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Power Point
Power Point

... SAPNS. The site of the lesion has healed, and axons have grown through the treated area and reached the caudal part of the SC. Axons from the retina are indicated by light-green fluorescence. The boxed area is an area of dense termination of axons that have crossed the lesion. Arrows indicate path a ...
here - STAO
here - STAO

... receptors on various postsynaptic membranes, certain actions are stimulated. There are quite a variety of other molecules that are structurally similar to various neurotransmitters. As you can imagine, if these molecules interact with your nervous system, there can be peculiar responses. Stimulants ...
AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM
AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM

... the autonomic nervous system such as smooth muscle around blood vessels. • Proceeds without conscious intention but can be influenced by volition. ...
Geen diatitel
Geen diatitel

... Conducted action potentials in axons contribute little to surface cortical records, because they usually occur asynchronously in time and at different spatial directions. Pyramid cells of the cerebral cortex are oriented vertically, with their long apical dendrites running parallel to one another. S ...
The Nervous System * Crash Course Biology
The Nervous System * Crash Course Biology

... The somatic system controls which one – things you think about or don’t think about? Examples: MOVEMENT, WALKING, PICKING STUFF UP (True or False? All the incoming sensory information goes up to brain where we make decisions about what to do.) FALSE The autonomic system controls which one – things y ...
The hidden side of the UPR signalling pathway - Reflexions
The hidden side of the UPR signalling pathway - Reflexions

... That's why there are less neurons in the cortex in the end and this translates into microcephaly", Laurent Nguyen explains. The molecular mechanism that controls the choice of the stem cell's differentiative division was still unknown up until now. Why and how does this cell chooses to giv ...
Western blots and quantitative RT-PCR
Western blots and quantitative RT-PCR

... not significantly affected by Ink4a deficiency (h). Note that control mice appeared to have more BrdU +NeuN+ neurons per mm of dentate gyrus (h) due to a single control mouse that had an unusually high frequency of newborn neurons for unknown reasons. All data are based on three independent experime ...
Ch 13 - lanoue
Ch 13 - lanoue

... Challenge: Try the experiment again while the catcher recites addition or multiplication facts. Compare the results. What happened to the reaction time? Why? NOTE: Our reaction time increases when we are distracted. With all of our senses, an __________ ______ is passed between neurons and travels t ...
02biologya
02biologya

... Peripheral Nervous System • Peripheral nervous system (PNS) – The nerves connecting the central nervous system to the rest of the body ...
house symposium 2015 - Instituto do Cérebro
house symposium 2015 - Instituto do Cérebro

... other monkeys, humans or real objects, while we recorded activity from the visual cortex. ...
Nerve Cells and Electrical Signaling
Nerve Cells and Electrical Signaling

... Type the question and your answer, in complete sentences, on a separate sheet of paper. Turn in your answers to the Lab Instructor. 1) Describe the anatomical organization of the nervous system, including how those nerves are organized within the nervous system. 2) Describe the structure of a neuron ...
Can Parkinsons disease be cured by an injection of fetal
Can Parkinsons disease be cured by an injection of fetal

... that correspond with the mis-aggregated synuclein (called synucleinopathies); these are A53T, A30P, and E46K. It is these mutations in some cases which may cause these fibrils (amyloid-like aggregations) to form. Tempered hopes for therapeutic stem cells Stem cells have been at the center of much b ...
Brain 2012 - student version
Brain 2012 - student version

... the motor cortex and the sensory cortex As you can see from this classic though inexact representation, the amount of cortex devoted to a body part is not proportional to that part’s size. Rather, the brain devotes more tissue to sensitive areas and to areas requiring precise control. Thus, the fing ...
Slide ()
Slide ()

... from the leg and arm are located in the lateral division of the nucleus (ventral posterior lateral nucleus, VPL; darker shading), whereas neurons receiving input from the face are located in the medial division (ventral posterior medial nucleus, VPM; lighter shading). Axons from the ventral posterio ...
Understanding the Gifted Learner`s Brain
Understanding the Gifted Learner`s Brain

... spurt at the age of 2 to 4 months, which corresponds to when babies start to really notice the world. This growth peaks at 8 months, when each neuron is connected to 15,000 other neurons. A baby whose eyes are clouded by cataracts from birth will, despite cataract-removal surgery at age two, be fore ...
Mechanism for Understanding and Imitating Actions
Mechanism for Understanding and Imitating Actions

... What are mirror neurons? How might these neurons help us understand actions and their intentions? ...
Chapter 13
Chapter 13

... location but only a few times per hour when the animal was located elsewhere. • For obvious reasons these neurons were named place cells. • place cell • A neuron that becomes active when the animal is in a particular location in the environment; most typically found in the hippocampal formation. • T ...
Human Nervous System Central nervous system
Human Nervous System Central nervous system

... Systems ...
GENERAL CONCEPTS OF NERVOUS SYSTEM
GENERAL CONCEPTS OF NERVOUS SYSTEM

... processing); complex (higher order) functions. – Motor – response to information processed through stimulation of effectors – Muscle contraction. – Glandular secretion. ...
What is Nervous System?
What is Nervous System?

... Looks like a gray, unshelled walnut. The most complex structure in the world. Body most vital organ. Each person is born with over 100 billions brain cells (neurons). Brains can send signals to thousands of other cells in the body at speed of more than 200 miles per hr. Brain growth before &after bi ...
Document
Document

... maintains a resting membrane potential. – cations outside the cell are attracted to anions inside the cell  Resting plasma membrane is more permeable to K+ than other cations, so K+ enters the cell but the sodiumpotassium pump is driving K+ out of the cell.  equilibrium potential ...
The Nervous System
The Nervous System

... • Direction in which the nerve impulse travels relative to the CNS ▫ Sensory/Afferent: dendrites are connected to receptors where stimulus is initiated in skin/organs and carry impulse toward CNS; axons are connected to other neuron dendrites; unipolar except for bipolar neurons in special sense org ...
Learning receptive fields using predictive feedback
Learning receptive fields using predictive feedback

... feedforward–feedback design is characteristic of many sensory areas (Felleman and Van Essen, 1991). This suggests that predictive feedback might be a general mechanism by which neuronal tuning properties are formed. In this paper, we use the predictive coding framework to explain receptive field prop ...
CYTOARCHITECTURE OF CEREBRAL CORTEX
CYTOARCHITECTURE OF CEREBRAL CORTEX

... • Transporters: plasma membrane; vesicular • Others ...
The Brain
The Brain

... • The ability of the brain to reorganize neural pathways based on new experiences • Persistent functional changes in the brain represent new knowledge • Age dependent component • Brain injuries ...
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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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