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Ch11AB
Ch11AB

... Graded potentials are _________________, ____________________ changes in the membrane potential. Graded potentials can be __________________or _______________________. The ___________________ of a graded potential varies directly (is graded) with stimulus strength. (Slide 10) The ___________________ ...
Nervous System Notes
Nervous System Notes

... • It also tells your body to respond to information. • It also helps maintain HOMEOSTASIS! ...
Binding Mechanisms in Visual Perception
Binding Mechanisms in Visual Perception

... When photoreceptors in the retina are stimulated by photons, these cells modulate their chemical transmitter releasing based on light frequency and intensity, which causes subsequent cellular electrical activity change of the following bipolar cells, ganglion cells, and more complex visual neurons ...
Three Types of Behavior : involuntary responses to stimuli
Three Types of Behavior : involuntary responses to stimuli

... Eric Kandel and Habituation in Aplysia The siphon is served by 24 sensory neurons, whose cell bodies are in the abdominal ganglion ______________________________________________form synapses with: excitatory and inhibitory interneurons six motor neurons serving the gill Possible Hypotheses for Habit ...
sensory neurone
sensory neurone

... Nerve fibres are bundles of nerve cells (NEURONES) that pass on electrical signals (IMPULSES) to the brain. ...
Afferent Synaptic Signaling
Afferent Synaptic Signaling

... that they have very large TTX sensitive sodium currents, up to 6nA. This is consistent with the fibers being long and branched. These currents are visible in top right trace which shows the sodium currents from this trace on an expanded x axis ...
Learning and Memory Lecture Notes Page
Learning and Memory Lecture Notes Page

... Eric Kandel and Habituation in Aplysia The siphon is served by 24 sensory neurons, whose cell bodies are in the abdominal ganglion ______________________________________________form synapses with: excitatory and inhibitory interneurons six motor neurons serving the gill Possible Hypotheses for Habit ...
MirrorBot Report 6
MirrorBot Report 6

... visual cortex model. Right part of the figure shows the two cortical surfaces, displaying at the location of each neuron the pixel that is at the centre of its receptive field. This has to be related to figure 1.3. 1.2.2. Contrast detection Once the centres and sizes of cortical filters are defined ...
CLASS #1: 9 Jan 2001
CLASS #1: 9 Jan 2001

... B. Receptors: types (mechanical, chemical thermal); sources (telereceptors-distance; exteroceptors-on body; proprioceptors-muscles, joints, vestibular apparatus; interoceptors-internal organs) C. Adequate stimulus: That stimulus to which a particular sensory receptor is normally AND most efficiently ...
Identification of sleep-promoting neurons in vitro. Nature 6781:992-5
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... that the reciprocal inhibitory interaction of such VLPO neurons with the noradrenergic, serotoninergic and cholinergic waking systems to which they project5,9,10 is a key factor for promoting sleep. ...
Review questions: Neuroanatomy
Review questions: Neuroanatomy

... 2. Describe how the sensation of being touched is dealt with in the 3 functional areas of the cerebral cortex. 3. Explain what is meant by the term “the emotional brain”. 4. Define proprioception. In which part of the brain is it processed? ...
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File

... •That contains nucleus Dendrites Mutiple branching hair like extensions that arise from the cell body of a neuron . It receives messages from other neurone and conducts impulses toward the cell body Axon Single long extension of a neuron, ending in branching terminal fibers ( called axon termina ...
Biology 2401 Anatomy and Physiology I notes
Biology 2401 Anatomy and Physiology I notes

... *What ends the stimulation of the postsynaptic neuron? *Explain how a drug that blocks Ca++ channels could be a depressant and how a drug that makes membranes more permeable to Ca++ could be a stimulant. *What is the value of having two different neurotransmitter receptors at a synapse? * How can a ...
THE BASAL GANGLIA
THE BASAL GANGLIA

... along with their connected cortical and thalamic areas, are viewed as components of parallel circuits whose functional and morphological segregation is rather strictly maintained. Each circuit is thought to engage separate regions of the basal ganglia and thalamus, and the output of each appears to ...
base text pdf
base text pdf

... spatial resolution. These elegant techniques, named chemical genetics, are applicable for neural cells in culture as well as in small animals like drosophila and zebrafish. The discovery of channelrhodopsin2 (ChR2) from the unicellar alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was the starting point for the opto ...
physiology_lec43_3_5_2011
physiology_lec43_3_5_2011

... When center part is excited the lateral part is inhibited, that will prevent the lateral spread of light excitation on the retina. It is the same with cones (blue, red, green) one cone inhibit the others so that there will be contrast between these colors. ...
notes as
notes as

... – vary the number of vesicles of transmitter – vary the number of receptor molecules. • Synapses are slow, but they have advantages over RAM – Very small – They adapt using locally available signals (but how?) ...
The Nervous System
The Nervous System

... The Nervous System • Transmission of nerve impulse – Chemical changes across the membrane of neuron. – Membrane of a unstimulated neuron is polarized. • Difference in electrical charges between the outside and inside of the membrane. • Inside is negative; outside is positive. ...
THE BASAL GANGLIA
THE BASAL GANGLIA

... along with their connected cortical and thalamic areas, are viewed as components of parallel circuits whose functional and morphological segregation is rather strictly maintained. Each circuit is thought to engage separate regions of the basal ganglia and thalamus, and the output of each appears to ...
Focus On Vocabulary Chapter 02
Focus On Vocabulary Chapter 02

... other nearby neurons for much the same reason that people live in cities—it is easier to have brief, quick interactions with other people when they are nearby. Learning occurs as feedback builds and strengthens these neural connections (neurons that fire together wire together). . . . information hi ...
Chapter 7 -Nervous System - Austin Community College
Chapter 7 -Nervous System - Austin Community College

... 4. the sodium/potassium pump works constantly to maintain Na and K gradients so that whenever ion channels open there is enough Na or K to move across the membrane to generate a signal ...
242 BLADDER AFFERENT NEURONS SELECTIVELY INTERACT
242 BLADDER AFFERENT NEURONS SELECTIVELY INTERACT

... Hypothesis / aims of study The urothelium is capable of releasing a multitude of signalling factors including ATP, nitric oxide or prostaglandins to modulate the activity of sensory nerves innervating the suburothelium. In turn, sensory nerves innervating the urinary bladder are thought release neur ...
Neurons and Nervous System
Neurons and Nervous System

... membrane potential less negative than the resting potential for a brief period. The dip after an action potential is called hyperpolarization or undershoot. ...
1 - Sur Lab
1 - Sur Lab

... and control via stimulator (left) and live image (right). (B) The system can be interchangeably interfaced to commercial arrays from different vendors, such as MCS (left, with blowup) and MED (right) to enable multi-site stimulation. (C) Chip placed on stage. (D) Stimulator box – or circuit diagram ...
Synergy between Transplantation of Olig2
Synergy between Transplantation of Olig2

... transplanted neural stem cells (NSCs) differentiate into OLs and neurons in lesion site. The previous studies have shown that Olig2-overexpression can promote the differentiation of cultured NSCs into mature OLs. Moreover, it has been reported that myelin basic protein activated T cells (MBP-T) can ...
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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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