Search results for "Sensory System"

showing 10 items of 1266 documents

Neuropeptides in Primary Afferent Neurons

1990

Traditionally, the primary sensory neurons, having their perikarya in the spinal or cranial sensory ganglia with processes directed towards the periphery and the central nervous system, have been regarded to function as receptive and afferent systems which reflexly activate central effector systems.1 This, however, does not apply to the small diameter primary afferents as suggested by the observation made about a century ago that antidromic stimulation of transected dorsal roots or sensory nerves caused vasodilatation and inflammatory signs in the skin.2,3 The novel concept which has been confirmed by many investigators ascribes to small diameter (particularly unmyelinated C) primary sensor…

Trigeminal ganglionmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemDorsal root ganglionCentral nervous systemmedicineNeuropeptideSensory systemStimulationBiologyNeuroscienceSensory neuronAntidromic
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Irritative and sensory disturbances in oral implantology. Literature review.

2010

The aim of this study was to review irritative and sensory disturbances following placement of dental implants. A literature search was made of PubMed for articles published between 2000 and 2010. Studies that reported sensory disturbances directly caused by the placement of dental implants were included. Sensory deficits or trigeminal neuropathy are caused by damage to the third branch of the trigeminal nerve du-ring surgery. This manifests in the immediate postoperative period as a sensory deficit not usually associated with pain and generally transient. The literature reviewed reported irritative and sensory disturbances caused during surgery, after surgery, and as a result of complicati…

Trigeminal nerveDental Implantsmedicine.medical_specialtyPain Postoperativebusiness.industryOral surgeryPostoperative painTrigeminal neuropathySensory system:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Neurogenic painSurgeryImplant placementOtorhinolaryngologyAnesthesiaUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASSensation DisordersmedicineHumansSurgeryTrigeminal Nerve Injuriesmedicine.symptomBone painbusinessGeneral DentistryMedicina oral, patologia oral y cirugia bucal
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Functional Anatomy of the Spinal Trigeminal Nucleus

1993

The trigeminal nerve (nV) conveys general somatic afferent exteroceptive input from the skin of the face and the frontal parts of the head, the mucous membranes of the oral cavity, tongue and nose, the tooth pulp, eye and meninges via the trigeminal (Gasserian) ganglion to the nuclei of termination [28]. Somatosensory input reaches the principal sensory nucleus of the nV and the spinal trigeminal nucleus of the nV (STN). Proprioceptive input from masticatory muscles innervated by trigeminal motor efferents is transferred to the nV mesencephalic nucleus.

Trigeminal nerveProprioceptionbusiness.industrySuperior colliculusSpinal trigeminal nucleusAnatomyInferior alveolar nerveSomatosensory systemmedicine.diseaseGanglionmedicine.anatomical_structureTrigeminal neuralgiamedicinebusiness
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Direct activation of zebrafish neurons by ultrasonic stimulation revealed by whole CNS calcium imaging

2020

Abstract Objective. Ultrasounds (US) use in neural engineering is so far mainly limited to ablation through high intensity focused ultrasound, but interesting preliminary results show that low intensity low frequency ultrasound could be used instead to modulate neural activity. However, the extent of this modulatory ability of US is still unclear, as in in vivo studies it is hard to disentangle the contribution to neural responses of direct activation of the neuron by US stimulation and indirect activation due either to sensory response to mechanical stimulation associated to US, or to propagation of activity from neighboring areas. Here, we aim to show how to separate the three effects and…

Ultrasonic Therapy0206 medical engineeringBiomedical EngineeringCalcium imagingStimulationSensory systembrain-stimulation02 engineering and technologysystem03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceUltrasounds0302 clinical medicineCalcium imagingmedicineAnimalsZebrafishZebrafishNeuronscalcium imaging ultrasonic stimulation ultrasound zebrafishSensory stimulation therapybiologyCalcium imaging; Neuromodulation; Ultrasounds; ZebrafishNeuromodulationneuromodulation; zebrafish; ultrasounds; calcium imagingtranscranial focused ultrasoundNeural engineeringbiology.organism_classification020601 biomedical engineeringNeuromodulation (medicine)cellular resolutionmedicine.anatomical_structureLarvaCalciumNeuronNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryneurostimulation
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Active Methods Concerning Skills Formation of the Sensory and Textural Analysis of Cheese

2017

The fundamental objective of this research is establishing favorable active methods applied to students in laboratory work, taking into account the peculiarities of students and the theme specificity so that they form certain practical skills to sensory and textural analysis of cheese. For the research purposes, students were grouped from one of the specializations in two heterogeneous groups. Taking into account their potential for learning, a different method of teaching and learning was applied separately for both groups of students. These methods are associated with other active methods for the skills training of sensory analysis of cheese and to stimulate the student’s creativity. Fin…

