Large-Scale Fluorescence Calcium-Imaging
									
... the dynamics of hundreds of cells concurrently, target specific neuron types for study based on their genetic identities or connectivity patterns, reliably track individual cells for many weeks in behaving animals, extract the signals of individual neurons nearly regardless of their activity rates, ...
                        	... the dynamics of hundreds of cells concurrently, target specific neuron types for study based on their genetic identities or connectivity patterns, reliably track individual cells for many weeks in behaving animals, extract the signals of individual neurons nearly regardless of their activity rates, ...
									category 1
									
... math, rhythm & coordinating complex movements like those associated with speech Mainly involved in analysis and processing information sequentially Right Hemisphere Tasks – global view Can produce only basic speech and numbers Deals with objects in space, recognizing patterns, faces, and melodies, p ...
                        	... math, rhythm & coordinating complex movements like those associated with speech Mainly involved in analysis and processing information sequentially Right Hemisphere Tasks – global view Can produce only basic speech and numbers Deals with objects in space, recognizing patterns, faces, and melodies, p ...
									Grade 7 ELA Module 4A, Unit 1, Lesson 2
									
... camera, or on a large piece of chart paper to be posted. Students will also maintain their own copy of this anchor chart and update it along with the class anchor chart. • The Brain Development anchor chart will hold the students’ learning around the three major aspects of brain development—the pref ...
                        	... camera, or on a large piece of chart paper to be posted. Students will also maintain their own copy of this anchor chart and update it along with the class anchor chart. • The Brain Development anchor chart will hold the students’ learning around the three major aspects of brain development—the pref ...
									lecture 1 () - Stanford Department of Mathematics
									
... computer vs. human computer , a car vs. a horse, an airplane vs. a bird. It hasn’t met with similar success in simulating human cognitive functions. 2. SCIENTIFIC / ENGINEERING (reverse engineering = hacking) Formulate biologically-inspired engineering or mathematical hypotheses. Study the implicati ...
                        	... computer vs. human computer , a car vs. a horse, an airplane vs. a bird. It hasn’t met with similar success in simulating human cognitive functions. 2. SCIENTIFIC / ENGINEERING (reverse engineering = hacking) Formulate biologically-inspired engineering or mathematical hypotheses. Study the implicati ...
									Proceedings - Neuroscience Meetings
									
... (903 AA), and Synpo-T (181 AA). All 3 isoforms specifically interact with alphaactinin and elongate alpha-actinin-induced actin filaments. According data from recent studies, we can suggest that dendritic spines containing sinaptopodin greatly differ in structural and functional properties from the ...
                        	... (903 AA), and Synpo-T (181 AA). All 3 isoforms specifically interact with alphaactinin and elongate alpha-actinin-induced actin filaments. According data from recent studies, we can suggest that dendritic spines containing sinaptopodin greatly differ in structural and functional properties from the ...
									Grade 7 ELA Module 4A, Unit 1, Lesson 2
									
... camera, or on a large piece of chart paper to be posted. Students will also maintain their own copy of this anchor chart and update it along with the class anchor chart. • The Brain Development anchor chart will hold the students’ learning around the three major aspects of brain development—the pref ...
                        	... camera, or on a large piece of chart paper to be posted. Students will also maintain their own copy of this anchor chart and update it along with the class anchor chart. • The Brain Development anchor chart will hold the students’ learning around the three major aspects of brain development—the pref ...
									Neural Plasticity Workshop: Insights from
									
... overview of our findings I will question classical theories of 'critical periods' by showing that "visual" regions do maintain their specific typical functionality and functional connectivity patterns even if "reawakened" in later periods in life including adulthood. Overall, through our approach an ...
                        	... overview of our findings I will question classical theories of 'critical periods' by showing that "visual" regions do maintain their specific typical functionality and functional connectivity patterns even if "reawakened" in later periods in life including adulthood. Overall, through our approach an ...
									Hyperhidrosis Due to Thalamic Deep Brain Stimulation in a Patient
									
... seconds of activating contact 1, the patient developed profuse sweating of the left face, thorax, and arm. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain confirmed lead positioning in the thalamus with a slightly inferior displacement extending to the superior cerebral peduncle. CONCLUSIONS: Although a rar ...
                        	... seconds of activating contact 1, the patient developed profuse sweating of the left face, thorax, and arm. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain confirmed lead positioning in the thalamus with a slightly inferior displacement extending to the superior cerebral peduncle. CONCLUSIONS: Although a rar ...
									Functional and comparative assessments of the octopus learning
									
