Results 251 to 260 of about 1,633,661 (305)
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Annual Review of Neuroscience, 2022
The cerebellar cortex is an important system for relating neural circuits and learning. Its promise reflects the longstanding idea that it contains simple, repeated circuit modules with only a few cell types and a single plasticity mechanism that mediates learning according to classical Marr-Albus models.
Court, Hull, Wade G, Regehr
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The cerebellar cortex is an important system for relating neural circuits and learning. Its promise reflects the longstanding idea that it contains simple, repeated circuit modules with only a few cell types and a single plasticity mechanism that mediates learning according to classical Marr-Albus models.
Court, Hull, Wade G, Regehr
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Current Biology, 2022
The prefrontal cortex is a well-studied but, in terms of understanding what it is for, deeply divisive part of the brain located at the front of the head. Perhaps the least controversial feature of the prefrontal cortex is its complexity. The prefrontal cortex is anatomically, functionally, and computationally complex.
Matthew V, Chafee, Sarah R, Heilbronner
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The prefrontal cortex is a well-studied but, in terms of understanding what it is for, deeply divisive part of the brain located at the front of the head. Perhaps the least controversial feature of the prefrontal cortex is its complexity. The prefrontal cortex is anatomically, functionally, and computationally complex.
Matthew V, Chafee, Sarah R, Heilbronner
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Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences, 1996
The orbitofrontal cortex is the key brain region involved in emotion in humans and other primates. The orbitofrontal cortex represents the reward or affective value of primary reinforcers including taste, touch, texture, and face expression. It learns to associate other stimuli with these to produce representations of the expected reward value for ...
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The orbitofrontal cortex is the key brain region involved in emotion in humans and other primates. The orbitofrontal cortex represents the reward or affective value of primary reinforcers including taste, touch, texture, and face expression. It learns to associate other stimuli with these to produce representations of the expected reward value for ...
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Annual Review of Neuroscience, 2014
Anatomically, the perirhinal cortex sits at the boundary between the medial temporal lobe and the ventral visual pathway. It has prominent interconnections not only with both these systems, but also with a wide range of unimodal and polymodal association areas.
Wendy A, Suzuki, Yuji, Naya
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Anatomically, the perirhinal cortex sits at the boundary between the medial temporal lobe and the ventral visual pathway. It has prominent interconnections not only with both these systems, but also with a wide range of unimodal and polymodal association areas.
Wendy A, Suzuki, Yuji, Naya
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Current Opinion in Cell Biology, 2002
Cytoplasmic dynein is a minus end directed microtubule motor protein with numerous functions during interphase and mitosis. Recent evidence has identified several roles mediated by a fraction of cytoplasmic dynein associated with the cell cortex. So far, these include nuclear migration, mitotic spindle orientation, and cytoskeletal reorientation during
Denis L, Dujardin, Richard B, Vallee
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Cytoplasmic dynein is a minus end directed microtubule motor protein with numerous functions during interphase and mitosis. Recent evidence has identified several roles mediated by a fraction of cytoplasmic dynein associated with the cell cortex. So far, these include nuclear migration, mitotic spindle orientation, and cytoskeletal reorientation during
Denis L, Dujardin, Richard B, Vallee
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The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1935
Note. —This article and the articles in the previous issues of The Journal are part of a series published under the auspices of the Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry. Other articles zvill appear in succeeding issues. When completed, the series will be published in book form.—Ed.
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Note. —This article and the articles in the previous issues of The Journal are part of a series published under the auspices of the Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry. Other articles zvill appear in succeeding issues. When completed, the series will be published in book form.—Ed.
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The Cerebral Cortex: Visual Cortex
Archives of Ophthalmology, 1986Brain structure involved in visual processing is examined in this new volume of The Cerebral Cortex . Ophthalmologists, particularly neuroophthalmologists, and visual scientists concerned with visual processing will benefit from this source book of detailed mammalian visual anatomy.
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Visual cortex efference to nonprimary cortex in the cat
Brain Research, 1971Abstract Evoked potentials and corresponding extracellular single cell activity were recorded in anterior middle suprasylvian gyrus upon stimulation of ipsilateral visual cortex with single pulses in chloralosed cats. Both a short and a long latency efference from visual cortex (VC) to anterior middle suprasylvian gyrus (AMSS) were observed.
J M, Orem, J M, Rhodes
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