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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
81

Neuroanatomical segregation of texture-sensitivity in feline-striate cortex

Edelstyn, Nicola M. J. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
82

The plasma corticosteroids: their determination and normal variations

Lewis, Barry 08 April 2020 (has links)
The current interest in the secretions of the adrenal cortex is shared by physiologist, physician and pharmacologists alike. such attention is not surprising in the case of a gland which is immediately essential to life, which can produce syndromes as varied as precocious puberty, virilisation; Addison's disease; Cushing's syndrome, and the newly described hyperaldosteronism syndrome of Conn (1955), a gland which has been implicated in the parthenogenesis of diabetes (Hoet and Lukens, 195; Jackson, 1955), hypertension (Sepeika, 1948, 1955), pre-eclampsia, and atherosclerosis, and which profoundly effects so many of the metabolic processes of the body. The need for accurate measurement of adrenocortical function has therefore been accentuated in recent years. The purpose of this study was to find out as direct a method as possible for determining the rate of secretion of this gland and to define with this method the norms and normal variations.
83

The Generation of Complex Reaches

Zimnik, Andrew James January 2021 (has links)
The study of motor cortex (dorsal premotor cortex and primary motor cortex) has been greatly aided by the development of a conceptual paradigm that has emerged over the past decade. In contrast to established frameworks, which view neural activity within motor cortex as a representation of particular movement parameters, the ‘dynamical systems paradigm’ posits that motor cortex is best understood via the low-dimensional neural processes that allow the generation of motor commands. This framework largely evolved from, and has been most successfully applied to, simple reaching tasks, where the sequential stages of movement generation are largely separated in time – motor cortex absorbs an input that specifies the identity of the upcoming reach, a second input initiates the movement, and strong, autonomous dynamics generate time-varying motor commands. However, while the dynamical systems paradigm has provided a useful scaffolding for interrogating motor cortex, our understanding of the mechanisms that generate movement is still evolving, and many questions remain unanswered. Prior work has established that the neural processes within motor cortex that generate descending commands are initiated by a large, condition-invariant input. But are movements made under different behavioral contexts initiated via the same mechanisms? Lesion studies suggest that the generation of so-called ‘self-initiated movements’ is uniquely dependent on the supplementary motor area (SMA), a premotor region immediately upstream of motor cortex. In contrast, SMA is thought to be less critical for generating externally-cued movements. To characterize the degree to which SMA is able to impact movement initiation across behavioral contexts, we trained two monkeys to make reaches that were either internally or externally cued. On a subset of trials, we disrupted activity within SMA via microstimulation and asked how this perturbation impacted the monkeys’ behavior. Surprisingly, we found that the effect of stimulation was largely preserved across contexts; the behavioral effects of stimulation could be explained by a simple model in which a context-invariant, time-varying kernel multiplicatively altered the odds of movement initiation. These results suggest that SMA is able to impact movement initiation across behavioral contexts. The question of how sequences of discrete actions are generated has been investigated for over one hundred years. It is commonly thought that once a given sequence (particularly a rapid sequence) becomes well-learned, individual actions that were once produced separately become ‘merged’, such that multiple actions are generated as a single, holistic unit. But what does it mean to generate multiple actions as a single unit? The dynamical systems paradigm offers the ability to translate this notion into specific predictions about the timing and structure of neural activity within motor cortex during sequence production. Importantly, it also offers predictions for the alternative hypothesis – that motor cortex generates the component actions of a sequence independently. To determine whether the production of rapid sequences requires motor cortex to merge multiple actions into a single ‘movement’, we trained monkeys to make sequences of two reaches. Surprisingly, we found that the same set of neural events are used to produce rapid sequences and isolated reaches. Rather than merging individual actions into a single unit, motor cortex generated rapid sequences by overlapping the neural activity related to reach preparation and execution. These results demonstrate that the performance of extremely fast, well-learned movement sequences does not require motor cortex to implement a sequence-specific strategy; the same neural motif that produces a simple reach can also generate movement sequences.
84

