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THE CINGULATE CORTEX AND HUMAN MEMORY PROCESSES
THE CINGULATE CORTEX AND HUMAN MEMORY PROCESSES

... 2008; Mitelman, Shihabuddin, Brickman, Hazlett, & Buchsbaum, 2005). Far less is known about the posterior cingulate cortex. According to the PubMed data base, there are almost six times fewer references to it in published works than there are to the anterior cingulate cortex. It is known that the po ...
Distinct Mechanisms for Processing Spatial Sequences and Pitch
Distinct Mechanisms for Processing Spatial Sequences and Pitch

... Figure 2. Statistical parametric maps for contrasts of interest (group data). a, SPMs are shown as “glass brain” projections in sagittal, coronal, and axial planes. b, SPMs have been rendered on the group mean structural MRI brain image, normalized to the MNI standard sterotactic space (Evans et al. ...
Auditory cortical processing: Binaural interaction in healthy
Auditory cortical processing: Binaural interaction in healthy

... Two functioning ears provide clear advantages over monaural listening. We are able to locate sound sources in a variety of auditory spaces accurately (≈1 deg) and rapidly, and redirect our attention towards the sound sources. In addition, our speech understanding in noisy and reverberant environment ...
Chapter 48
Chapter 48

... Overview: Lines of Communication • The cone snail kills prey with venom that disables neurons • Neurons are nerve cells that transfer information within the body • Neurons use two types of signals to communicate: electrical signals (long-distance) and chemical signals (short-distance) ...
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation: Decomposing the
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation: Decomposing the

... influence on the motor system at the same time (Fig. 1), sometimes in antagonistic fashion, it remains a challenge to divorce their influences on the motor system. Here, we focus on a set of processes that have frequently been investigated using TMS, including competition resolution, which resolves ...
Cytokines, prostaglandins and nitric oxide in the regulation of stress
Cytokines, prostaglandins and nitric oxide in the regulation of stress

... of HPA axis signaling and increased corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH) secretion from the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and extra-hypothalamic neurons. During chronic stress-induced inhibition of systemic feedback, cytosolic glucocorticoid receptor (GR) levels were significantly cha ...
resting potential
resting potential

... Overview: Lines of Communication • The cone snail kills prey with venom that disables neurons • Neurons are nerve cells that transfer information within the body • Neurons use two types of signals to communicate: electrical signals (long-distance) and chemical signals (short-distance) ...
Olfactory pathway
Olfactory pathway

... the temporal lobe (uncus). Then to olfactory association cortex (anterior part of parahippocampal gyrus or entorinal area). The primary olfactory area and olfactory association cortex are referred to as the pyriform cortex. It is responsible for the appreciation of olfactory stimuli. ...
Sensing Limb Movements in the Motor Cortex: How Humans Sense
Sensing Limb Movements in the Motor Cortex: How Humans Sense

... brain activity related to the sensory processing of the kinesthetic afferent information from the activity related to the processing of vibration stimuli over the skin per se. In our series of neuroimaging experiments (Naito and others 1999, 2002b, 2002c; Naito and Ehrsson 2001), we adopted two appr ...
SOM
SOM

... the links from the input layer to the nodes of the lattice, in such a way that adjacent neurons will have similar weight vectors. • For an input, the output of the neural network will be the neuron whose weight vector is most similar (with respect to Euclidean distance) to that input. • In this way, ...
View PDF
View PDF

... RGCs, and excess glutamate has been found in the retina in glaucoma33, while inhibitors of NMDAR or downstream pathways have a protective role in experimental models of retinal ischemia and glaucoma34, 35. However, several studies demonstrated that there was no excessive glutamate found in experimen ...
The Mirror System, Imitation, and the Evolution of Language
The Mirror System, Imitation, and the Evolution of Language

... F5 rather than by visual inputs so that AIP can monitor ongoing activity as well as visual affordances. Here we indicate the case in which the visual input has activated an affordance for a precision pinch, and we here show the AIP activity driving an F5 cell pool that controls the execution of a pr ...
Text - ETH E
Text - ETH E

... This article focuses on recent modeling studies of dopamine neuron activity and their influence on behavior. Activity of midbrain dopamine neurons is phasically increased by stimuli that increase the animal’s reward expectation and is decreased below baseline levels when the reward fails to occur. T ...
Experimental Diabetic Neuropathy With Spontaneous
Experimental Diabetic Neuropathy With Spontaneous

