The
stereotaxic method was developed to support the study of neuroanatomy. In order to trace neuronal pathways a brain area was lesioned, the animal scarified and the brain extracted, the brain was then sliced into very thin sections and the cours
Chapter 5 Experimental Ablation Phineas Gage (1823-1860) -railroad worker -explosives -tamping iron through the head 1848 -personality changes -"not the same Gage" experimental ablation: the removal or destruction of a portion of the brain of a labor
Neuroscience Methods
VII. Histology I: An Introduction5
Materials Fixed rat brain Cryostat, microtome, or other means of sectioning Subbed microscope slides Materials for cresyl violet staining protocol (see methods section) - absolute ethyl alcohol
1068 Brain Image Analysis and Atlas Construction
Figure 17.1: Elements of a disease-specic atlas. This schematic shows the types of maps and models contained in a disease-specic brain atlas. This atlas [3235] represents an Alzheimers disease populat
Psychology 111L Laboratory in Biopsychology Instruction for the lab involving: Stereotaxic Surgeries Materials needed Scale for weighing the rats one for the whole lab Heat sterilizer "Steri" - one for the whole lab Heating pads At least two Anes
Chapter 4 Membrane potential- the difference in electrical charge between the inside and the outside of a cell. Microelectrodes- extremely fine recording electrodes, which are used for intracellular recording. Resting potential- the steady membrane p
Model-driven deformable atlases 1083
Figure 17.5: Partitioning the ventricles into 3D surface elements. A model of the lateral ventricles is shown, in the context of a coronal anatomic image and a smoothed cortical surface mesh. The ventricles are p
A DEFORMABLE BRODMANN AREA ATLAS Paul E. Rasser1,2,3, Patrick J. Johnston2,1, Philip B. Ward1,3 and Paul M. Thompson4,1
1
Neuroscience Institute of Schizophrenia and Allied Disorders, Sydney, Australia; 2Centre for Mental Health Studies, Newcastle,
Carlson (7e) PowerPoint Lecture Outline Chapter 13: Ingestive Behavior: Eating
This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: any public performance or display, including transmission
Biopsychology (Psy 308) Sample Exam 2
Dr. Alcantara
1. Which of the following techniques creates a brain lesion by stimulating neurons to death? A. Kainic acid. B. Radio-frequency current. C. 6-hydroxydopamine. D. Sham lesion. 2. Which of the foll
Biopsychogical Method 1/30/08 Lecture 5 Chapter 5
Steps in NT Release Example of metabotropic receptor: o Autoreceptors: metabotropic receptors on presynaptic button that bind own NT and regulate NT levels in synapse. o NT are finally deactivated in
ART H 202 Professor Christine Gttler Winter Quarter 2007 LECTURE NOTES HANDOUT LATE GOTHIC TO HIGH RENAISSANCE Contents: I. LATE GOTHIC SCULPTURE II. BOOK ILLUMINATION (PARIS) III. RENAISSANCE IDEALS IV. ITALIAN CITY STATES V. POLITICAL GROUPS VI. N
STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURE Decerebration Procedure for Rats
July 2, 2008
Introduction and Purpose
Decerebration is the elimination or loss of cerebral function by removing the brain at the corpora quadrigemina level or somewhere below it thereby c
I. What is Image Registration?
Image Registration is the SPATIAL ALIGNMENT of one image to match another. WITHIN SUBJECT: One image may be lined up with another image from the same subject, at a subsequent time-point (e.g. alignment of fMRI time-seri
IV/01_IV/04_4002_JON_S_04/05 05.10.2005 07:46 Uhr Seite 1
J Neurol (2005) 252 [Suppl 4]: IV/1IV/4 DOI 10.1007/s00415-005-4002-y
Atsushi Nambu
A new approach to understand the pathophysiology of Parkinsons disease
Abstract Here I introduce a dyna