The retrosplenial cortex: afferent projections and cholinergic properties

Gage, Sandra Louise January 1991 (has links)
This document only includes an excerpt of the corresponding thesis or dissertation. To request a digital scan of the full text, please contact the Ruth Lilly Medical Library's Interlibrary Loan Department (rlmlill@iu.edu).
85

Regulation and functional profile of cyclic AMP response element-binding protein in monkey primary visual cortex during postnatal development and activity-dependent plasticity

Lalonde, Jasmin. January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
86

The role of the mid-ventrolateral prefrontal cortex in memory retrieval /

Kostopoulos, Penelope. January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
87

Effects of sequential removals of striate and extrastriate neocortex upon visual habits learned interoperatively /

Horel, James Alan January 1962 (has links)
No description available.
88

Changes in emotionality following simultaneous lesions of the septal region and limbic cortex /

Yutzey, David Alan January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
89

Development of Human Visual Cortex: A Neurobiological Approach

Siu, Caitlin R January 2017 (has links)
Human visual perception changes across the lifespan that relies on changes in synaptic plasticity in the visual cortex. Anatomical studies of the visual cortex, however, suggest human V1 develops early and remains relatively constant from childhood and on. Animal models have pin-pointed specific neurobiological mechanisms that are necessary for the development of visual plasticity and receptive field properties in the visual cortex. Very little is known, however, about how those synaptic mechanisms develop in the human visual cortex to support plasticity and perception across the lifespan. This thesis addresses this gap by providing new studies on the development of those neurobiological mechanisms in postmortem human visual cortex cases that range in age from 20 days to 79 years. The main findings from this thesis support prolonged development of plasticity mechanisms in human V1 that could be characterized in 5 stages of change across the lifespan: booting up synaptic function in infancy, high neural variability in young childhood, peaks of development in older childhood, prolonged plasticity in adulthood, and return to juvenile-like state in aging. In addition, I show a contrasting development of synaptic plasticity mechanisms in V1 and extrastriate areas that suggest higher order visual perception is processed differently. I also highlight a modernized technique for isolating synaptoneurosomes in human brain that helps quantify synaptic proteins using postmortem human tissue. Together these findings aid in the translation of neurobiological mechanisms in animal models for identifying new therapeutic targets for recovery in human visual disorders and vision loss. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / The ability to see the world constantly changes from birth to old age, and depends on the health and function of our brain. The visual cortex is the part of the brain that processes vision, and it is made up of millions of cells that connect to each other through billions of synapses. Fine-tuning those connections and networks in the brain leads to better vision. The ability for connections to be fine-tuned by experience is called plasticity, and it is necessary for developing good vision. This thesis addresses the development of plasticity in the human brain by measuring levels of proteins that are responsible for controlling plasticity and vision. My findings suggest that humans have a longer period of plasticity for developing good vision than previously thought. These findings will help identify new targets to rescue vision loss that occurs in aging or visual disorders across the lifespan.
90

Ablation of the Somatosensory Cortex for Taste: Effects on Taste Preference and Taste Discrimination Behavior

Potter, Wendy K. 05 1900 (has links)
Three groups of rats were tested both before and after the bilateral ablation of the taste sensory cortex. The first group, exposed to quinine hydrochloride (QHCL) in a two-bottle preference situation, showed a large deficit postoperatively, but these were considerably reduced by the fourth postoperative week. A second group, tested for sodium chloride (NaCl) discrimination in a modified signal detection situation, also showed significant postoperative impairment. A third group, QHCL discrimination, was discarded for failure to learn the detection task. The results which were very unclear compared with NaCl discrimination and QHCL preference. It is concluded that preference tests are unsatisfactory measures of taste sensitivity unless the stimuli possess extreme aversive or preferred qualities. / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA)

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