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Head-Direction Cells Recorded from the Postsubiculum in Freely
Head-Direction Cells Recorded from the Postsubiculum in Freely

... Data analysis.Head direction was calculated from the relative positions of the 2 LEDs. The spatial location of the animal was defined as the position of the red LED. Given the size of an individual pixel (3.6 mmz) and a spacing of 8 cm between the red and green LEDs, the maximum resolution of head d ...
D5 (Not D1) Dopamine Receptors Potentiate Burst
D5 (Not D1) Dopamine Receptors Potentiate Burst

... (control: 5.3 ⫾ 1.2; D1 agonist: 5.7 ⫾ 1.8 Hz; n ⫽ 8). Afterhyperpolarization was often more pronounced, but there was no other effect on cell properties, including input resistance, spike threshold, amplitude, or width (n ⫽ 15; data not shown). Although burst-firing is displayed spontaneously by on ...
Reticular Formation
Reticular Formation

... states of consciousness (sleep & wakefulness, including EEG changes, and associated muscle atonia and eye movements), visceromotor activities (heart rate, respiration) maintained even when asleep. ...
Nonlinear brain dynamics as macroscopic manifestation of
Nonlinear brain dynamics as macroscopic manifestation of

... vivid picture of cortex as a mosaic of modules (Calvin, 1996), each of which performs a sensory or motor function; they have not given a picture of comparable clarity of the integration of modules. In our experimental work aiming to understand global cooperation among modules we have focused on the ...
Memory Extinction, Learning Anew, and Learning the New
Memory Extinction, Learning Anew, and Learning the New

... formation and plasticity of neural circuits. However, direct evidence for a transneuronal transfer of BDNF and its relation to neuronal activity remains elusive. We simultaneously injected complementary DNAs of green fluorescent protein (GFP)–tagged BDNF and red fluorescence protein into the nucleus ...
Auditory working memory: contributions of lateral prefrontal cortex
Auditory working memory: contributions of lateral prefrontal cortex

... my husband I owe a debt of gratitude for being there when it counted the most and standing by me for all the challenges great and small. ...
Proprioceptive Eye Position Signals Are Still Missing a Sensory
Proprioceptive Eye Position Signals Are Still Missing a Sensory

... that have motor terminals on MIFs are likely underestimates. Unfortunately, the authors did not provide an additional analysis based on examination of tracerpositive populations. Therefore, it remains unclear whether most axons would be expected to make motor contacts on MIFs, as the summary schema ...
Pathophysiology of breathing
Pathophysiology of breathing

... • Violation of the conduction impulses in the peripheral nerves that supply respiratory muscles can occur because of inflammation, vitamin deficiency, trauma. Diaphragmatic nerve lesion leads to paralysis of the diaphragm, which manifests its paradoxical movements according to changes in pressure in ...
Lecture 23. Pathophysiology of respiratory system
Lecture 23. Pathophysiology of respiratory system

... • Violation of the conduction impulses in the peripheral nerves that supply respiratory muscles can occur because of inflammation, vitamin deficiency, trauma. Diaphragmatic nerve lesion leads to paralysis of the diaphragm, which manifests its paradoxical movements according to changes in pressure in ...
The role of the mirror neuron system in action understanding and
The role of the mirror neuron system in action understanding and

... seen, some mirror neurons still fired. The monkeys saw beforehand if there was an object present or not. Mirror neurons did not fire when the object was not present. This shows that the motor representation of a meaningful action performed by another can be generated internally in the premotor corte ...
S-potentials precede and drive nearly all LGN spikes in a burst.
S-potentials precede and drive nearly all LGN spikes in a burst.

... a stimulus paradigm that mimics the viewing of natural scenes? (2) Are LGN bursts simply due to bursting activity in the retina? (3) Does the LGN ignore retinal input during bursts because of IT activation? To answer these questions, we recorded the action potentials of LGN neurons along with their ...
Chapter 7 - Bakersfield College
Chapter 7 - Bakersfield College

... • Spiral ganglia neurons communicate with cochlear hair cells and the dorsal and ventral cochlear nuclei of the medulla • Cochlear nuclei synapse directly or indirectly with the inferior colliculus • The inferior colliculus projects to the medial geniculate nucleus (MGN) of the thalamus ...
Modeling goal-directed spatial navigation in the rat based on physiological
Modeling goal-directed spatial navigation in the rat based on physiological

