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... Parker, 1987); full details are given in Rolls and Milward (2000). To train the network a sequence of images is presented to VisNet’s retina that corresponds to a single stimulus occurring in a randomised sequence of the nine locations across a background. At each presentation the activation of indi ...
Nervous System Development Inner Cell Mass of Blastocyst Inner
Nervous System Development Inner Cell Mass of Blastocyst Inner

... • Has been linked to maternal diet (insufficient folic acid (one of the B vitamins), zinc) • E-W Geography, anti-seizure meds or alcohol use, fever and illness during pregnancy, age of mom, diabetes, and ethnicity & genetics also ...
chapt10answers
chapt10answers

... Which is responsible for color vision? cones ...
excitatory neurotransmitter
excitatory neurotransmitter

... Glutamate is a neurotransmitter in the CNS. It is involved in a range of activities in the brain including: learning, memory, perception, thinking and movement. When glutamate is released into the synapse it is absorbed by NMDA receptor sites on the post-synaptic dendrites. Glutamate is excitatory, ...
The Nervous System
The Nervous System

... from other parts of the brain and relays the information to a more complex part of the brain ...
Neural representation of action sequences: how far can
Neural representation of action sequences: how far can

... In this section, we explore how well the simple snippet-matching model can predict the response waveforms of our population of STS neurons. This is a challenging task. STS is high up in the visual processing hierarchy, meaning that there are more unknown processing steps and parameters between the r ...
The Nervous System
The Nervous System

... hemispheres) The left hemisphere controls the right side of your body and the right hemisphere controls the left side of your body. 2. Cerebellum: controls your balance 3. Medulla: receives signals from blood vessels and controls blood pressure, heart rate, and involuntary breathing. ...
Document
Document

... where Cm = 1 mF/cm2 and Iapp is the injected current (in mA/cm2). The leak current IL = gL(V - EL) has a conductance gL = 0.1 mS/cm2, so that the passive time constant t0 = Cm/gL = 10 msec; EL = -65 mV. The spike-generating Na+ and K+ voltage-dependent ion currents (INa and IK) are of the Hodgkin–Hu ...
Review and Study Guide for Evaluation #1
Review and Study Guide for Evaluation #1

... (parietal cortex) receives information from skin surface and sense organs. Aphasia: impairment of language, usually caused by left-hemisphere damage either to Broca’s area or Wernicke’s area. Broca’s area: controls language expression; an area of the frontal lobe, usually in the left hemisphere, dir ...
Toxicology of the Nervous System
Toxicology of the Nervous System

... week may be linked to fatigue, headaches, inability to concentrate and hair loss, all symptoms of low-level mercury poisoning. In a study of 123 fish-loving subjects, the researchers found that 89% had blood levels of methylmercury that exceeded the EPA standard by as much as 10 times. How Much Tuna ...
Information Theory and Learning
Information Theory and Learning

... We seem to have an information-theoretic explanation of some properties of area V1 of visual cortex: -simple cells (Olshausen &Field, Bell & Sejnowski) -complex cells (Hyvarinen & Hoyer) -topographic maps with singularities (Hyvarinen & Hoyer) -colour receptive fields (Doi & Lewicki) -direction sens ...
Outline 11: Nemertea
Outline 11: Nemertea

... Primarily via…? VIII. Nervous system/sensory structures A. Organization (briefly) ...
A Motion-sensitive Area in Ferret Extrastriate
A Motion-sensitive Area in Ferret Extrastriate

... stimulus is constant throughout a stimulus trial (cycle), but stimulus direction changes continuously (0--360) within a complete stimulus cycle. This stimulus is not sensitive to receptive field size. On the other hand, depending on the receptive field size and the radius of the circular pathway a gi ...
Document
Document

... • Peripheral nervous system (PNS) – Neurons outside the CNS ...
Neuron death - UBC Psychology`s Research Labs
Neuron death - UBC Psychology`s Research Labs

... What developmental changes are observed in the nervous system after birth? • With two exceptions, all of the neurons that will compose the adult human brain develop by the 7th month of pregnancy. • Nevertheless, the brain grows substantially after birth. • Postnatal brain growth results from synapt ...
Chapter 12 Nervous System Cells
Chapter 12 Nervous System Cells

... several knobs being activated simultaneously and stimulating different locations on the postsynaptic membrane, producing an action potential – Temporal summation—when synaptic knobs stimulate a postsynaptic neuron in rapid succession, their effects can summate over a brief period of time to produce ...
Neuroscience Course Conference
Neuroscience Course Conference

... c. What might be the side effects of such a drug? 3. Although gNa increases as a graded function of membrane depolarization (Fig. 9-6 of textbook), the action potential has a discrete voltage threshold. Why? 4. During epileptic seizures, massive synchronous bursts of activity in cortical neurons cau ...
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210_Lecture6_motor

... lead to issues with the liver and other organs ONLY treats the symptoms, not the cause ...
DOC
DOC

... doing so they use structural and functional brain sys tems highly similar to those used by humans. The functions of these systems are revealed through depth electrode recording of single or multiple neuro nal unit activity and event-related field potentials, and the anatomical dis tributions of the ...
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6.5 Nerves, Hormones and Homeostasis part 1

...  Both structures receive sensory information from receptors all over the body and they interpret the information, process it and decide if a response is required.  A response by the brain or spinal cord is known as a motor response. ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... • Compare somatosensory receptor neurons relative to their size and myelination • Describe the sensory function controlled by neurons in each of the sensory pathways • Sketch the sensory homunculus • Describe the role of posterior parietal cortex (areas 5 & 7) in sensory perception • Apply knowledge ...
Visual pathway class..
Visual pathway class..

... • We do not have a descriptive or mechanistic model that predicts response properties of downstream visual areas, or behavior. • A descriptive model would vastly transform technology: the primate visual system is far superior to anything that engineers can build. • A mechanistic model is the ultimat ...
CHEMICAL SENSES: SMELL AND TASTE Smell = Olfaction
CHEMICAL SENSES: SMELL AND TASTE Smell = Olfaction

... smell sensation. - when nose is congested by infection, food “tastes” different because the olfactory system is “blocked” In humans, the senses of taste and smell have lost important survival characteristics In many animal species, taste (especially of bitterness and sourness) is used to protect org ...
Peripheral Nervous System - UBC Psychology`s Research Labs
Peripheral Nervous System - UBC Psychology`s Research Labs

... and function of the nervous system? 4. Recording  Allows researchers to record the electrical and magnetic output of the living brain.  The small electrical charges and magnetic fields that nerve cells generate are measured using electrodes.  Examples: ...
We have seen how the Nervous System plays an important role in
We have seen how the Nervous System plays an important role in

... This needs A LOT of help. Good diagrams are a must for this topic!!! I’m not sure if this is too specific and needs to be more general, or if it is too general and needs to be more specific???????? We have seen how the nervous system plays an important role in reaction time, stability and balance, h ...
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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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