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Spinal Sensorimotor System: An Overview
Spinal Sensorimotor System: An Overview

... animal’s environment, temperature regulation, and protection of the inner organs. In human beings the skin is further classified in terms of glabrous (non-hairy) skin (e.g. the palms of the hands, fingertips, bottom of the feet, etc.) and hairy skin (which makes up most of the skin mass in mammals). ...
Microevolution of neuroendocrine mechanisms
Microevolution of neuroendocrine mechanisms

... life-history traits evolve. Genetic variation in reproductive control systems may exist in many elements of the complex inputs that can affect the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal (HPG) or reproductive axis. Such variation could include numbers and other traits of secretory cells, the amount and patte ...
The ventral striatum - Brain imaging of Parkinson`s disease
The ventral striatum - Brain imaging of Parkinson`s disease

... territory), the caudate nucleus (associative territory) and the posterior putamen (sensorimotor territory) [15–17]. However, the reduction in the number of neurons from the striatum to the output structures of basal ganglia, the internal segment of globus pallidus (GPi) and the substantia nigra pars ...
Techniques and Methods to Implement Neural Networks Using SAS
Techniques and Methods to Implement Neural Networks Using SAS

... paper will offer techniques and methods through implementation of neural nets using only BASE SAS and SAS macro's to represent intrinsic iterative learning/training steps of neural network algorithms. This SAS program can be used as building blocks to build one's own neural network models or be used ...
Chapter 48
Chapter 48

... • The membrane potential of a cell can be measured APPLICATION Electrophysiologists use intracellular recording to measure the membrane potential of neurons and other cells. TECHNIQUE A microelectrode is made from a glass capillary tube filled with an electrically conductive salt solution. One end ...
25. Organ of balance and hearing
25. Organ of balance and hearing

... other acoustic properties  Sound waves must be of sufficient amplitude to move the tympanic membrane and have a frequency capable of stimulating the hair cells in the organ of Corti (spiral organ) (Figure 15-13)  Basilar membrane width and thickness varies throughout its length  High-frequency so ...
Emergence of new signal-primitives in neural systems
Emergence of new signal-primitives in neural systems

... time-of-arrival codes, permit encoding and transmission of multidimensional information by the same elements (multiplexing). We outline how synchronous time-division and asynchronous code-division multiplexing might be realized in neural pulse codes. Multidimensional temporal codes permit different ...
Duration Tuning across Vertebrates
Duration Tuning across Vertebrates

... of sound are found from the auditory periphery to the auditory cortex. Mammals first determine sound frequencies in the cochlea where mechanical properties of the basilar membrane produce a spatial (tonotopic) map of frequency that is preserved throughout the auditory brainstem, midbrain, thalamus, ...
Intrinsic and synaptic plasticity in the vestibular system
Intrinsic and synaptic plasticity in the vestibular system

... calcium influx that occurs with each action potential: decreases in CaMKII activity oppose excitability by reducing BK currents. This unusual form of plasticity might be common to spontaneously active neurons throughout the brain, and would not have been observed in typical plasticity studies that c ...
Favorable Recording Criteria for Spike Sorting
Favorable Recording Criteria for Spike Sorting

... 0 s1 (t) dt · 0 s2 (t − τ ) dt At complete overlap, spikes having identical waveforms, even when they have different amplitudes, will be perfectly correlated and all constellation points will lie on the horizontal axis. If the waveforms differ, being aligned in time still produces the maximal correl ...
Figure 15.9
Figure 15.9

... Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings ...
Autonomic NS
Autonomic NS

... Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings ...
A Dendritic Disinhibitory Circuit Mechanism for Pathway
A Dendritic Disinhibitory Circuit Mechanism for Pathway

... and SOM interneurons5,7,10–13 . These studies generally found that VIP neurons are activated, and ...
View Full Page PDF
View Full Page PDF

... preferentially to the dorsal and central part of the caudate nucleus, and the ventral part projects to the ventral and central caudate nucleus (293). A topographic connection has been reported in projections from the orbital and medial PFC. The medial PFC preferentially projects to the ventral stria ...
Cortical interactions underlying the production of speech sounds
Cortical interactions underlying the production of speech sounds

... ‘‘feedback commands’’ in Fig. 1 are tuned during a babbling phase in which semi-random articulator movements are used to produce auditory and somatosensory feedback. This combination of articulatory, auditory, and somatosensory information is used to tune the synaptic projections between the sensory ...
The Origins of Two-State Spontaneous Membrane Potential
The Origins of Two-State Spontaneous Membrane Potential

... neurons from -61 to -94 mV. The more depolarized level, called the Up state, varied among neurons from -71 to -40 mV. For any one neuron, the membrane potential in the Up and Down states was constant over the period of observation (from 15 min to 4 hr), and the cells spent little time in transition ...
Poly(A) Binding Protein Nuclear 1 regulates the
Poly(A) Binding Protein Nuclear 1 regulates the

... bioRxiv preprint first posted online Mar. 27, 2017; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/121194. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not peer-reviewed) is the author/funder. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license. ...
Glycemic State Regulates Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor
Glycemic State Regulates Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor

... sympathetic neurons, showing that fibers emerging from sympathetic ganglion cells in chick embryos were observed to grow directionally towards sarcomas that provide favorable medium for nerve fiber outgrowth at the base of limb buds (103). Since this time, other neurotrophic factors have been descri ...
Document
Document

... This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: •Any public performance or display, including transmission of any image over a network; •Preparation of any derivative work, including the extraction, in whole or in part, of any images • ...
Carlsson J Neurosci 2007 (pdf 2,2 MB)
Carlsson J Neurosci 2007 (pdf 2,2 MB)

... sessions were performed over 90 min, and the data are expressed as total net full-body turns per minute. A positive value indicates rotations ipsilateral to the lesion side. Amphetamine-induced rotation was recorded at 2 weeks after the 6-OHDA lesion to evaluate the extension of the lesion, and at 8 ...
Chapter 3
Chapter 3

... Thirty-one pairs of spinal nerves emerge from the spinal cord. Ganglia, located outside the brain and spinal cord, are small masses of nervous tissue, containing primarily cell bodies of neurons. Enteric plexuses help regulate the digestive system. Sensory receptors are either parts of neurons or sp ...
Layer III Neurons Control Synchronized Waves in the Immature
Layer III Neurons Control Synchronized Waves in the Immature

... and spatially filtered with a 3 ⫻ 3-pixel Gaussian kernel. The images were further smoothed through a 100 ms window hamming filter. Wide-field images were analyzed using custom-made Matlab routines with the image processing toolbox. Time periods during which the slice did not show activity were manu ...
File
File

... © Cengage Learning 2016 ...
Insect hearing: from physics to ecology - Karl-Franzens
Insect hearing: from physics to ecology - Karl-Franzens

... these taxa later enabled their additional use for communication and promoted the evolution of ultrasound communication signals (Nakano et al. 2015). A close range communication with low-intensity ultrasounds during courtship may be more common in moths than anticipated. The paper by Lakes-Harlan and ...
Kv2 Channels Form Delayed-Rectifier Potassium Channels In Situ
Kv2 Channels Form Delayed-Rectifier Potassium Channels In Situ

... immature and mature times did not vary (40 and 36%, respectively), the inferred proportions of Kv2 channels are similar. The mutant subunit may have produced this effect by decreasing either the number of functional channels, the single-channel conductance, or Popen. These results suggest that funct ...
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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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