... functional role of theta rhythm oscillations. These models have been developed in two different software packages: CATACOMB, developed by Cannon, Koene, and Hasselmo (2002)) and KInNeSS, developed in the Hasselmo laboratory by Gorchetchnikov. The use of separate models effectively tests the robustne ...
48_lecture_presentation - Course
48_lecture_presentation - Course

... 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). ...
Higginbotham H, Eom TY, Mariani LE, Bachleda A, Hirt J, Gukassyan V, Cusack CL, Lai C, Caspary T, Anton ES. Developmental Cell. 2012, Nov 13 23(5):925-38. Arl13b in primary cilia regulates the migration and placement of interneurons in the developing cerebral cortex.
Higginbotham H, Eom TY, Mariani LE, Bachleda A, Hirt J, Gukassyan V, Cusack CL, Lai C, Caspary T, Anton ES. Developmental Cell. 2012, Nov 13 23(5):925-38. Arl13b in primary cilia regulates the migration and placement of interneurons in the developing cerebral cortex.

... Breunig et al., 2008; Willaredt et al., 2008). Although these studies demonstrate the importance of cilia activity in progenitor dynamics, little is known about how neuronal cilia may influence the migration and differentiation of distinct classes of neurons during corticogenesis. We therefore aimed ...
Simulations of neuromuscular control in lamprey swimming
Simulations of neuromuscular control in lamprey swimming

... Most neuromechanical simulation studies of the lamprey have been done using a mechanical model where the body is represented as a chain of links (Ekeberg 1993; Bowtell & Williams 1991). Since the real lamprey does not have discrete vertebra, these links should only be viewed as an arti¢cial subdivis ...
The Relation between Dendritic Geometry
The Relation between Dendritic Geometry

... the basis for the quantitative morphological analysis (see below). The soma was reconstructed by drawing a contour along its largest circumference. To do so, the soma circumference was first observed in the plane of the slice (xy-plane). Then, at each location along the largest soma circumference in ...
Document
Document

... Efferent fibers. Efferent fibers are axons that carry impulses away from the CNS to muscles and glands. They also are referred to as motor, or descending, fibers. Afferent fibers are axons that carry impulses toward the CNS. REF: 1-23 40. General sensory (also known as somatic sensory) pathways feat ...
Autonomic Nervous System
Autonomic Nervous System

... •Preganglionic axons to intra-abdominal structures go through paravertebral ganglia to prevetebral ganglia ...
Neuronal-Derived Nitric Oxide and Somatodendritically Released
Neuronal-Derived Nitric Oxide and Somatodendritically Released

... rats. The VP-eGFP neuron, or non-eGFP (OT) neuron near the preconstricted vessel, was detected using fluorescence microscopy and patched using DIC and recordings performed using the whole-cell configuration. The internal solution consisted of (in mM) the following: 135 K $ gluconate, 10 HEPES, 0.2 E ...
1-1 Test Bank Liebgott: The Anatomical Basis of Dentistry, 3rd
1-1 Test Bank Liebgott: The Anatomical Basis of Dentistry, 3rd

... Efferent fibers. Efferent fibers are axons that carry impulses away from the CNS to muscles and glands. They also are referred to as motor, or descending, fibers. Afferent fibers are axons that carry impulses toward the CNS. REF: 1-23 40. General sensory (also known as somatic sensory) pathways feat ...
Multilayer perceptrons
Multilayer perceptrons

... where the network performs well on the training data but poorly on the test data The alternative is to divide the data into three sets, the extra one being the validation set ...
Early Ontogeny of the Secondary Proliferative Population of the
Early Ontogeny of the Secondary Proliferative Population of the

... of the cerebral hemispheres. Its distribution corresponds closely to a compact architectonic stratum which has been designated the ventricular zone (VZ, Boulder Committee, 1970). It gives rise to the majority of neurons of the neocortex, but it is also a proliferative zone for the radial glial cells ...
Differential innervation of superficial versus deep - HAL
Differential innervation of superficial versus deep - HAL

... bulbo-spinal modulations of both acute and chronic pain in rats (Wei et al., 2010; Gautier et al., 2017), in convergence with a recent report on the effectiveness of selective optogenetic activation of RVM-serotonergic neurons to markedly affect pain signaling in rats (Cai et al., 2014). In spite of ...
Imitation: is cognitive neuroscience solving the correspondence
Imitation: is cognitive neuroscience solving the correspondence

... a visuo-motor link that cannot support imitation because the visual component is not similar to the visual input received during observation of another person performing the same action. Performance of an opaque movement leads to the establishment of a ‘matching vertical association’, a visuo-motor ...
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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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