... cell bodies reveal that the amacrine interneurons are inexcitable. Decremental non-regenerative “A-spikes” can be recorded in the cell bodies of the large efferent neurons of the VL and in the MSF neurons, suggesting that the cell bodies and possibly the dendritic trees of these large cells are inex ...
                        	... cell bodies reveal that the amacrine interneurons are inexcitable. Decremental non-regenerative “A-spikes” can be recorded in the cell bodies of the large efferent neurons of the VL and in the MSF neurons, suggesting that the cell bodies and possibly the dendritic trees of these large cells are inex ...
									Understanding Embodied Cognition through Dynamical Systems
									
... only if it is stabilized against the majority of such perturbative inputs. A central concept of DST is that the dynamical systems which nervous systems form together with their coupling to the sensory and motor systems are best characterized by their attractor states. Dynamical systems with converge ...
                        	... only if it is stabilized against the majority of such perturbative inputs. A central concept of DST is that the dynamical systems which nervous systems form together with their coupling to the sensory and motor systems are best characterized by their attractor states. Dynamical systems with converge ...
									ExamView - Unit 3 Practice Test.tst
									
... e. aphasib. ____ 16. Your conscious awareness of your own name and self-identity depends primarily on the normal ...
                        	... e. aphasib. ____ 16. Your conscious awareness of your own name and self-identity depends primarily on the normal ...
									Chapter 2: The Brain and Behavior
									
... • Ablation: Surgical removal of parts of the brain. • Deep Lesioning: A thin wire electrode is lowered into a specific area inside the brain. Electrical current is then used to destroy a small amount of brain tissue. • Electrical Stimulation of the Brain (ESB): When an electrode is used to activate ...
                        	... • Ablation: Surgical removal of parts of the brain. • Deep Lesioning: A thin wire electrode is lowered into a specific area inside the brain. Electrical current is then used to destroy a small amount of brain tissue. • Electrical Stimulation of the Brain (ESB): When an electrode is used to activate ...
									Neural Axis Representing Target Range in the Auditory
									
... three major clusters of delay-sensitive neurons: FM,-FM2, FMi-FM3, and FM,-FM4 facilitation neurons. Each cluster shows odotopic representation. Iso-BD contours and range axes are schematically shown by dashed lines and solid arrows, respectively. Best delays of 0.4 and 18 msec correspond to best ra ...
                        	... three major clusters of delay-sensitive neurons: FM,-FM2, FMi-FM3, and FM,-FM4 facilitation neurons. Each cluster shows odotopic representation. Iso-BD contours and range axes are schematically shown by dashed lines and solid arrows, respectively. Best delays of 0.4 and 18 msec correspond to best ra ...
									Magnetic-resonance-imaging
									
... likely to give a wrong final segmentation. Apart from this, the whole algorithm is slightly slower than the original FM-EM model, due to additional MRF-MAP classification, EM fitting procedure and bias field correction. However, it can obtain slightly good speed by employing ICM fast deterministic m ...
                        	... likely to give a wrong final segmentation. Apart from this, the whole algorithm is slightly slower than the original FM-EM model, due to additional MRF-MAP classification, EM fitting procedure and bias field correction. However, it can obtain slightly good speed by employing ICM fast deterministic m ...
									Chapter 3 Synapses
									
... synapse typically have little effect on the firing of the postsynaptic neuron (Bruno & Sakmann, 2006). The receptive areas of most neurons are covered with thousands of synapses, and whether or not a neuron fires is determined by the net effect of their activity.” –Pinel, p. 81 ...
                        	... synapse typically have little effect on the firing of the postsynaptic neuron (Bruno & Sakmann, 2006). The receptive areas of most neurons are covered with thousands of synapses, and whether or not a neuron fires is determined by the net effect of their activity.” –Pinel, p. 81 ...
									Exam 5 Study Guide-sp2016
									
