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Saccade-Related Spread of Activity Across Superior Colliculus May
Saccade-Related Spread of Activity Across Superior Colliculus May

... M. Optican. Saccade-related spread of activity across superior colliculus may arise from asymmetry of internal connections. J Neurophysiol 96: 765–774, 2006; doi:10.1152/jn.01372.2005. The superior colliculus (SC) receives a retinotopic projection of the contralateral visual field in which the repre ...
Sherman_PPT_Chapter2
Sherman_PPT_Chapter2

... Neurons: Basic Cells of the Nervous System • Because a neural signal is sent from one neuron to the next through the terminal buttons of the axons, the most common arrangement is for a neuron’s terminal buttons to be near, but not touching, the receptive dendrites of neighboring neurons. • The memb ...
LFP Power Spectra in V1 Cortex: The Graded Effect of Stimulus
LFP Power Spectra in V1 Cortex: The Graded Effect of Stimulus

... ascending stimulus contrasts. The simultaneously sampled LFP and spike responses from these recordings were analyzed to clarify the conditions under which gamma-band components of the LFP specifically distinguish themselves from the other LFP components as well as to explore what information the LFP ...
Biological Cybernetics
Biological Cybernetics

... electrodes and returns to a low-amplitude oscillation on the cessation of odor stimulus (Freeman 1978). The oscillation is an intrinsic property of the bulb itself persisting after the central connections to the bulb is cut off (Freeman and Skarda 1985). Central inputs (Freeman 1979a; Freeman and Sk ...
Lab Activity 14 - Portland Community College
Lab Activity 14 - Portland Community College

... • Lower motor neurons go from the spinal cord to a muscle. • The cell body of a lower motor neuron is in the spinal cord and its termination is in a skeletal muscle. • The loss of lower motor neurons leads to weakness, twitching of muscle (fasciculation), and loss of muscle mass (muscle atrophy). “F ...
Differential Characteristics of Face Neuron Responses Within the
Differential Characteristics of Face Neuron Responses Within the

... The monkeys were trained to perform a version of a sequential delayed matching-to-sample task that requires the identification of a face (I-DMS task; Fig. 1A); this behavioral task was the same as that described in our preceding paper (Eifuku et al. 2004). In the I-DMS task, a sample (480 ms) stimul ...
Chapter 17- The Special Senses
Chapter 17- The Special Senses

... B) are also called basal cells. C) use olfactory hairs to transduce chemical signals from odorants. D) A and B are correct. E) A, B and C are correct. 4) How do olfactory receptors differ from other neurons? A) They, like other special sense receptors, have a lower threshold than most neurons. B) Th ...
`What` Is Happening in the Dorsal Visual Pathway
`What` Is Happening in the Dorsal Visual Pathway

... [7,40] and probably reflects object representations that are in the service of action [41], at least some of the activation is dissociable from the visuomotor regions and is located more posteriorly or caudally within the parietal lobe [18,27,40,42–44]. This latter pattern of activation dovetails wit ...
Lecture 12
Lecture 12

... – Sound pressure changes of • low-frequency sounds – can translate into vibratory skin pressure changes • higher-frequency – notes cannot be felt ...
Three key sequences HDEV
Three key sequences HDEV

... curves shown in Figure 4.1 on the next page, but research suggests that infants actually grow in spurts. About 90%–95% of the time, they are not growing at all. One study measured the height of infants throughout their first 21 months (Lampl et al., 1992). The researchers found that the infants woul ...
Stress - Neuroanatomy
Stress - Neuroanatomy

... your body muscles, releases stress hormones into your blood, and so on. The sound also goes to the temporal lobe system (hippocampus) and reminds you of the accident, who you were with and where you were going. It also reminds you that it was awful. But these are all just facts about the situation. ...
Pain bare
Pain bare

... organs, skeletal muscle, tendon • Tend to be stimulated by substances (bradykinin, serotonin, histamine, potassium) released from damaged tissues ...
Words and pictures in the left fusiform gyrus
Words and pictures in the left fusiform gyrus

