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Dynamics of Spontaneous Activity in Neocortical Slices
Dynamics of Spontaneous Activity in Neocortical Slices

... by Multiple Coactivations While the previous test indicated that the spontaneous activity was correlated when considered as a whole, it did not highlight which individual cells were correlated. ...
Sense Of Vision
Sense Of Vision

... • The visual cortex is the largest system in the human brain and is responsible for processing the visual image. It lies at the occipital lobe of the brain above the cerebellum. The region that receives information directly from the LGN is called the primary visual cortex, (also called V1 and striat ...
Lecture Exam 2 Study Guide
Lecture Exam 2 Study Guide

... - What is cerebrospinal fluid composed of, what glial cells make it, from what is it made, and what is its purpose? Why would a spinal tap be performed? - What does the blood-brain barrier consist of, and what is its purpose? - What are the special metabolic requirements of nervous tissue? What two ...
The Nervous System
The Nervous System

...  12 pairs of cranial nerves-from your brain  31 pairs of spinal nerves—from your spinal cord  Made up of sensory and motor neurons  Can have several impulses going at the same time ...
important ascending tracts
important ascending tracts

... The spinothalamic tract, like the dorsal column-medial lemniscus tract, uses three neurons to convey sensory information from the periphery to conscious level at the cerebral cortex. Pseudounipolar neurons in the dorsal root ganglion have axons that lead from the skin into the dorsal spinal cord whe ...
nervous system
nervous system

... Figure 49.35 The roles of the muscle fiber’s sarcoplasmic reticulum and T tubules in contraction ...
Dr. Cam Perkins - BIOL 2210
Dr. Cam Perkins - BIOL 2210

... continuously around the spinal cord and brain (Figures 13.1a, 14.4a). – The outermost layer is the dura mater. – The middle layer is the arachnoid. – The innermost meninx is the pia mater, a thin, transparent connective tissue layer that adheres to the surface of the spinal cord and brain ...
Neuroscience 5b – Nociception
Neuroscience 5b – Nociception

... from pain in that pain is an experience that may arise from nociception or in the absence of nociception. It is sensed by nociceptors. A nociceptive stimulus can be measured. Conduction Speed: as a general rule, larger axon diameters and myelination of axons results in an increase in conduction velo ...
23Neurotransmitter22012-09
23Neurotransmitter22012-09

... 1- The first extends from the substantia nigra to the caudate nucleus-putamen (neostriatum) and is concerned with sensory stimuli and movement. 2- The second pathway projects from the ventral tegmentum to the mesolimbic forebrain and is thought to be associated with cognitive, reward and emotional b ...
primary cortex - u.arizona.edu
primary cortex - u.arizona.edu

... processes (endogenous attention; topdown) or by external events (exogenous attention; bottom-up) ...
Microsoft Word 97
Microsoft Word 97

... pressures and stresses among the muscles and other connective tissues within bodies tend to escape nerve fatigue. Why is it important to organisms that they continue to receive impulses from these two types of receptors? ...
The Neural Basis of the Object Concept in Ambiguous and
The Neural Basis of the Object Concept in Ambiguous and

... Finally, if the bars have different colors, the oscillations are de-synchronized. Applying the hypothesis that an object is represented by synchronous oscillation, the patterns of synchrony in the first eigenmodes of the four stimulations are to be read as representing: (3a) two objects, i.e., one R ...
Week7
Week7

... • Components of a neuron: cell body, dendrites, axon, synaptic terminals. • The electrical potential across the cell membrane exhibits spikes called action potentials. • Originating in the cell body, this spike travels down the axon and causes chemical neurotransmitters to be released at synaptic te ...
Strategies for the Generation of Neuronal Diversity in the
Strategies for the Generation of Neuronal Diversity in the

... of motor neurons to differentiate on that side (Hirano et al., 1991). However, there is equally compelling evidence for a primary role for the notochord itself in regulating the formation of motor neurons. The notochord expresses vhh-I before vhh-I is turned on in the floor plate, and at a time when ...
CVI
CVI

... when there is damage to the visual cortex, and/or the posterior visual pathways within the brain. The eye generally does not have any internal damage although CVI can also be evident in children who do have ocular damage. The reduction of vision is due to neurological damage which hinders visual sti ...
Marieb_ch3c
Marieb_ch3c

... bullet wounds, one in the cranial cavity, and one that shattered the sternum. There’s one viscera splatter on the wall, and another where the wall meets the floor, indicating that the victim was first shot while standing, and then shot again while slumped to the ground.  A histologist examines the ...
Basic principles of attention and decision
Basic principles of attention and decision

...  highest-order area in the visual hierarchy of the dorsal stream  involved in gaze control, strongly connected with the frontal eye field (FEF) and superior colliculus (SC) • Both LIP and FEF stimulation elicit eye movement (shorter delay for FEF [<20ms*1], closer to motor output, than LIP [~40ms* ...
chapter1
chapter1

... • A: spike triggered average shows 15 ms latency; B: twospike at 10 +/- 1 ms triggered average yields sum of two one-spike triggered averages; C: two-spike at 5 +/- 1 ms triggered average yields larger response indicating that multiple spikes may encode stimuli. ...
Chapter 33 - CanonMacZoology
Chapter 33 - CanonMacZoology

... • Name one organism from each of the 4 cnidarian classes. • Compare and contrast cnidarians and ctenophores. ...
Lecture #13 – Animal Nervous Systems
Lecture #13 – Animal Nervous Systems

... out from the neural tube (neural tube develops into the CNS) • Can also function as stem cells to replace glia and neurons (so can astrocytes) This function is limited in nature; major line of research ...
Excitation of Ventral Tegmental Area Dopaminergic and
Excitation of Ventral Tegmental Area Dopaminergic and

... filled with biocytin by diffusion from the patch pipette and identified post hoc by staining for TH. To ensure that orexin effects on neuronal firing were not an artifact of dialysis of the cells, the effects of orexins were also investigated using extracellular singleunit recordings. Electrophysiol ...
Extracting Single-trialViews of Brain Activity
Extracting Single-trialViews of Brain Activity

... monitor simultaneously. To make further scientific progress with the ever-growing volume of neural data being collected, new analytical methods are needed that can leverage the simultaneous recording of large populations of neurons. In this talk, I will take a step in this direction by describing ho ...
Inferring functional connections between neurons
Inferring functional connections between neurons

... allowed neuroscientists to begin to answer this question for a wide variety of signals ranging from fMRI and PET imaging to simultaneous recordings of many single neurons [1–3,4,5]. In this review we focus on the ideas underlying new techniques for the inference of functional connectivity from spik ...
The Synergists: An Exploration of Choreography, Media, and Science
The Synergists: An Exploration of Choreography, Media, and Science

... addition of the live dancer served to create an artificial synapse between the video projection and the live performance which symbolized the dueling aspect between the axon on one end of the synapse and the dendrites on the other end. Both the video projection and the live dancer performed the sam ...
The Motor System of the Cortex and the Brain Stem
The Motor System of the Cortex and the Brain Stem

... in some way to the target’s position. Importantly, after the go signal was given, the discharge remained the same as it was during the delay period. This second observation suggests that the information that whatever the cell was coding during the delay period was the same as after the go signal. It ...
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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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