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A role for subplate neurons in the patterning of
A role for subplate neurons in the patterning of

... Chun and Shatz 1988b; Ghosh et al., 1990a). Kainic acid was diluted (10 mg/ml) in 0.9% sterile saline and used within 2 hours. In some cases, fluorescent latex microspheres (Lumafluor, NY) were added to the kainic acid solution (at a ratio of 1:9, microspheres: kainic acid) to mark the injection sit ...
Move to the rhythm: oscillations in the subthalamic nucleus–external
Move to the rhythm: oscillations in the subthalamic nucleus–external

... from the GPe and acts at GABAA receptors. In vitro patch recordings of STN neurons, using the perforated configuration to maintain the natural intracellular concentration of Cl− (the principal permeant ion of the GABAA receptor), have revealed that the equilibrium potential of GABAA receptormediated ...
a scaling cross platform tool for the analysis of neurophysiological data
a scaling cross platform tool for the analysis of neurophysiological data

... neuronal network of 2000 neurons would require the production and normalisation of 2,001,000 pairwise cross correlations. Current recording hardware for multi-dimensional spike trains can already routinely record neuronal networks in the 1500 – 2000 neuron range [6], using MultiElectrode Arrays (MEA ...
Do superior colliculus projection zones in the inferior pulvinar
Do superior colliculus projection zones in the inferior pulvinar

... without further processing so that neurons labelled with FB could be located. Another series was processed for myelin according to the procedure of Gallyas (1979), and the third series was processed for CO following the procedures of Wong-Riley (1979). Both the myelin and CO procedures allowed us to ...
$doc.title

... this benefit was not found in FP training. No such correlation was found between performance and other brain regions, such as the putamen and hippocampus. ...
Fluctuations in Perceptual Decisions  Panagiota Theodoni
Fluctuations in Perceptual Decisions Panagiota Theodoni

... Nava Rubin for constituting the Ph.D. committee of the current thesis, as well as to their substitutes Jaime de la Rocha and Albert Compte for their interest. I am very happy to have had the opportunity to collaborate with Theofanis I. Panagiotaropoulos, Vishal Kapoor, Nikos K. Logothetis, Guyla Kov ...
Neural Mechanisms of Reward in Insects - Chittka Lab
Neural Mechanisms of Reward in Insects - Chittka Lab

... Considering rewards as the strengthening of stimulus–response associations was simple and appealing, but it did not explain how rewarded behavior was strengthened. Hull (31) proposed drive reduction theory to explain motivational systems underlying reward. This essentially stated that an organism ha ...
the human entorhinal cortex
the human entorhinal cortex

... morphologically interneurons. Although calretinin and calbindin were localized in non-pyramidal cells, they also labeled some pyramidal-like neurons. The high density of non-pyramidal neurons containing these calciumbinding proteins in layers II and III suggests they form a critical network that con ...
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Contemporary Principles of Pathologic Neurotoxicity Assessment in

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Multi-chip dataflow architecture for massive scale biophysically

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Functional Organization in the Motor Cortex
Functional Organization in the Motor Cortex

... tuning within a voxel. My findings show that voxels in M1 are directionally tuned, suggesting functional organization. This directional tuning was shown using several analytical tools: (1) I showed directly that when aligning the tuning curve of voxels to their PD (defined as the direction in which ...
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PDF

... the subjective values, of available actions. As actions are executed, the expected immediate consequences (ensuing states and rewards) can be compared to actual consequences to continuously update the model. The advantage of this model-based system is that it is up to date and flexible, taking into ...
Chapter 9
Chapter 9

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Full Text

... although only four out of the seven cases had slopes that were statistically significantly different from zero. In the four cases with significant regression coefficients, the initial measurements were made within a month of stroke onset and none showed macular sparing. The third case, who did not e ...
Study of the human hypoglossal nucleus: Normal development and
Study of the human hypoglossal nucleus: Normal development and

... Co., Ltd, Ohta-ku, Tokyo, Japan), using a Plan Neofluar Zeiss objective and were displayed in a PC-monitor in RGB real colour. The measurements were made in a blinded fashion, without knowledge of the clinical diagnosis or victim age, in all cases in the same histological sections, selected at the an ...
Neural Encoding I: Firing Rates and Spike Statistics
Neural Encoding I: Firing Rates and Spike Statistics

... Neurons are remarkable among the cells of the body in their ability to propagate signals rapidly over large distances. They do this by generating characteristic electrical pulses called action potentials, or more simply spikes, that can travel down nerve fibers. Neurons represent and transmit inform ...
Simulating Populations of Neurons - Leeds VLE
Simulating Populations of Neurons - Leeds VLE

... Understanding the brain is a recent fascination in modern computing. We have come to realise that the brain is the most advanced computational tool that we know of, to be able to replicate neuronal processes could vastly improve current computational techniques. However, the more we understand the m ...
Operant conditioning and motor cortex - D
Operant conditioning and motor cortex - D

... rates of pyramidal tract neurons (PTNs) correlated with gross motor behavior [16], and had suggested that this correlation was indicative of a relatively direct, and causal, relationship between PTN activity and volitional movement [15]. Moreover, he reported evidence suggesting that the activity of ...
Shared and distinct retinal input to the mouse superior colliculus and
Shared and distinct retinal input to the mouse superior colliculus and

... has access to input from most of the retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) that innervate the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN). By comparison, a number of RGC types appear to innervate the SC but not the dLGN; these RGCs generally exhibit more transient responses and respond best to small stimuli. ...
Early Neuronal Loss and Axonal/Presynaptic Damage is Associated
Early Neuronal Loss and Axonal/Presynaptic Damage is Associated

... Handling Associate Editor: Javier S. Burgos Muñoz ...
BMC Neuroscience
BMC Neuroscience

... emerged. Medial areas received the most widespread projections on the ipsilateral side (average = 12.4 areas), followed by orbitofrontal (average = 11.7 areas), and lateral prefrontal cortices with comparatively more restricted projections (average = 6.3 areas). The more widespread ipsilateral proje ...
Supplementary Materials ANTICIPATION PHASE Neutral vs. gain
Supplementary Materials ANTICIPATION PHASE Neutral vs. gain

... gyrus, middle temporal gyrus, and lateral occipital cortex, and left insula, orbitofrontal cortex, and inferior frontal gyrus (Table S1). Social anxiety and gain anticipation Gain magnitude. To examine whether social anxiety was associated with differential neural activity across reward magnitudes, ...
psychology 2
psychology 2

... Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. ...
Large-Field Visual Motion Directly Induces an Involuntary Rapid
Large-Field Visual Motion Directly Induces an Involuntary Rapid

... trials. The selected target was extinguished when the hand had traveled 8 cm in the y direction from the start position. Success was immediately given by a beeping sound if the hand had correctly passed the hitting target position (1 ⫻ 1 cm square) within 0.3– 0.7 s after the go signal. In other wor ...
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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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