... Regarding what kind of word representation is computed in the VWFA, the picture is also unclear: While some studies find this area more activated by real words than consonant strings or pseudowords (Cohen et al., 2002), others have found that activity in the VWFA increases as word frequency decrease ...
CONTROL OF FOOD INTAKE: NEUROBIOLOGICAL ASPECTS S
CONTROL OF FOOD INTAKE: NEUROBIOLOGICAL ASPECTS S

... crucial problem of public health justifying the increasing number of studies in this field. For the past 50 years, two main concepts have dominated the study of food intake. In the “depletion-repletion” model, it is proposed that a meal is initiated when available energy falls below a threshold valu ...
TESIS DOCTORAL Dynamics and Synchronization in Neuronal Models
TESIS DOCTORAL Dynamics and Synchronization in Neuronal Models

... Since many years scientists have been studying the nervous system and its constituent elements. One of the most notable advances in the description of the structural and functional units of the nervous system came from the Spanish physician Santiago Ramón y Cajal in the late 19th century with his ne ...
Segmentation of neuronal nuclei based on clump splitting
Segmentation of neuronal nuclei based on clump splitting

... half index of the point sequence’’. This could be a good approximation when there are only two overlapping cells and they are of the same size. Nevertheless, this is not always true, at least for the problem under consideration in this paper. Other algorithms assume circular shapes (LaTorre et al., ...
Aberrant Localization of Synchronous Hemodynamic
Aberrant Localization of Synchronous Hemodynamic

... connectivity of, for example, the primary motor cortex to other areas can be assessed with fMRI by taking a seed point (voxel) from within the motor cortex and correlating the fMRI time course from this voxel to all the other fMRI time courses within the brain (typically after low-pass filtering to ...
Chapter 13
Chapter 13

... C.One increases and one inhibits actions of the organ. D.One is sensory and one is motor. 42. Which of these is the best analysis of the function of the autonomic nervous system? A.Conscious control of muscle movements is coordinated with sensory stimuli. B.It controls muscle movements that are prim ...
A scientific theory of ars memoriae: spatial view cells in a continuous
A scientific theory of ars memoriae: spatial view cells in a continuous

... the cerebral cortex to be formed. These might involve associations between information originating in the temporal visual cortex about the presence of an object, and information originating in the parietal cortex about where it is. I note that although there is some spatial gradient in the CA3 recur ...
NeuralNets
NeuralNets

... Wave of depolarization/repolarization propagates along axon Turns on transmission mechanisms at axon terminal • Electrical or Chemical Synapse ...
Effect of Methamphetamine Neurotoxicity on Learning- Arc Efferent Neurons
Effect of Methamphetamine Neurotoxicity on Learning- Arc Efferent Neurons

... cells positively stained for Arc mRNA and positive or negative for PPE mRNA were counted in each field, yielding numbers of Arc+/PPE+ and Arc+/ PPE- neurons per field. In previous work we established that the field size analyzed contains approximately 1,000 cells and that approximately 7% of those c ...
View Full Page PDF
View Full Page PDF

... auditory channel (cochlear place), and estimates are then combined across channels (Licklider, 1951; Meddis and O’Mard, 1997; de Cheveigné, 2010). Sound periodicity is indeed accurately reflected in the patterns of spikes produced by auditory nerve fibers (Cariani and Delgutte, 1996a, 1996b; Cedolin ...
Maruska et al. 2007
Maruska et al. 2007

... larger POA GnRH cells than non-territorial males (Francis et al., 1993; Foran and Bass, 1999). The first study to compare sex differences among three GnRH cell populations of the gonochoristic monomorphic goldfish found larger POA GnRH cells in males compared to females (Parhar et al., 2001), but no ...
Sten Grillner
Sten Grillner

... intact animals or the need to use animals under anesthesia. We then could show that subthreshold activation of MLR indeed released reflex discharges similar to that of DOPA and a suppression of other shortlatency responses. We then suggested that the MLR indeed caused locomotion by releasing the spi ...
The Subconscious Motor Tracts
The Subconscious Motor Tracts

...  Spinal reflexes and equilibrium  Modulation of sensory transmission to higher centers The motor pathways are divided into two groups  Direct pathways (voluntary motion pathways)  The pyramidal tracts (corticospinal)  Indirect pathways (postural pathways)  The extrapyramidal pathways ...
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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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