... somatosensory cortex. (You do not have to identify individual sections of the homunculus or be able to identify where any given body part is mapped on the homunculus.) Understand how brain injuries help scientists understand what different parts of the brain do. Explain what a frontal lobotomy is wh ...
                        	... somatosensory cortex. (You do not have to identify individual sections of the homunculus or be able to identify where any given body part is mapped on the homunculus.) Understand how brain injuries help scientists understand what different parts of the brain do. Explain what a frontal lobotomy is wh ...
									CNS - Algonquin College
									
... Scattered throughout the entire brain stem, but concentrated in the medulla oblongata, is a collection of large and small-interconnected neurons known as the reticular formation. This net-like structure of gray and white matter is believed essential for the cortical activities associated with initia ...
                        	... Scattered throughout the entire brain stem, but concentrated in the medulla oblongata, is a collection of large and small-interconnected neurons known as the reticular formation. This net-like structure of gray and white matter is believed essential for the cortical activities associated with initia ...
									Nervous System - Lakeridge Health
									
... Scattered throughout the entire brain stem, but concentrated in the medulla oblongata, is a collection of large and small-interconnected neurons known as the reticular formation. This net-like structure of gray and white matter is believed essential for the cortical activities associated with initia ...
                        	... Scattered throughout the entire brain stem, but concentrated in the medulla oblongata, is a collection of large and small-interconnected neurons known as the reticular formation. This net-like structure of gray and white matter is believed essential for the cortical activities associated with initia ...
									Granger causality analysis of state dependent functional connectivity
									
... Time Windows using the method in [12]. Fig. 1 (a) shows the kinematic traces of the mandibular marker during consecutive chew cycles (Chew Transition in green), or consecutive Chew and Swallow cycles (Swallow Transition in yellow). Those two traces are remarkably similar during the chew cycle prior ...
                        	... Time Windows using the method in [12]. Fig. 1 (a) shows the kinematic traces of the mandibular marker during consecutive chew cycles (Chew Transition in green), or consecutive Chew and Swallow cycles (Swallow Transition in yellow). Those two traces are remarkably similar during the chew cycle prior ...
									neural correlates of associative face memory in
									
... Satoshi Eifuku, Email: [email protected] or Ryoi Tamura, Email: [email protected] Department of Integrative Neuroscience, Graduate School of Medicine and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Toyama 2630 Sugitani, Toyama, 930-0194 Japan ...
                        	... Satoshi Eifuku, Email: [email protected] or Ryoi Tamura, Email: [email protected] Department of Integrative Neuroscience, Graduate School of Medicine and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Toyama 2630 Sugitani, Toyama, 930-0194 Japan ...
									Neural coding of behavioral relevance in parietal cortex
									
... spatial locations or rather in providing a transient signal when attention is shifted from one location to another. Yantis et al. [37] directed subjects to detect a stimulus in one of two rapid serial visual displays presented simultaneously in opposite visual hemifields. Attention was rapidly shif ...
                        	... spatial locations or rather in providing a transient signal when attention is shifted from one location to another. Yantis et al. [37] directed subjects to detect a stimulus in one of two rapid serial visual displays presented simultaneously in opposite visual hemifields. Attention was rapidly shif ...
									Glossary of commonly used Occupational Therapy terms
									
... Figure-Ground Perception: The ability to perceive a figure in the foreground from a rival background. Fine Motor: Referring to movement of the muscles in the fingers, toes, eyes and tongue. Fine Motor Skills: The skilled use of one’s hands. It is the ability to move the hands and fingers in a smooth ...
                        	... Figure-Ground Perception: The ability to perceive a figure in the foreground from a rival background. Fine Motor: Referring to movement of the muscles in the fingers, toes, eyes and tongue. Fine Motor Skills: The skilled use of one’s hands. It is the ability to move the hands and fingers in a smooth ...
									Intelligent Systems - Teaching-WIKI
									
... • Recurrent networks have at least one feedback connection: – They have directed cycles with delays: they have internal states (like flip flops), can oscillate, etc. – The response to an input depends on the initial state which may depend on previous inputs. – This creates an internal state of the n ...
                        	... • Recurrent networks have at least one feedback connection: – They have directed cycles with delays: they have internal states (like flip flops), can oscillate, etc. – The response to an input depends on the initial state which may depend on previous inputs. – This creates an internal state of the n ...
									Neural plate - Bakersfield College
									
... are produced – death is normal Neurons die due to failure to compete for chemicals provided by targets ...
                        	... are produced – death is normal Neurons die due to failure to compete for chemicals provided by targets ...