Regulatory Functions of the CNS Subsystems :Proceedings of the 28th International Congress of Physiological Sciences, Budapest, 1980

Publication subTitle :Proceedings of the 28th International Congress of Physiological Sciences, Budapest, 1980

Author: Szentágothai   J.;Hámori   J.;Palkovits   M.  

Publisher: Elsevier Science‎

Publication year: 2013

E-ISBN: 9781483190235

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780080273716

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780080273716

Subject: R Medicine and Health;R-6 Reference Books of Medicine and Health;R1 Preventive Medicine , Health;R4 Clinical Medicine;R68 (content in Kinesiology of Department of Orthopedics diseases, orthopedics)

Language: ENG

Access to resources Favorite

Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.

Description

Advances in Physiological Sciences, Volume 2: Regulatory Functions of the CNS Subsystems covers the proceedings of the 28th International Congress of Physiological Sciences, held in Budapest in 1980.
This volume is divided into five parts. Before this book presents the five major themes, it first discusses the synaptic plasticity in the red nucleus and the functional units of cerebellum. Then, this text concentrates on explaining the central nervous system’s ontogenic development and differentiation. The modular organization principles in the system, as well as the perspectives in cerebellar physiology and striatal mechanisms, are then looked into. This volume concludes by explaining neuronal mechanisms of subcortical sensory processing.
This book will be valuable to those studying the central nervous system, specifically the functions of its subsystems.

Chapter

CHAPTER 1. SYNAPTrC PLASTICITY IN THE RED NUCLEUS

LESION-INDUCED SPROUTING AND FORMATION OF FUNCTIONAL SYNAPSES IN ADULT FELINE RED NUCLEUS

LESION-INDUCED SPROUTING IN KITTEN RED NUCLEUS

SPROUTING AND FORMATION OF FUNCTIONAL SYNAPSES AFTER CROSSINNERVATION OF FLEXOR AND EXTENSOR NERVES

BEHAVIORAL CORRELATES OF NEURONAL PLASTICITY IN RED NUCLEUS

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 2. SAGITTAL ZONES AND MICROZONES — THE FUNCTIONAL UNITS OF CEREBELLUM

References

PART 1: ONTOGENIC DEVELOPMENT AND DIFFERENTIATION OF THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM

CHAPTER 3. EFFECTS OF MONOCULAR STROBOSCOPIC EXPERIENCE ON THE KITTEN'S VISUAL CORTEX

Effects on ocular dominance

Differential effects on different layers

General deprivation effects

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 4. INTERACTIONS BETWEEN GOLDFISH RETINA AND TECTUM MODULATE TUBULIN SYNTHESIS DURING OPTIC NERVE REGENERATION

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 5. THE TRANSNEURONAL INDUCTION OF SPROUTING AND SYNAPSE FORMATION

Sprouting and synapse formation in intact innervated muscles following contralateral axotomy.

The transneuronal induction of sprouting and synapse formation.

The role of injured motor neurons in the transneuronal induction of sprouting and synapse formation

Sprouting and synapse formation produced by colchicine

Summary and conclusions

REFERENCES

PART 2: MODULAR ORGANIZATION PRINCIPLES IN THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM

CHAPTER 6. MODULAR ORGANIZATION PRINCIPLES IN THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM — OPENING REMARKS

The module

Modular patterns in space cuid time

CHAPTER 7. AREAL AND LAMINAR DISTRIBUTION OF VISUAL ASSOCIATION FIBERS AND THEIR TERMINATION IN MULTIPLE PATCHES OR CONTINUOUS FIELDS

