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... – Fibers originate in the vestibular nuclei of the medulla and terminate at level of the sacral spinal nerves Connects vestibular complex and head and eye movement coordination center in medulla • Medial Longitudinal Fasciculus – Contains both ascending and descending fibers ...
Unit 03B
Unit 03B

... definitions not be included to prevent students from only “copying down what is on the screen” and not actively listening to the presentation. For teachers who continually use the Bold Print Term Hyperlinks option, please contact the author using the email address on the next slide to learn a techni ...
Document
Document

... machine. The amplified tracings are referred to as evoked potentials when the recorded change in voltage is the result of a response to a specific stimulus presented to the subject. EEGs have been used to study the brain during states of arousal such as sleeping and dreaming to detect abnormalities ...
Hydrogen peroxide-induced cell death in cultured Aplysia sensory
Hydrogen peroxide-induced cell death in cultured Aplysia sensory

... tion, one of the commonly used apoptotic markers, is also found in necrotic cells [35]. Cell death is induced by various internal and external stresses. Oxidative stress refers to the cytotoxic effects of oxygen free radicals and is involved in a variety of neurodegenerative conditions, such as Alzh ...
Nerve Cell Flashcards
Nerve Cell Flashcards

... SYNAPSES in the CNS 49. What is a collection of cell bodies in the Ganglion PNS? 50. What is a network of nerves called? NERVE PLEXUS 51. What are the neurons that leave the CNS to MOTOR NEURONS effect a muscle or gland? 52. What neurons go from body to CNS, SENSORY NEURON carrying sensory informati ...
Nerve Cell Flashcards
Nerve Cell Flashcards

... SYNAPSES in the CNS 49. What is a collection of cell bodies in the Ganglion PNS? 50. What is a network of nerves called? NERVE PLEXUS 51. What are the neurons that leave the CNS to MOTOR NEURONS effect a muscle or gland? 52. What neurons go from body to CNS, SENSORY NEURON carrying sensory informati ...
The Human Nervous System
The Human Nervous System

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Carl L.Faingold, Manish Raisinghani, Prosper N`Gouemo
Carl L.Faingold, Manish Raisinghani, Prosper N`Gouemo

... in GEPR-3s and ETX rats (with some variability). However, in the GEPR-3s and ETX rats, the amygdala (AMG) is also involved in the network, and the medial geniculate body (MGB) is implicated, since this structure is the likely pathway from the IC to the AMG. The hippocampus (HPC) is implicated in the ...
Oriented Axon Projections in Primary Visual Cortex of the Monkey
Oriented Axon Projections in Primary Visual Cortex of the Monkey

... the micropipette with a freshly made, saturated solution of biocytin (ⱖ4%; Sigma, St. L ouis, MO) in sterile saline. We took a photograph of the cortical surface for later reference and chose injection sites in areas free of blood vessels and spaced ⬎3 mm apart. Just before introducing the pipette, ...
Sensory Pathways
Sensory Pathways

...  Thinly myelinated (Ad) fibers (for fast sharp pain) and unmyelinated ...
AP-Anatomy
AP-Anatomy

... The receptors in a reflex are sensory neurons associated with a receptor device (transducer) and which relay nerve impulses to a central control center ...
acetylcholine
acetylcholine

... Although dopamine is synthesized by only several hundred thousand cells, it fulfils an exceedingly important role in the higher parts of the CNS. These dopaminergic neurons can be divided into three subgroups with different functions. The first group regulates movements: a deficit of dopamine in thi ...
text - Systems Neuroscience Course, MEDS 371, Univ. Conn. Health
text - Systems Neuroscience Course, MEDS 371, Univ. Conn. Health

... 1. The basal ganglia operate to produce action selection. They facilitate the most effective motor, cognitive and emotional behaviors for the prevailing circumstances and they suppress other behaviors. They tend to facilitate behaviors which have had and/or are predicted to have rewarding (positive) ...
File
File

... ● Identify basic processes and systems in the biological bases of behavior, including parts of the neuron and the process of transmission of a signal between neurons. ● Discuss the influence of drugs on neurotransmitters (e.g., reuptake mechanisms, agonists, antagonists). ● Discuss the effect of the ...
November 2000 Volume 3 Number Supp p 1168
November 2000 Volume 3 Number Supp p 1168

... measure that did not involve a teacher and that could easily be optimized using information that was locally available at a synapse. A measure with all the right properties emerges from thinking about perception in a peculiar way: the widespread existence of top-down connections in the brain, couple ...
Presentation materials - Brain Dynamics Laboratory
Presentation materials - Brain Dynamics Laboratory

... Bursts as a Unit of Neuronal Information • Bursts have higher signal-to-noise ratio than single spikes. Burst threshold is higher than spike threshold, i.e., generation of bursts requires stronger inputs. • Bursts can be used for selective communication if the postsynaptic cells have subthreshold o ...
Review of the Pain Pathway
Review of the Pain Pathway

... According to the IASP (International Association for the Study of Pain) pain is “An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage.” The IASP further states that “The inability to communicate verbally does not negat ...
Slide
Slide

... overlapping combinations of OR inputs generate those glomeruli had similar locations in six different bulbs. distinct odor perceptions ...
nervous-system-12-1
nervous-system-12-1

... including hockey and football players. He has found that these players often suffered from chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a degenerative brain disease caused by repeated blunt impact to the head. ...
SV3 Neuroscience n Behavior Oct 5 09
SV3 Neuroscience n Behavior Oct 5 09

... Handles non-verbal processing, such as that required by spatial, musical, and visual recognition tasks Controls & receives information from left side of body ...
Touch lab
Touch lab

... Modulating the sense of touch • Does visual-tactile enhancement effect extend to: – Viewing other people’s bodies • Dependent variable: 2PDT estimate • (View object/view body) * +/- other factor – (self/other) • Look for interaction in 2x2 ANOVA • Counterbalancing very important: training effects • ...
Chapter 12: Nervous System
Chapter 12: Nervous System

... including hockey and football players. He has found that these players often suffered from chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a degenerative brain disease caused by repeated blunt impact to the head. ...
Neurotransmitters
Neurotransmitters

... Serotonin (excitatory and inhibitory) o Serotonin has been found to be intimately involved in emotion and mood. o Too little serotonin has been shown to lead to depression, problems with anger control, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and suicide. o Too little also leads to an increased appetite for ...
`What` and `where` in the human brain
`What` and `where` in the human brain

... pathway, for example, whereas many VI cells function as local spatiotemporal filters, V2 cells may respond to ‘virtual’ or illusory contours of figures [I31, some V4 cells respond only if a stimulus stands out from its background on the basis of a difference in color or form 114,151, and inferior te ...
Document
Document

... Mental branch of the IAN = mental nerve - union of several external branches - sensory from the chin, lower lip and labial mucosa - enters the skull at the mental foramen - then merges with the lingual branch of the IAN Lingual branch of the IAN - made up of dental branches from anterior mandibul ...
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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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