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... • Positive voltage shift – excitatory PSP: • Negative voltage shift – inhibitory PSP ...
ANATOMY OF A NEURON
ANATOMY OF A NEURON

... The All-or-None Law: A single neuron is either fires or does not fire. If fires, it always fires at full speed and intensity. ...
BRAIN
BRAIN

... Somatic afferent fibers – carry sensory impulses from skin, skeletal muscles, and joints Visceral afferent fibers – transmit sensory impulses from visceral organs Motor (efferent) division – transmits impulses from the CNS to effector organs. Two subdivisions: Somatic motor fibers – provides conscio ...
Nervous System
Nervous System

...  The cerebellum is important for coordination and error checking during motor, perceptual, and cognitive functions  Is responsible for handeye coordination and balance.  Good way to remember its function is “Cerebalance”. ...
LECTURE OUTLINE
LECTURE OUTLINE

... Transmission across a Synapse Every axon branches into many fine endings, each tipped with an axon terminal. Each terminal lies very close to either the dendrite or cell body of another neuron. This is called a chemical synapse. Communication between the two neurons is carried out by molecules calle ...
Session 2 Neurons - Creature and Creator
Session 2 Neurons - Creature and Creator

... Probably the most important thing about neurons is that they can communicate with each other Neurons to not replicate. Our neurons, for the most part, stay the same from cradle to grave – womb to tomb  Although they do not replicate, neurons can regenerate their processes, provided the cell body is ...
08 - Pierce College
08 - Pierce College

... Putman/Pierce College Biol 241 08px Practice Exam/20110311 proofread/Page 10 ...
Sensation & Perception
Sensation & Perception

... the retina called rods and cones (process information for darkness and color). 5. The rods and cones set off chemical reactions they form a synapse with bipolar cells which change light energy into neural impulses. 6. These neural impulses go to the optic nerve (bundle of neurons that take informati ...
McConnell SK, Kaznowski CE (1991)
McConnell SK, Kaznowski CE (1991)

... distribution of DNA contents of BrdUlabeled cells that were removed and dissociated 4 hours after BrdU injection. Few, if any, labeled cells had completed mitosis at this time; the vast majority were in late S-phase or in G2/M at 4 hours (Fig. 4). Thus, the decision to generate a deep-layer neuron m ...
CONCLUSIONS  133
CONCLUSIONS 133

... the formation of receptor clusters, it does not affect de degree of dimerization. ...
A. Normal OD development - Molecular and Cell Biology
A. Normal OD development - Molecular and Cell Biology

... 2) expression and secretion are activity-dependent 3) regulate aspects of neuronal function 4) For competitive plasticity, the amount of neurotrophins should be limited ...
Bi150 (2005)
Bi150 (2005)

... probably occurs by matching to memory templates stored in the brain • A smell is categorized based on one’s previous experiences of it and on the other sensory stimuli correlated with its appearance. ...
SHEEP BRAIN DISSECTION GUIDE
SHEEP BRAIN DISSECTION GUIDE

... eyeball. The right and left optic nerves cross at the optic chiasm, forming a distinctive "X" on the ventral surface of the brain. After the nerves cross, they each contain information from both eyes; after this point, they are called the optic tracts. The lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) of the tha ...
~ rn-
~ rn-

... I List I Know " List ...
nn2new-02
nn2new-02

... • Only spikes are important since other neurons receive them (signals) ...
Optimization of neuronal cultures derived from human
Optimization of neuronal cultures derived from human

... The MANTRA instrumentation (left) consists of integrated 96-well parallel imaging and field stimulation systems. Right, top shows the instrument deck with its multiple technology components. Right, bottom shows the design of the electrode tip module. ...
EN Sokolov`s Neural Model of Stimuli as Neuro
EN Sokolov`s Neural Model of Stimuli as Neuro

... modulating system comprises nerve cells associated with the processing of information that circulates between the neural networks that make up the afferent and effector subsystems of the conceptual reflex arc. The reflex arc activity can be represented as follows: receptors are specific sensory devi ...
FIGURE LEGENDS FIGURE 29.1 Vestibular canals and otoliths. The
FIGURE LEGENDS FIGURE 29.1 Vestibular canals and otoliths. The

... four forearm muscles. From Shinoda, Yokota, and Futami (1981). (B) Action potentials in a cortical neuron (top trace) are followed at a fixed latency by peaks of postspike facilitation in EMGs recorded from four of six recorded forearm muscles (lower traces), consistent with monosynaptic excitation ...
m5zn_363798b57fd4c88
m5zn_363798b57fd4c88

... Function of the spinal cord The main functions of the spinal cord are: 1. The spinal cord communicates through nerve fibers, its nervous pathways, with various parts of the brain and through spinal nerves with organs. The spinal cord contains two kinds of nervous pathway: ascending (sensory) and d ...
moth`s nervous system - Wageningen UR E
moth`s nervous system - Wageningen UR E

... £10,£12,Z14-16:AL input channel and do not respond differently when the complete, natural blend is presented to the antenna. These cells may therefore be involved in mediating general arousal in response to sex pheromone but apparently do not contribute to species recognition. In contrast, we refer ...
Cell-Type Specific Properties of Pyramidal
Cell-Type Specific Properties of Pyramidal

... Properties, and Cell Counting Apical tuft dendrite was defined in BC as the dendritic profiles in the upper 10% of the pia--white matter distance and upper 15% of the pia-- ...
Information Integration and Decision Making in Humans and
Information Integration and Decision Making in Humans and

... Short Interval of Time • If p(spike per 10 msec) = p(H|E) then having a single neuron to represent a hypothesis would make it difficult to get a clear estimate of P(H|E) within, say, 100 msec. • However, suppose many (say, 10,000) neurons each encode the same hypothesis, and suppose that they produc ...
Neuronal Differentiation in The Cerebral Cortex of
Neuronal Differentiation in The Cerebral Cortex of

... the bipolar and the differentiating multipolar cells. This situation was the most interesting observation of the prenatal 17-day-old rat’s cerebral cortex. Another interesting occurrence was the ICG observed in the early postnatal period. While the ICG was seen in newborn and the 5th postnatal day, ...
Chapter 12 - Nervous Tissue
Chapter 12 - Nervous Tissue

... 2) ______ of ________ (neurofibral nodes) are gaps between myelin sheaths on the neuron axon; permeable to Na+ and K+; allow rapid saltatory conduction of nerve impulses. b. __________ cells - support neurons in ganglia (collection of neuron cell bodies in PNS). B. _________ - nerve cells that condu ...
Neural Basis of Motor Control
Neural Basis of Motor Control

... brain •  Sensory neural pathway (ascending track) –  Passes through the spinal cord to brain stem to thalamus to the sensory areas of cerebral cortex and to the cerebellum –  There are different specific ascending tracks: •  Vision has it’s own track to the cerebral cortex •  Audition has it own tra ...
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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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