Results 301 to 310 of about 268,541 (353)
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The neurobiology of aging

Epilepsy Research, 2006
Basic principles of the neurobiology of aging were reviewed within selected topic areas chosen for their potential relevance to epileptogenesis in the aging brain. The availability of National Institute on Aging-supported aged mouse and rat strains and other biological resources for studies of aging and age-associated diseases was presented, and ...
K M, Kelly   +5 more
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NEUROBIOLOGY OF ECHINODERMATA

Biological Reviews, 1972
SummaryDuring the past ten years much information has been added to our knowledge of nerve and muscle systems of echinoderms.1. Electron‐microscopy has shown that all the main nerve trunks consist of large numbers of small, parallel‐running unmyelinated axons which are packed tightly together. Glial cells are generally absent.
V W, Pentreath, J L, Cobb
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Neurobiology

Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 2001
A, Lumsden   +18 more
openaire   +4 more sources

The Neurobiology of Sleep

Continuum, 2013
The basic circuitries that regulate wake-sleep cycles are described, along with how these are affected by different disease states and how those alterations lead to the clinical manifestations of those disorders.The discovery of both sleep-promoting neurons in the ventrolateral preoptic nucleus and wake-promoting neurons, such as the lateral ...
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IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY AND NEUROBIOLOGY

Quarterly Journal of Experimental Physiology, 1983
Immunocytochemistry enables the localization of transmitter‐related antigens in tissue sections at either the light microscopic or the electron microscopic level. In the case of neuropeptides and certain transmitters (e.g. serotonin) it has been possible to produce antibodies directed against the putative transmitter itself.
A C, Cuello   +2 more
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Neurobiology of schizophrenia

Annals of Neurology, 2000
Schizophrenia is a common chronic and disabling brain disease of unknown etiology, pathogenesis, and mechanism. Whether schizophrenia represents a single disorder of markedly variable expression or a family of clinically related disorders is unclear. Genetic factors, most likely multiple genes of modest effect, play a major role in its etiology, but an
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Neurobiology

Science, 1983
L F, Reichardt, P, Early
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