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serotonergic modulation of swimming speed in the pteropod mollusc
serotonergic modulation of swimming speed in the pteropod mollusc

... swim motor neurons, pedal 5-HT cells, type 12 interneurons and heart excitor neurons. In all preparations, the cells were chemically isolated through the use of high-Mg2+ solutions. In all cases, the cells were depolarized following the addition of serotonin (Fig. 2) and returned to the normal resti ...
TABLE OF CONTENTS - Test Bank, Manual Solution, Solution Manual
TABLE OF CONTENTS - Test Bank, Manual Solution, Solution Manual

... dendrites. Compare the structure of these components in the following two types of neurons: A motor neuron: Conducts impulses to muscles and glands from the spinal cord. A sensory neuron (receptor neurons): Sensitive to certain kinds of stimulation (e.g., light, touch, etc.). ...
Functional connectivity of the entorhinal–hippocampal space circuit
Functional connectivity of the entorhinal–hippocampal space circuit

... our entorhinal study. Photostimulation in ChR2-expressing cultured hippocampal neurons discharged cells slightly faster, at an average latency of 8.0 ms [30]. Similar stimulation of pyramidal neurons in cortical slices led to light-evoked firing at latencies ranging from 3 to 11 ms, with low jitter ...
The Peripheral Nervous System
The Peripheral Nervous System

... – Nerve endings that monitor: • Touch, pressure, vibration, stretch, pain, temperature and  ...
3.2 Our Brains Control Our Thoughts, Feelings, and Behavior
3.2 Our Brains Control Our Thoughts, Feelings, and Behavior

... wired such that in most cases the left hemisphere receives sensations from and controls the right side of the body, and vice versa. Fritsch and Hitzig also found that the movement that followed the brain stimulation only occurred when they stimulated a specific arch-shaped region that runs across th ...
Tsuda et al NeurosciRes
Tsuda et al NeurosciRes

... within the microscope field, while detecting responses in individual MLIs via cell-attached recordings. A brief light pulse (1 ms, 18.7 mW/mm2 at the specimen) reliably evoked action potentials in the MLIs (Figure 1C). ...
Connecting cortex to machines: recent advances in brain interfaces
Connecting cortex to machines: recent advances in brain interfaces

... other animals to record its electrical activity, and thereby infer its function, or to modify its function by stimulating it electrically. Single-neuron recordings were already underway in humans1 and in behaving monkeys2 in the 1960s. Electrical stimulation has been used to influence brain function ...
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BY310 Review 2

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2 CHAPTER The Biology of Behavior Chapter Preview Our nervous

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Efficient generation of retinal progenitor cells from human embryonic stem... Deepak A. Lamba, Mike O. Karl, Carol B. Ware, and... 2006;103;12769-12774; originally published online Aug 14, 2006;
Efficient generation of retinal progenitor cells from human embryonic stem... Deepak A. Lamba, Mike O. Karl, Carol B. Ware, and... 2006;103;12769-12774; originally published online Aug 14, 2006;

... express a high level of Pax6 are also labeled with antibodies against HuC兾D, another protein expressed by amacrine and ganglion cells (Fig. 2B). Primary cell cultures derived from a 78-day human fetal retina show a very similar pattern of labeling with Pax6 and HuC兾D (Fig. 2 C and D), as do sections ...
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Nerve activates contraction

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Page | 1 CHAPTER 2: THE BIOLOGY OF BEHAVIOR The Nervous

... Unlike the short dendrites, axons are sometimes very long, projecting several feet through the body. A motor neuron carrying orders to a leg muscle, for example, has a cell body and axon roughly on the scale of a basketball attached to a rope 4 miles long. Much as home electrical wire is insulated, ...
- Wiley Online Library
- Wiley Online Library

... tissues. After birth, CE was increasingly expressed in these tissues with aging to attain maximal levels at 30 months of age. Western blot analyses revealed that CE existed predominantly as the mature enzyme at 2 and 17 months of age, whereas it was present as not only the mature enzyme but also the ...
Induction of c-fos Expression in Hypothalamic Magnocellular
Induction of c-fos Expression in Hypothalamic Magnocellular

... increasein oxytocin neuronal firing during lactation. Thus, either the pattern of activity during lactation is not suitable for the induction of C-$X or an appropriate synaptically driven mechanismis not operating. C&s transcription can be induced in cells by a number of secondmessenger systems,incl ...
NEUR3041 Neural computation: Models of brain function 2014
NEUR3041 Neural computation: Models of brain function 2014

... Explain how Hebbian learning in recurrent connections between neurons can create an associative memory.  Describe how a set of examples of stimuli and correct responses can be used to train an artificial neural network to respond correctly via changes in synaptic weights governed by the firing rate ...
Functional features of the rat subicular microcircuits studied in vitro
Functional features of the rat subicular microcircuits studied in vitro

... for instance, subicular cells exhibit place fields that are modulated by the animal’s head-direction and are insensitive to environmental landmarks, in contrast to hippocampal place cells [65,66,80,81]. It has been suggested that subicular cells encode a universal location-specific map that assists ...
MR of Neuronal Migration Anomalies
MR of Neuronal Migration Anomalies

... places, because of fusion of adjacent gyri, sulci are shallow or absent and cortical surface becomes paradoxically smooth. B, Cut section reveals a thickened cortex with a flattened inner cortical border (arrowheads). Also notice marked overgrowth of left hemisphere with enlargement of ipsilateral l ...
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... Differentiating CAPD from Auditory Neuropathy Spectrum Disorders Charles Berlin, Ph.D. July 2011 ...
ATP-Sensitive K+ Channels in the Brain: Sensors of
ATP-Sensitive K+ Channels in the Brain: Sensors of

... highest spontaneous activity (up to 100 Hz) in the brain, indicating a very high metabolic rate in these neurons in the normoxic condition. Indeed, SNr neurons are extremely sensitive to hypoxia (18). On the other hand, it has been reported that the potentials evoked by electrical stimulation in hip ...
The Hermann grid illusion revisited
The Hermann grid illusion revisited

... 2.6 Varying the contrast and color in the Hermann grid produces illusory effects not readily handled by the theory In this section, we shall examine what happens when the contrast and color of the elements in the Hermann grid are manipulated. In figure 7, the contrast and color of the bars is varied ...
NIH Public Access
NIH Public Access

... specific to PV+ neurons (Fig. 1a). To measure the effect of ChR2 activation, we inserted a multichannel silicon probe4,5 near the injection site for simultaneous recording from all cortical layers (Supplementary Fig. 1b). Upon stimulation with blue (473 nm) laser, a small fraction (12/96, 13%) of th ...
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... 1. Because the fMRI voxel is sensitive to activity from many neurons, simply showing that an area is active both during action and perception does not guarantee that the same neurons are responding to both action and perception (e.g., Dinstein et al, 2007). ...
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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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