... Data are the means ⫾ SE of 9-month diabetic, recovered, and nondiabetic mice (n ⫽ 4 or 5 per group). Comparisons were made between groups using a one-way ANOVA with Bonferroni post hoc t test. *P ⬍ 0.05. cacodylate, dehydrated using a series of graded alcohols and propylene oxide, and embedded in ep ...
MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY IN ADULT MAMMALIAN SENSORY CORTEX
MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY IN ADULT MAMMALIAN SENSORY CORTEX

... of sensory maps, as well as the capability to recover from injury. Most of these functions decline with age, supporting the observation that synaptic plasticity is greater in juveniles than in adults. However, it has been known for some time that peripheral deafferentation in adult animals can induc ...
Components of Decision-Making
Components of Decision-Making

... Baimel, C., et al. (2015). "Orexin/hypocretin role in reward: implications for opioid and other addictions." British journal of pharmacology 172(2): 334-348. Baimel, C. and S. L. Borgland (2015). "Orexin signaling in the VTA gates morphine-induced synaptic plasticity." The journal of neuroscience 3 ...
C:\Vision\15Higher level Pt 2.wpd
C:\Vision\15Higher level Pt 2.wpd

... in research related to the maximum performance of the human visual system. The system contains components and circuits that are either rudimentary or absent in these lower species. With an understanding of these new elements and mechanisms, a new Chapter 19 on the Mechanisms and Capabilities of Read ...
The GABAergic system in schizophrenia
The GABAergic system in schizophrenia

... 1999). In-vivo pharmacological manipulation of the GABAergic system indicates that GABAergic function is potentially relevant to the pathophysiology of schizophrenia. For example, blockade of GABA receptors with picrotoxin in the prefrontal cortex of rats impairs sensorimotor gating, an effect that ...
Expression of the zebrafish gene hlx
Expression of the zebrafish gene hlx

... during development of the vertebrate central nervous system (CNS). One important class consists of the homeodomain proteins encoded by genes in the Hox complexes, which probably specify anteroposterior positions of cells in the nervous system and other tissues (McGinnis and Krumlauf, 1992). Similar ...
The Role of Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex in Decision Making
The Role of Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex in Decision Making

... within each category, for a total of 58 trials. For example, in the ‘‘food’’ category, subjects would choose between carrot sticks and watermelon on one trial and between a donut and a chocolate bar on the next, continuing until they had indicated their preference between all possible pairs of the 8 ...
Quantification of the Effect of Different Levels of IOP in the Astroglia
Quantification of the Effect of Different Levels of IOP in the Astroglia

... the detoxification and in the structural and metabolic support15 of the nervous system and neuronal protectors during the aging process.16 Under pathologic conditions, such as glaucoma, there is a reduction of the RGCs and their axons in addition to a decrease in neural cells in the lateral genicula ...
Imitation, mirror neurons and autism
Imitation, mirror neurons and autism

... affected more than imitations of actions with objects [30]. Perhaps the use of objects in some tests may offer a `prop', helping to shape a matching response; by contrast, dif®culties in copying raw gestures underlines the more basic nature of the imitative de®cit referred to earlier [33]. Secondly, ...
Working Memory in the Prefrontal Cortex
Working Memory in the Prefrontal Cortex

... memory as a brain system that provides for the temporary storage and manipulation of information that is necessary for complex cognitive tasks such as language comprehension, learning and reasoning. Baddeley and Logie (1999) [28] further described working memory as a mechanism that allowed humans to ...
LYRICA (pregabalin) eLearning System
LYRICA (pregabalin) eLearning System

... before you can understand how neuropathic pain occurs, you first need to understand the normal actions of the nervous system. Another one of these disorders is fibromyalgia, a common condition that is characterized by the hallmark symptom of chronic, widespread pain. Today, much evidence suggests th ...
Mental state inference using visual control parameters
Mental state inference using visual control parameters

... minimization of the distance between the hand and the target. Humans fixate certain landmarks critical for the control of grasping, such as where contact events take place, and the time when gaze exits a given landmark coincides with kinematic events at that landmark [44]. This suggests that humans ...
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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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