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슬라이드 1

... INTRODUCTION  Nervous System  The structure of the nervous system will tell us about brain function ...
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Nervous System - science

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... pores in a cell membrane allows for labeling of just one or a few cells. These techniques allow for an understanding of neural network activity at the most basic functional level. For example, researchers led by Michael Hausser at the University College in London recently used ChR2 to investigate th ...
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... which amounts to a 75% increase in the connectome for these neurons. In the subsequent progression from MCI to AD, there is a 68% reduction of the connectome in the frontal cortex. These results indicate that in the evolution of AD, layer II-III neurons of the temporal and parietal regions undergo a ...
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Concepts and functions - Pécsi Tudományegyetem
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The Brain and Cranial Nerves The Brain

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... a second study that correlated with clinical improvements in motor control. In a recent prospective cohort study of severely brain-injured patients followed for a year following initial injury, similar changes in DTI measured fractional anisotropy were identified in the patients who recovered neurol ...
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Brain Organizing Principles and Functions

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Neurophilosophy

Neurophilosophy or philosophy of neuroscience is the interdisciplinary study of neuroscience and philosophy that explores the relevance of neuroscientific studies to the arguments traditionally categorized as philosophy of mind. The philosophy of neuroscience attempts to clarify neuroscientific methods and results using the conceptual rigor and methods of philosophy of science.While the issue of brain-mind is still open for debate, from the perspective of neurophilosophy, an understanding of the philosophical applications of neuroscience discoveries is nevertheless relevant. Even if neuroscience eventually found that there is no causal relationship between brain and mind, the mind would still remain associated with the brain, some would argue an epiphenomenon, and as such neuroscience would still be relevant for the philosophy of the mind. At the other end of the spectrum, if neuroscience will eventually demonstrate a perfect overlap between brain and mind phenomena, neuroscience would become indispensable for the study of the mind. Clearly, regardless of the status of the brain-mind debate, the study of neuroscience is relevant for philosophy.
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