Name one other body system and how you think it works with the nervous system ...
030909.PHitchcock.IntroductoryLecture
030909.PHitchcock.IntroductoryLecture

... other neurons via their axons (also called fibers) and their synapses. • A collection of neuronal cell bodies outside the CNS is called a ganglion. • A collection of neuronal cell bodies within the CNS is called a nucleus. • A discrete bundle of axons outside the CNS is known as a nerve. • A discret ...
Visual areas and spatial summation in human visual cortex
Visual areas and spatial summation in human visual cortex

... more anterior position in the TOS. Again, based on measurements of angular retinotopic organization, we have found that this third central representation falls within area V7 (Tootell et al., 1998). Fig. 1b shows a flat map of these eccentricity measurements. The flattened representation includes al ...
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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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