• Study Resource
  • Explore
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
The Neurology of Music for Post-Traumatic-Stress
The Neurology of Music for Post-Traumatic-Stress

... 2014). During CBT, a client identifies negative thought patterns and tries to replace them with more positive, balanced thought patterns. The idea is that if one has positive thought patterns, it will change maladaptive behaviors (Barlow & Durand, 2009). It also focuses on the distressing memories a ...
BRAIN DYNAMICS AT MULTIPLE SCALES: CAN ONE RECONCILE
BRAIN DYNAMICS AT MULTIPLE SCALES: CAN ONE RECONCILE

... The above results are consistent with the idea that awake brain activity may be associated with high-dimensional dynamics, perhaps analogous to a stochastic system. To further investigate this aspect, we have examined data from animal experiments in which both microscopic (cells) and macroscopic (EE ...
The causes and consequences of reminding
The causes and consequences of reminding

... We survive and thrive by making efficient use of our knowledge. When specific prior events are relevant to current situations, aspects of those past events are retrieved and guide us through the present. Sometimes this remembering is deliberate, but often we are reminded less by force of our own wil ...
Consolidation
Consolidation

... these explanations fell short of providing a more compelling explanation, they raised the possibility that there may be more to retrograde amnesia with respect to ECS than can be determined by a simple analysis. Other problems existed with the literature on ECS and retrograde amnesia. The time cours ...
Analyzing Neural Responses to Natural Signals: Maximally
Analyzing Neural Responses to Natural Signals: Maximally

... Bialek & de Ruyter van Steveninck, 2003). It can be shown that the dimensionality of the RS is equal to the number of nonzero eigenvalues of a matrix given by a difference between covariance matrices of all presented stimuli and stimuli conditional on a spike. Moreover, the RS is spanned by the eige ...
Locus coeruleus - Rice CAAM Department
Locus coeruleus - Rice CAAM Department

... The genetic defect of the transcriptional regulator MECP2 is responsible for Rett syndrome[8] . A MeCP2 deficiency has been associated to catecholaminergic dysfunctions related to autonomic and sympathoadrenergic system in mouse models of RTT. The Locus Coeruleus is the major source of noradrenergic ...
PDF - Oxford Academic - Oxford University Press
PDF - Oxford Academic - Oxford University Press

... Remarkably, the effects of afferents in maintaining dendritic form are often spatially localized to the sites of their contacts with the postsynaptic dendrite. This is most clearly evident in a series of elegant experiments in which afferents to the ventral dendrites of neurons in the nucleus lamina ...
PDF
PDF

... the completion of each date they were asked if they had been as descriptive as possible. In order to guard against fatigue, a twomin time limit was set for each date. If they did not reach the two-min time limit they were probed once, at the completion of each date, with the question, “is there anyt ...
Early Neural Patterning •Neural induction
Early Neural Patterning •Neural induction

... -The concentration of Shh that a ventral neuron encounters determines its identity -Highest dose of Shh at the ventral midline causes the differentiation of the specialised type of glial cells = floor plate ...
Analysis and Classification of EEG signals using Mixture of
Analysis and Classification of EEG signals using Mixture of

Researchers inch closer to causes, cures for insomnia, narcolepsy
Researchers inch closer to causes, cures for insomnia, narcolepsy

... a protein that recognizes the HLA pattern on the outside of cells. Erroneous while somewhat effective, address only readings of the HLA pattern might cause the symptoms, not the underlying loss of an immune cell to mount an attack on neurons. In most cases, once the sympthe body’s own orexin-produci ...
Name__________________________________ The Spinal Cord
Name__________________________________ The Spinal Cord

... The Spinal Cord and Reflexes Lab A reflex arc represents the simplest type of nerve pathway found in the brain. It may consist of only 2 or 3 neurons. The pathway is an automatic, unconscious response to a change in the external environment and does not involve the brain. The main steps of a reflex ...
KIDS, Inc. - School Neuropsych
KIDS, Inc. - School Neuropsych

... optic chiasm. •  Fibers from the optic nerve cross at the chiasm and project to the lateral geniculate body (occipital cortex) via the optic tract. ...
Ch 48 49 Notes - Dublin City Schools
Ch 48 49 Notes - Dublin City Schools

