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Neuro Quiz 4 – Notes from April 9 to April 16 First order neurons
Neuro Quiz 4 – Notes from April 9 to April 16 First order neurons

... 39. T or F: Pain receptors are non-adapting or very slowly adapting. One advantage of this would be that we are always apprised of pain. A disadvantage is that it will keep the person in a hyper-facilitated situation. 40. Define Hyperalgesia. And give an example. 41. T or F: The processing of pain o ...
Biology 232
Biology 232

... receptor potentials processed by bipolar cells and horizontal and amacrine cells; increase sensitivity and contrast, and assist in differentiating colors ganglion cells (first-order neurons)receive inhibitory and excitatory neurotransmitter signals from bipolar and amacrine cells; when threshold sti ...
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... nucleus ascends through the deep layers of V1 (layers 5, 6) subdividing repeatedly and terminating in layer 4C in a couple of 0.5 mm-wide clusters separated by 0.5 mm gaps (approximately). Axons from the two eyes alternate, giving ocular dominance columns in 4C. The presence of horizontal connection ...
The Nervous System
The Nervous System

... synapses. When synapses are created to a high degree through new experiences, they allow the central nervous system to send and receive messages much more quickly between nerve cells. Like neurogenesis, synaptogenesis continues into adulthood. ...
The Nervous System Notes
The Nervous System Notes

...  Interior- white matter – made of myelinated nerve tracts called white matter, nerve tract relaying impulses to & from cerebral cortex  gyrus (gyri)- elevated ridges on cerebral cortex  sulcus (sulci)- shallow grooves in cortex  Cerebral cortex - made up of tightly packed neurons and is the wrin ...
Document
Document

... represented in the mind by a single unit, we consider the possibility that it could be represented by a pattern of activation a over population of units. • The elements of the pattern may represent (approximately) some feature or sensible combination of features but they need not. • What is crucial ...
November 1 CNS INTRO
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... 5. “Decussation” is when information crosses from one side of the brain or spinal cord to the other. “Projection” is when information is exchanged between brainstem and spinal cord, or deep brain nucleand cortical ribbon. What two major anatomical areas of gray matter in the brain account for each r ...
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Electronic Circuits and Architectures for Neuromorphic Computing
Electronic Circuits and Architectures for Neuromorphic Computing

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Chapter 3 - Victoria College
Chapter 3 - Victoria College

... cord, pons, medulla • sensory tracts from medulla to thalamus – contains reflex centers for visual activities, head movements – controls subconscious muscle activity • some neurons (substantia nigra) release dopamine • loss/damage of these neurons results in loss of tone  Parkinson’s disease – asso ...
the nervous system powerpoint
the nervous system powerpoint

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VIEW PDF - Glaucoma Today
VIEW PDF - Glaucoma Today

... seemingly is implicated.18 Neurochemical changes in koniocellular neurons in the presence of ocular hypertension, without significant retinal ganglion cell axon loss, suggest that elevated IOP may alter the blue/yellow koniocellular pathway in the central nervous system in early glaucoma. This findi ...
The Cerebral Cortex
The Cerebral Cortex

... • 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 • Describe the nervous system and its subdivisions and functions: — central and peripheral nervous systems; — major brain regions, lob ...
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... regeneration, new tissue forms at the wound and existing tissues are remodelled to make a complete, symmetrical animal. How is this amazing feat achieved? On p. 4043, Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado’s group report that BMP signalling regulates several aspects of regeneration in the planarian Schmidtea me ...
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... regeneration, new tissue forms at the wound and existing tissues are remodelled to make a complete, symmetrical animal. How is this amazing feat achieved? On p. 4043, Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado’s group report that BMP signalling regulates several aspects of regeneration in the planarian Schmidtea me ...
Ch 35 PowerPoint - Damien Rutkoski
Ch 35 PowerPoint - Damien Rutkoski

... down the axon rapidly and away from the cell body. The flow of positive charges into one region of the axon causes the membrane just ahead of it to open up and let positive charges flow across the membrane. This continues. ...
Sensory input: Sensory structures, classification by function
Sensory input: Sensory structures, classification by function

... 2. olfactory receptors are neurons that have dendrites called cilia that project from the surface of the olfactory epithelium 3. molecules from inhaled air dissolve in mucus covering the olfactory epithelium and bind with membrane receptors in olfactory cilia, initiating action potentials in olfacto ...
Central Nervous System
Central Nervous System

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The Visual System: The Nature of Light
The Visual System: The Nature of Light

... • The central focal point of the retina • The spot where vision is best (most detailed – visual acuity) • Only cones are found in the Fovea ...
REVIEW THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
REVIEW THE NERVOUS SYSTEM

... spinal cord. 42. The depolarization and repolarization of a neuron’s membrane is called a (n) 43. What are the spaces between adjacent neurons called? 44. A change in the environment that may be of sufficient strength to initiate an impulse is called a(an) 45. The minimum level of a stimulus that is ...
The Visual System: The Nature of Light
The Visual System: The Nature of Light

... • The central focal point of the retina • The spot where vision is best (most detailed – visual acuity) • Only cones are found in the Fovea ...
Neuroscience, 4e
Neuroscience, 4e

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... Stay tuned for more information and the launch announcement. Announcing the CereStage 96 channel Headstage This is exciting news for all Plexon OmniPlex® or MAP Data Acquisition System customers using the Utah Array in their research. We have just launched the CereStage 96 channel unity, gain headst ...
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NERVOUS TISSUE The nervous system consists of all nervous

... the main transmitters, and this transmitter is used at all synaptic boutons that originate from the neuron. One or more of the "minor" transmitters (there are several dozens of them - such as cholecystokinin, endogenous opioids, somatostatin, substance P) may be used together with a main transmitter ...
Chapter 49 Nervous Systems - Biology at Mott
Chapter 49 Nervous Systems - Biology at Mott

... The peripheral nervous system (PNS) is composed of nerves and ganglia ...
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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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