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Models of bodily expression perception
Models of bodily expression perception

... Depending on whether the stimulus is consciously seen and recognized, some of these processes may be associated with a conscious emotional experience. These are some of the main components of the ability to perceive bodily expressions. Based on results obtained so far, we have viewed them as the cor ...
Topographic Maps in Human Frontal Cortex Revealed in Memory
Topographic Maps in Human Frontal Cortex Revealed in Memory

... doi:10.1152/jn.00010.2007. We used fMRI at 3 Tesla and improved spatial resolution (2 ⫻ 2 ⫻ 2 mm3) to investigate topographic organization in human frontal cortex using memory-guided response tasks performed at 8 or 12 peripheral locations arranged clockwise around a central fixation point. The task ...
BIOINFORMATICS ORIGINAL PAPER
BIOINFORMATICS ORIGINAL PAPER

... long-term detached retina do not deviate from the spatial patterns observed on normal retinas. Our methodology uses a geodesic feature space that is independent of Euclidean space: the scale of the images and rotation of the retina about the optic nerve have no impact on the results. The scale and r ...
Motor Control - Reza Shadmehr
Motor Control - Reza Shadmehr

... In the ventral part of the spinal cord, motor neurons are organized into segregated motor pools, which innervate particular muscles. Alpha motor neurons send their axons from the spinal gray matter to terminate on extrafusal muscle fibers. Gamma motor neurons send their axons to intrafusal muscle fibe ...
Odorant Specificity of Single Olfactory Bulb Neurons to Amino Acids
Odorant Specificity of Single Olfactory Bulb Neurons to Amino Acids

... (Friedrich and Korsching 1998) studies of ORN nerve terminals within the OB of zebrafish did reveal OB regions responsive to particular types of amino acids, but responses of individual cells were not detected. Single OB neurons can be recorded in an intact preparation over longer average times than ...
Galanin in Alzheimer s disease: Neuroinhibitory or neuroprotective?
Galanin in Alzheimer s disease: Neuroinhibitory or neuroprotective?

... few small GAL-ir neurons within the basal forebrain and preoptic area account for the rich galaninergic fiber plexus seen within this region of the human brain [72, 73]. One potential source of GAL fiber innervation to the basal forebrain may be the LC [74 – 76]. The coeruleo-forebrain pathway is we ...
Review Mitochondrial movement and positioning in axons
Review Mitochondrial movement and positioning in axons

... cytoskeletal dynamics (Gallo and Letourneau, 2000), so it was possible that the accumulation of mitochondria reflected local gross disruption of the cytoskeletal tracks for mitochondrial transport – for instance, an accumulation of actin filaments or depolymerization of MTs in the region of NGF stim ...
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 2

... distal to the dorsal root ganglion where sensory and motor axons interweave so that the ventral and dorsal rami can contain both kinds of axons needed to innervate the body wall. However, most of us tend to use the term “spinal nerve” loosely so as to include its roots and rami. The ventral and dors ...
Evidence for time division multiplexing of multiple simultaneous
Evidence for time division multiplexing of multiple simultaneous

... In the natural world many stimuli or events occur at the same time, evoking activity in an ...
Point-Light Biological Motion Perception Activates Human Premotor
Point-Light Biological Motion Perception Activates Human Premotor

... activity in frontal cortex as well. We performed a human functional magnetic resonance imaging study on a high-field-strength magnet and used a number of methods to increase signal, as well as cortical surface-based analysis methods. Areas that responded selectively to point-light biological motion ...
Neural Basis of Visually Guided Head Movements Studied With fMRI
Neural Basis of Visually Guided Head Movements Studied With fMRI

... frontal cortex (supplementary eye fields, SEF), in the intraparietal sulcus (parietal eye fields, PEF), in the precuneus, at the junction of occipital and temporal cortex (MT/V5) as well as subcortical areas including basal ganglia, thalamus, and cerebellum. Much less is known about the functional a ...
Introduction to Electroencephalography (EEG)
Introduction to Electroencephalography (EEG)

... http://www.scholarpedia.org/wiki/images/1/10/Electroencephalogram_figHead.jpg ...
Neural Crest_Origin, Migration and Differentiation
Neural Crest_Origin, Migration and Differentiation

... The pathways of neural crest migration are primarily determined by extracellular components in the environment through which the cells migrate. Control of trunk neural crest migration is especially well studied. At the trunk level, neural crest cells migrate ventrally between the neural tube and som ...
- Wiley Online Library
- Wiley Online Library

