Results 151 to 160 of about 1,289,857 (204)
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Emotion recognition following human pulvinar damage

Neuropsychologia, 2007
Pulvinar activation has been observed while viewing fearful expressions, but the necessity of this activation to their recognition has not been previously assessed. We measured the processing of emotional facial expressions in a rare patient with complete unilateral loss of the pulvinar. With brief presentations, patient CJ was incapable of recognizing
Robert, Ward   +3 more
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Amygdala damage impairs emotion recognition from music

Neuropsychologia, 2007
The role of the amygdala in recognition of danger is well established for visual stimuli such as faces. A similar role in another class of emotionally potent stimuli -- music -- has been recently suggested by the study of epileptic patients with unilateral resection of the anteromedian part of the temporal lobe [Gosselin, N., Peretz, I., Noulhiane, M.,
Gosselin, Nathalie   +3 more
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Damage recognition in nucleotide excision DNA repair

Current Opinion in Structural Biology, 2012
Nucleotide excision repair (NER) is a highly versatile DNA repair process. Its ability to repair a large number of different damages with the same subset of recognition factors requires structural tools for damage recognition that are both broad and very accurate.
Jochen, Kuper, Caroline, Kisker
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The recognition of DNA damage

Current Opinion in Genetics & Development, 1996
DNA strand breaks are potentially mutagenic and must, therefore, be recognized and repaired. Recent work has identified DNA polymerase epsilon, Ku, and proteins such as DNA-PKcs, Mec1 and Tel1 as key players in DNA damage recognition pathways. Studies on these and other factors have provided important insights into the mechanisms of DNA repair and how ...
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Recognition and processing of damaged DNA

Journal of Cell Science, 1995
ABSTRACT Base excision-repair, which is required for correction of spontaneous hydrolytic and oxidative damage to DNA as well as lesions inflicted by alkylating agents, is a relatively well understood repair pathway. Mammalian factors involved in this pathway are reviewed, with emphasis on current uncertainties.
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Pattern recognition in damaged neural networks

Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, 2001
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Miljković, Vladimir   +3 more
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Recognition of overlapping patterns and focal hemisphere damage

Neuropsychologia, 1976
Abstract 204 Ss entered this research, subdivided in controls ( N = 44) and hemisphere damaged patients ( N = 160). A meaningful and a meaningless patterns version of the Poppelreuter-Ghent Test were employed and the answers were worked out in the frame of the Signal Detectability Theory.
E, Bisiach   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Recognition of Damaged DNA: Structure and Dynamic Markers

Medicinal Research Reviews, 2010
AbstractDNA damage, a consequence of external factors and inherent metabolic processes, is omnipresent. Nature has devised multiple strategies to safeguard the genetic information and developed intricate repair mechanisms and pathways to reverse an array of different DNA lesions, including mismatches.
Markus W, Germann   +2 more
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Basal forebrain damage and object-recognition in rats

Behavioural Brain Research, 1998
Damage to the basal forebrain (BF) produces permanent learning and memory impairments in humans. Most efforts to model these deficits in rats have focused on spatial memory dysfunction; this study was the first to assess the effects of BF damage in rats on the performance of a battery of object-memory tasks commonly employed to assess brain damage ...
T J, Kornecook, T E, Kippin, J P, Pinel
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DNA Damage Recognition

2005
Mechanisms of Damage Recognition: Theoretical Considerations. UV Damage and Other Bulky DNA-adducts. Non-bulky Base Damage. Mismatch Repair. Replicational Bypass of DNA Lesions. DNA Strand Breaks.
openaire   +1 more source

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