... – A peripheral nervous system (PNS), • Made mostly of nerves which brings information into and out of the CNS • A nerve is a communication line made from cable like bundles of neuron fibers Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings ...
Artifical Neural Networks (ANN) - In data pattern recognition for
Artifical Neural Networks (ANN) - In data pattern recognition for

... approximately 240 - 300 moulds per hour, tremendous amounts of data over time is generated and stored. While producing molds through each cycle the speed and position of every moving part in the machine is determined in advance, meaning movements of all interacting components are synchronized. This ...
Perceptual Expectation Evokes Category
Perceptual Expectation Evokes Category

... that ranged in duration from 0 to 6 s randomly; the onset of the image coherence interval, and thus the earliest sensory information about the target image, was therefore unpredictable. The noise interval was a dynamic display that ‘‘cohered’’ from one random phase map to another random phase map (r ...
A quantitative description of the mouse piriform cortex
A quantitative description of the mouse piriform cortex

... piriform cortex. Quantitative descriptions such as these are important because they make it possible to construct realistic models and provide a constraint that theories of the olfactory circuit must fulfil. We show how quantitative descriptions can be useful for modelling by using our data to refin ...
Acetylcholinesterase in central vocal control nuclei of the zebra finch
Acetylcholinesterase in central vocal control nuclei of the zebra finch

... ventralis; Uva, nucleus uvaeformis; VP, ventral paleostriatum; VTA, ventral tegmental area; X, area X. J. Biosci. | Vol. 29 | No. 2 | June 2004 | 189–200 | © Indian Academy of Sciences ...
Language repetition and short-term memory: an integrative
Language repetition and short-term memory: an integrative

... delay between input and output stages during language repetition should be a critical variable. This is supported by a case study with a deep dysphasic patient who has partially recovered from his language impairment, but who shows again semantic effects during repetition as soon as the delay betwee ...
Pansynaptic Enlargement at Adult Cortical
Pansynaptic Enlargement at Adult Cortical

... has been suggested that the number of synapses forming individual connections alters (Ramón y Cajal 1894; Greenough and ...
The Basal Ganglia and Chunking of Action Repertoires
The Basal Ganglia and Chunking of Action Repertoires

... (thought to be the specialty of the hippocampal/medial temporal system) (Eichenbaum, 1995)? At the systems level, one answer is that the outputs of the striatum (via its pallidal and nigral targets) are oriented mainly toward motor and cognitive action systems of the frontal cortex and toward brains ...
Mercury and the Developing Brain
Mercury and the Developing Brain

... axon gives rise to many smaller axon branches before ending at nerve terminals. Another extension of the cell body includes dendrites, which extend from the neuron cell Figure 3. The Healthy Neuron ...
From/To LTM - Ohio University
From/To LTM - Ohio University

Descartes` Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain
Descartes` Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain

... decide on the course of a personal relationship, choose some means to prevent our being penniless in old age, or plan for the life that lies ahead. Emotion and feeling, along with the covert physiological machinery underlying them, assist us with the daunting task of predicting an uncertain future a ...
Concepts and models in neuropsychology of memory - HAL
Concepts and models in neuropsychology of memory - HAL

... memories and the role of the hippocampal region in different memory systems (see Squire & Alvarez, 1995 and Nadel & Moscovitch, 1997, for contradictory models, and Viard et al., 2007 for recent imaging findings). With a few exceptions, the neuropsychology of memory used to be restricted to organic ...
< 1 ... 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 ... 491 >

Holonomic brain theory

The holonomic brain theory, developed by neuroscientist Karl Pribram initially in collaboration with physicist David Bohm, is a model of human cognition that describes the brain as a holographic storage network. Pribram suggests these processes involve electric oscillations in the brain's fine-fibered dendritic webs, which are different from the more commonly known action potentials involving axons and synapses. These oscillations are waves and create wave interference patterns in which memory is encoded naturally, and the waves may be analyzed by a Fourier transform. Gabor, Pribram and others noted the similarities between these brain processes and the storage of information in a hologram, which can also be analyzed with a Fourier transform. In a hologram, any part of the hologram with sufficient size contains the whole of the stored information. In this theory, a piece of a long-term memory is similarly distributed over a dendritic arbor so that each part of the dendritic network contains all the information stored over the entire network. This model allows for important aspects of human consciousness, including the fast associative memory that allows for connections between different pieces of stored information and the non-locality of memory storage (a specific memory is not stored in a specific location, i.e. a certain neuron).
  • studyres.com © 2025
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report