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  2. Purkinje fibers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purkinje_fibers

    The Purkinje fibers are further specialized to rapidly conduct impulses (having numerous fast voltage-gated sodium channels and mitochondria, and fewer myofibrils, than the surrounding muscle tissue). Purkinje fibers take up stain differently from the surrounding muscle cells because of having relatively fewer myofibrils than other cardiac cells.

  3. Purkinje cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purkinje_cell

    P-type calcium channels were named after Purkinje cells, where they were initially encountered (Llinas et al. 1989), which are crucial in cerebellar function. Activation of the Purkinje cell by climbing fibers can shift its activity from a quiet state to a spontaneously active state and vice versa, serving as a kind of toggle switch. [25]

  4. Climbing fiber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climbing_fiber

    Early in development, Purkinje cells are innervated by multiple climbing fibers, but as the cerebellum matures, these inputs gradually become eliminated resulting in a single climbing fiber input per Purkinje cell. These fibers provide very powerful, excitatory input to the cerebellum which results in the generation of complex spike excitatory ...

  5. Cerebellar granule cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerebellar_granule_cell

    Cerebellar granule cells form the thick granular layer of the cerebellar cortex and are among the smallest neurons in the brain. (The term granule cell is used for several unrelated types of small neurons in various parts of the brain.) Cerebellar granule cells are also the most numerous neurons in the brain: in humans, estimates of their total ...

  6. Flocculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flocculus

    Vestibular inputs are also carried through climbing fibers that project into the flocculus, stimulating Purkinje cells. Leading research would suggest that climbing fibers play a specific role in motor learning. [4] The climbing fibers then send the image or projection to the part of the brain that receives electrical signals and generates ...

  7. Olivocerebellar tract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olivocerebellar_tract

    The olivocerebellar tract, also known as olivocerebellar fibers, are neural fibers which originate at the olivary nucleus and pass out through the hilum and decussate with those from the opposite olive in the raphe nucleus, then as internal arcuate fibers they pass partly through and partly around the opposite olive and enter the inferior peduncle to be distributed to the cerebellar hemisphere ...

  8. Granule cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Granule_cell

    The parallel fibers are sent up through the Purkinje layer into the molecular layer where they branch out and spread through Purkinje cell dendritic arbors. These parallel fibers form thousands of excitatory Granule-cell-Purkinje-cell synapses onto the dendrites of Purkinje cells. This connection is excitatory as glutamate is released.

  9. Purkinje - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purkinje

    Purkinje fibers, located in the heart; The visual Purkinje effect of how human beings do not see color in dim light; Purkinje images, reflections of objects from the surface of the cornea, and from the anterior and posterior surfaces of the lens; Purkinje Incorporated, a company that develops healthcare information technology software and services