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The Role of sema2a in the Neural Compensatory
The Role of sema2a in the Neural Compensatory

... Nervous system growth and development is an intricate process and not yet fully understood. Because many factors that influence the growth of neurons are well conserved across a broad range of species, in learning about the more complicated nervous systems found in humans and other mammals, it can b ...
Revision material
Revision material

... How are gaze-fixing eye movements controlled? Draw an annotated diagram explaining how the stretch reflex might operate as part of a servo control system. Describe the somatosensory pathways in the mammalian central nervous system. What are the principal differences between control of eye movements ...
PPT - Angelfire
PPT - Angelfire

... The Olfactory Bulb specializes in processing the molecular signals that give rise to the sense of smell. It is located in the anterior region of the brain just above the nasal cavity. The olfactory bulb receives input from the olfactory sensory neurons and sends its output directly to the olfactory ...
KleinCh5
KleinCh5

... Garcia says cues are indexed. R-W says cues are seen as unitary stimulus. ...
somatic sensation
somatic sensation

... Nociceptors are similar to other receptor types but generally respond to higher levels of stimulus. e.g. general thermal receptors respond to temperatures < 45 oC, whereas nociceptive thermal receptors respond to temperatures > 45 oC. Nociceptors have either free nerve endings or nonencapsulated end ...
reSOLUTION Neuroscience Supplement
reSOLUTION Neuroscience Supplement

... In his novel “Perfume – the Story of a Murderer”, Patrick Süskind managed to put the power of odors into words better than anyone before him. It may be a fascinating idea, but no one will ever be able to create the perfect fragrance that makes a person irresistibly attractive. In the animal world, o ...
Psychophysics ppt. - Ms. Engel @ South
Psychophysics ppt. - Ms. Engel @ South

... Three steps of sensory processing: Physical stimulusPhysiological responseSensory or psychological experience • Physical stimulus: light energy, sound energy, pressure, chemical (taste), etc • Physiological response: receptor potential in the sensory receptor which causes a change in the release ...
The peripheral auditory system
The peripheral auditory system

... connected to auditory ossicles • Stapes in contact with the oval window which separates middle ear from inner ear • Inner ear consists of cochlea – spiral-shaped, fluid-filled structure that contains the basilar membrane ...
Special Senses
Special Senses

... -contains hearing transducers (hair cells) -sits on basilar membrane -hair cells stick into tectorial membrane -movement of the hair cells creates AP’s ...
nicotine / neuroimaging 2006
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... Abstract Craving is a commonly used term to describe an intense desire for a substance or behaviour; however, its underlying neurobiology is not fully characterized. We have successfully used a cue exposure paradigm with functional neuro-imaging (H215O PET; PET, positron emissi ...
Senses
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... Refraction occurs when light enters the eye and bends in order to focus. Images appear upside down when they reach the retina, but are perceived as right side up by the brain. If the lens is normal, the light always focuses on the retina. In myopia and hyperopia the shape if the eye is slightly defo ...
Sensation_and_Perception
Sensation_and_Perception

... If each student is receiving the same sensation of color from each of the boxes, then why do some students have different perceptions of the colors? ...
Hearing
Hearing

... Code for the brain 1. Sensory neurons produce spikes 2. Spike rate increases with an increase in the stimulus intensity (here it was a weight on a muscle) ...
Neuron highlight
Neuron highlight

... tasks in intact animals to determine whether and what central structures might be differentially involved in each task. Are sustained oscillations produced in response to difficult-to-discriminate odorants during the extra sampling time, similar to those seen in locusts, honeybees, and zebrafish (Ka ...
Neurobiology of the Senses
Neurobiology of the Senses

... 5 The Na+ channels close when cGMP detaches. The membrane’s permeability to Na+ decreases, and the rod hyperpolarizes. ...
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Featured Lectures

... from advances in neuroscience, but not adequately. The potential is much greater. This lecture will present a background of the current state of mental health in the world and then focus on how a closer collaboration between mental health and neuroscience could enhance knowledge and improve populati ...
2.7 notes
2.7 notes

... – Stimuli below the level of conscious awareness • Strong enough to activate the sensory receptors but not strong enough for conscious awareness ...
Multimodal Virtual Environments: Response Times, Attention, and
Multimodal Virtual Environments: Response Times, Attention, and

... Single channel conveys limited and insufficient information to the senses - Engenders a lower sense of presence Multimodal VE provide a greater extent of sensory information to the observer - Sense of being present is felt stronger ...
Damien Lescal , Jean Rouat, and Stéphane Molotchnikoff
Damien Lescal , Jean Rouat, and Stéphane Molotchnikoff

... single sound and the sum of all sounds forms a complex sound transmitted to the two ears. The receptive fields design is inspired by work on the retina. The challenge in this project resides in the design of a suitable encoding of the visual scene into auditory stimuli such that the content o f the ...
Vision and Audition PowerPoint
Vision and Audition PowerPoint

... Summary: Color processing occurs in two stages: (1) the retina’s red, green, and blue cones respond in varying degrees to different color stimuli, as the trichromatic theory suggests, (2) then their signals are processed by the nervous system’s opponent-process cells, en route to the visual cortex. ...
Abbreviated 11-15
Abbreviated 11-15

... shown in these images. ...
How do we manage to remember smells despite the fact
How do we manage to remember smells despite the fact

... (via their receptors) respond to submolecular features of the volatile chemicals coming from those objects. For example, an olfactory sensory receptor neuron may respond to a hydrocarbon chain of a particular length or a specific functional group like an alcohol or aldehyde. This means that any give ...
Document
Document

... SENSES • Sensory Receptors - detect environmental changes and trigger nerve impulses • - somatic senses (touch, pressure, temp, pain) - special senses (smell, taste, vision, equilibrium) ...
COLOUR VISION Newton`s Prism Experiments: a white light beam
COLOUR VISION Newton`s Prism Experiments: a white light beam

... auditory information must be from the same source – which should be in the same location ...
An Introduction to the Special Senses
An Introduction to the Special Senses

...  Sensations of motion directed by superior colliculi of mesencephalon  Attempt to keep focus on specific point  If spinning rapidly, eye jumps from point to point  Nystagmus: – have trouble controlling eye movements – caused by damage to brain stem or inner ear ...
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Sensory cue

A sensory cue is a statistic or signal that can be extracted from the sensory input by a perceiver, that indicates the state of some property of the world that the perceiver is interested in perceiving.A cue is some organization of the data present in the signal which allows for meaningful extrapolation. For example, Sensory cues include Visual cues, auditory cues, haptic cues, olfactory cues, environmental cues, and so on. Sensory cues are a fundamental part of theories of perception, especially theories of appearance (how things look).
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