Urban StudiesTeaching methodActive learningMathematics educationCollege instructionSensory systemSkill developmentPsychologyEducationCognitive styleEducation and Urban Society
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Infants and Children Making Sense of Scents

2017

This chapter summarizes research on the development of human olfactory skills to rely on different cues conveyed by odorants, such as odor quality, intensity, position in space, novelty/familiarity, and hedonic value. The sensory, neural, and psychological dimensions at the root of these early aptitudes remain poorly explored in humans, but one can safely affirm that any weak odor to which the infant has previously been nonadversely exposed will have a higher reinforcing value than any novel odor. Developmental differences in odor discrimination and appreciation are certainly causally multiple and may depend on general or olfaction-specific cognitive factors which can be traced back to pren…

Value (ethics)musculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyOdor discriminationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesNoveltyCognitionSensory systemOdor identification050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineOdor0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesQuality (business)Psychologypsychological phenomena and processes030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedia_commonCognitive psychology
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Visual spike-based convolution processing with a Cellular Automata architecture

2010

this paper presents a first approach for implementations which fuse the Address-Event-Representation (AER) processing with the Cellular Automata using FPGA and AER-tools. This new strategy applies spike-based convolution filters inspired by Cellular Automata for AER vision processing. Spike-based systems are neuro-inspired circuits implementations traditionally used for sensory systems or sensor signal processing. AER is a neuromorphic communication protocol for transferring asynchronous events between VLSI spike-based chips. These neuro-inspired implementations allow developing complex, multilayer, multichip neuromorphic systems and have been used to design sensor chips, such as retinas an…

Very-large-scale integrationSignal processingTheoretical computer scienceArtificial neural networkComputer sciencebusiness.industrySensory systemCellular automatonConvolutionNeuromorphic engineeringAsynchronous communicationSpike (software development)businessComputer hardwareThe 2010 International Joint Conference on Neural Networks (IJCNN)
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Meta-analytical definition and functional connectivity of the human vestibular cortex.

2012

Contrary to most other sensory systems, no consensus has been reached within the scientific community about the exact locations and functions of human cortical areas processing vestibular information. Metaanalytical modelling using activation likelihood estimation (ALE) for the integration of neuroimaging results has already been successfully applied to several distinct tasks, thereby revealing the cortical localization of cognitive functions. We used the same algorithm and technique with all available and suitable PET and fMRI studies employing a vestibular stimulus. Most consistently across 28 experiments vestibular stimuli evoked activity in the right hemispheric parietal opercular area …

Vestibular systemBrain MappingCognitive NeuroscienceSensory systemSomatosensory CortexSomatosensory systemVestibular cortexBrain mappingSaccadic maskingPremotor cortexmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyGyrusotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineAnimalsHumanssense organsVestibule LabyrinthPsychologyNeuroscienceNeuroImage
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Sensorimotor aspects of high-speed artificial gravity: I. Sensory conflict in vestibular adaptation

2003

Short-radius centrifugation offers a promising and affordable countermeasure to the adverse effects of prolonged weightlessness. However, head movements made in a fast rotating environment elicit Coriolis effects, which seriously compromise sensory and motor processes. We found that participants can adapt to these Coriolis effects when exposed intermittently to high rotation rates and, at the same time, can maintain their perceptual-motor coordination in stationary environments. In this paper, we explore the role of inter-sensory conflict in this adaptation process. Different measures (vertical nystagmus, illusory body tilt, motion sickness) react differently to visual-vestibular conflict a…

Vestibular systemGeneral Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectIllusionEye movementSensory systemAdaptation (eye)medicine.diseaseSensory SystemsMotion sicknessOtorhinolaryngologyArtificial gravitymedicineVertical nystagmusNeurology (clinical)PsychologySimulationmedia_commonCognitive psychologyJournal of Vestibular Research
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Development and evolution of inner ear sensory epithelia and their innervation

2002

The development and evolution of the inner ear sensory patches and their innervation is reviewed. Recent molecular developmental data suggest that development of these sensory patches is a developmental recapitulation of the evolutionary history. These data suggest that the ear generates multiple, functionally diverse sensory epithelia by dividing a single sensory primordium. Those epithelia will establish distinct identities through the overlapping expression of genes of which only a few are currently known. One of these distinctions is the unique pattern of hair cell polarity. A hypothesis is presented on how the hair cell polarity may relate to the progressive segregation of the six sens…

Vestibular systemNeuroDSensory neuron migrationGeneral NeuroscienceSensory systemBiologyCellular and Molecular Neurosciencemedicine.anatomical_structuremedicinebiology.proteinInner earHair cellNeuroscienceCochleaNeurotrophinJournal of Neurobiology
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