... defined RTN neurons innervate only four regions of the brain, all of which regulate breathing (Abbott et al. 2009; Bochorishvili et al. 2012) (Fig. 2B). RTN neurons are also uniformly activated by serotonin, thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), substance P and orexin (Mulkey et al. 2007; Lazarenko e ...
Contacts among non-sister dendritic branches at
Contacts among non-sister dendritic branches at

... Fig. 3 – High synaptic density and strength at BDIs: (A, B) Representative clustering of synaptophysin (A) or FM1-43 (B) positive synaptic terminals around a BDI. The circle shows the 3.75 μm radius from the BDI center, which was used for analysis in the following panels. The fluorescence of synapto ...
Quantity and Three-Dimensional Position of the Recurrent and
Quantity and Three-Dimensional Position of the Recurrent and

... transection leads to reliable and consistent nonfunctional synkinetic reinnervation of the larynx as evaluated by kinesiologic, histologie, and electromyographic parameters.'" The present work is a part of ongoing research on rats that is aimed at creating a comprehensive model to study laryngeal re ...
A Split-LexA-based Concatenate Expression System for
A Split-LexA-based Concatenate Expression System for

... heterodimerize and drive the expression of the transgene downstream of the LexAop promoter. (D-D’’’) The Split LexA system efficiently drives reporter expression in vivo. An ortLexADBD hemidriver was used in combination with the pan-neuronal hemidriver elavVP16AD to drive the expression of a membra ...
Rearrangement of microtubule polarity orientation during conversion
Rearrangement of microtubule polarity orientation during conversion

... [Burack et al., 2000; Setou et al., 2003]. It is thus important to understand the mechanisms that underlie the establishment and maintenance of microtubule polarity orientation in neuronal processes in order to understand those responsible for the establishment and maintenance of neuronal polarity i ...
Frontal Eye Field Sends Delay Activity Related to Movement
Frontal Eye Field Sends Delay Activity Related to Movement

... delay activity signals that are related in various ways to movement, memory, and vision. This suggests that the delay activity sent from the FEF to the SC contributes to several different functions during saccade generation. Moreover, these results provide the first detailed description of delay act ...
Drug-Evoked Synaptic Plasticity Causing Addictive Behavior
Drug-Evoked Synaptic Plasticity Causing Addictive Behavior

... levels, which mediate their reinforcing effect (Wise, 1987; Di Chiara and Imperato, 1988). While this statement is supported by many experiments, particularly early behavioral pharmacology studies, it has been challenged, most prominently by genetic manipulations. For example, even though cocaine in ...
Nicotinic Receptors in Addiction Pathways
Nicotinic Receptors in Addiction Pathways

... have a critical role in controlling local dopamine release (Exley and Cragg, 2008) and exhibit marked differences in subunit composition across brain regions (Livingstone and Wonnacott, 2009). The ventral striatum, or nucleus accumbens, is a major output for reinforced behavior and is the target of ...
Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) in Inflammatory and Degenerative Brain
Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) in Inflammatory and Degenerative Brain

... such as multiple sclerosis (MS), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Parkinson disease (PD), Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), and Alzheimer disease (AD). First, the emerging role of COX-2 in cognitive functions will be discussed since understanding the role of COX-2 in brain function is an importan ...
A role for FKBP52 in Tau protein function
A role for FKBP52 in Tau protein function

... determined by experiments using as the bait either phosphorylated hT40, nonphosphorylated hT40, or hT40 to which had been added, just before spotting, the same amount of cytosol protein as used to obtain phosphorylated or hyperphosphorylated hT40. As shown in Fig. 3B, the amount of FKBP52 recruited ...
Altered Patterns of Dynorphin lmmunoreactivity Suggest
Altered Patterns of Dynorphin lmmunoreactivity Suggest

... in the polymorph (PM), CA3i and CA1 regions. Varying degrees of cell loss are found in CA30. Scale bars, 1 mm. ...
propofol alters vesicular transport in rat cortical neuronal cultures
propofol alters vesicular transport in rat cortical neuronal cultures

... addition at time 0. Thereafter the vesicles retract up to 10 min when some of the vesicles have started to move anterograde again. At time 20 min, the majority of vesicles move anterograde. Scale bar =10 µm. (B) Time-lapse data of the vesicular velocity obtained from the experiments described above, ...
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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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