AREAL AND LAMINAR DISTRIBUTION OF AXONS AND EFFERENT CELLS

TERMINATION OF VISUAL ASSOCIATIONS IN SEGREGATED COLUMNS AND CONTINUOUS FIELDS

CHAPTER 8. CROSS-CORRELATION STUDY OF THE CATS VISUAL CORTEX

1. THREE DIMENSIONAL ORGANIZATION IN VISUAL CORTEX

2. TECHNIQUE OF CROSS-CORRELATION ANALYSIS

3. IDENTIFICATION OF INTERNEURONAL COÍÍNECTIVITIES

4. RESPONSE TYPE ATÍD INTERNEURONAL CONNECTIVITY

5. CELLULAR LOCATION AND INTERNEURONAL CONNECTIVITIES

6. RELEVANCE TO SERIAL- AND PARALLEL-PROCESSING MODELS OF VISUAL INF0RI4ATI0N

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 9. MODULAR ORGANIZATION OF RAT NEOCORTEX: VASCULARIZATION. GROWTH AND CONNECTIVITY

INTRODUCTION

MATERIAL AND METHODS

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

CHAPTER 10. CONCLUDING REMARKS: ORGANIZATION IN THE CNS

REFERENCES

PART 3: PERSPECTIVES OF CEREBELLAR PHYSIOLOGY

CHAPTER 11. PERSPECTIVES IN CEREBELLAR PHYSIOLOGY INTRODUCTORY REMARKS

A decade ago

Recent development

1. Basic neuronal processes

2. Neuronal circuitry

3. Testing of functional involvements of the cerebellum

CHAPTER 12. EVIDENCE FOR MODIFIABILITY OF PARALLEL FIBERPURKINJE CELL SYNAPSES

Remote influences of olivary lesions on Purkinje cell inhibition

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 13. PLASTIC REORGANIZATION OF CEREBELLAR CIRCUITRY

1. CEREBELLO-CEREBRAL RESPONSE IN CAT

2. COLLATERAL SPROUTING OF CEREBELLOTHALAMIC NEURONS IN KITTENS FOLLOWING NEONATAL HEMICEREBELLECTOMY

3. REORGANIZATION OF CEREBELLO-CEREBRAL RESPONSE IN CAT FOLLOWING CEREBRAL CORTICAL ABLATION

4. CONCLUDING REf^RKS

5. REFERENCES

CHAPTER 14. DEVELOPMENT OF SYNAPTIC CIRCUITRY IN THE CEREBELLAR CORTEX: ROLE OF MOSSY AND CLIMBING AFFERENTS

1. Climbing fibers

2. Mossy fibres

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 15. CLIMBING FIBRE ELICITED PROLONGED DEPOLARIZATIONS IN PURKINJE CELL DENDRITES

References

CHAPTER 16. ABOUT THE FUNCTION OF THE TONIC ACTIVITY OF CEREBELLAR CLIMBING FIBERS

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 17. THE ACTION OF CLIMBING FIBERS ON PURKINJE CELL RESPONSIVENESS TO MOSSY FIBER INPUTS

CHAPTER 18. THE EFFECT OF HARMALINE AND 3-ACETYLPYRIDINE ON THE OLIVO-CEREBELLO-NUCLEAR SYSTEM IN RATS STUDIED WITH 14C 2-DEOXYGLUCOSE

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 19. CONCLUDING REMARKS: CEREBELLAR SYMPOSIUM

PART 4: STRIATAL MECHANISMS

CHAPTER 20. THE PRESENT STATE OF STRIATAL CIRCUITRY — INTRODUCTORY REMARKS TO THE SYMPOSIUM ON STRIATAL MECHANISMS

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 21. SYNAPTIC ORGANIZATION OF THE STRIATUM AND PALLIDUM IN THE MONKEY

THE STRIATUM

THE PALLIDUM

COMPARISON BETWEEN STRIATAL AND PALLIDAL ORGANIZATION

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 22. PHYSIOLOGICAL AND MORPHOLOGICAL ANALYSES OF DEVELOPING BASAL GANGLIA

METHODS

RESULTS

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 23. NON-DOPAMINERGIC NIGRAL EFFERENTS

ANATOMICAL DATA :

ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL DATA

NEUROCHEMICAL AND PHARMACOLOGICAL DATA

CONCLUDING COMMENTS

CHAPTER 24. NEURONAL RESPONSES IN THE STRIATUM OF THE BEHAVING MONKEY: IMPLICATIONS FOR UNDERSTANDING STRIATAL FUNCTION AND DYSFUNCTION

References

CHAPTER 25. PEPTIDE CONTAINING NEURONES IN STRIATAL CIRCUITS

INTRODUCTION

Studies on the origin of the pallidal enkephalinergic fibres

The long strio-pallidal enkephalinergic pathway

GABAergic and substance Ρ immunoreactive fibres in the strionigral pathway

Peptidergic fibres and capsaicin

Application of monoclonal antibodies to the study of a striatal neuroactive peptide.

CONCLUSIONS

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 26. PHYSIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STRIATAL SYSTEM: NEW LIGHT ON AN OLD CONCEPT

INTRODUCTION

MAIN PROPERTY OF THE STRIATAL SYSTEM

CONSEQUENCES FOR OBSERVABLE BEHAVIOUR: FORiiAL ASPECTS

CONSEQUENCES FOR THE INDIVIDUAL ORGANISM

PHYSIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE: CONCLUSION

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 27. INTRINSIC CAUDATE MORPHOLOGY, PHYSIOLOGY AND CIRCUITRY

INTRODUCTION

METHOD

RESULTS

DISCUSSION

REFERENCES

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

CHAPTER 28. RESPONSES OF NEURONS OF THE BASAL GANGLIA BY STIMULATION OF PERIPHERAL, VESTIBULAR AND VISUAL SYSTEMS

CIRCUITARY ASPECTS OF THE BASAL GANGLIA

POSTURAL ADJUSTMENT BY THE BASAL GANGLIA

Reference

CHAPTER 29. STRUCTURAL-FUNCTIONAL CORRELATES IN THE BASAL GANGLIA CONCLUDING REMARKS TO THE SYMPOSIUM ON STRIATAL MECHANISMS

REFERENCES

PART 5: NEURONAL MECHANISMS OF SUBCORTICAL SENSORY PROCESSING

CHAPTER 30. MORPHOLOGICAL TYPES AND TOPOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF GANGLION CELLS IN THE CAT RETINA

The distribution of the Alpha type of ganglion cells

Retrograde labelling of Beta and Gamma ganglion cells

The mosaic of ON- and OFF-Beta cells

Acknowledgements

References

CHAPTER 31. DEVELOPMENT OF IDEAS ON THE FUNCTIONAL ORGANIZATION OF RETINAL GANGLION CELLS

INTRODUCTION

CAT RETINAL GANGLION CELLS

X - CELLS AND Y- CELLS

SUSTAINED/TRANSIENT BRISK/SLUGGISH CLASSIFICATION

W - CELLS AND CONDUCTION - LATENCY GROUPS

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 32. FUNCTIONAL PROPERTIES AND PRESUMED ROLES OF RETINAL GANGLION CELLS OF THE MONKEY

INITIAL STUDIES

PARALLEL RETINAL OUTPUTS

FUNCTIONAL ROLES

FUTURE STUDIES

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 33. THE LATERAL GENICULATE AS AN INTERFACE BETWEEN THE EYE AND THE BRAIN

INTRODUCTION

CONCLUSIONS

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 34. VISUO-MOTOR PROPERTIES OF NEURONS IN SUPERIOR COLLICULUS AND PULVINAR NUCLEUS OF THE MONKEY*

INTRODUCTION

MATERIALS AND METHODS

RESULTS

DISCUSSION

REFERENCES

CHAPTER 35. FUNCTIONS OF THE CAT'S SUPERIOR COLLICULUS ISOLATED FROM THE LOWER BRAINSTEM AND THE FOREBRAIN

REFERENCES

INDEX

The users who browse this book also browse


No browse record.