enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Neural circuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neural_circuit

    In a parallel after-discharge circuit, a neuron inputs to several chains of neurons. Each chain is made up of a different number of neurons but their signals converge onto one output neuron. Each synapse in the circuit acts to delay the signal by about 0.5 msec, so that the more synapses there are, the longer is the delay to the output neuron.

  3. Neuron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuron

    A neuron, neurone, [1] or nerve cell is an excitable cell that fires electric signals called action potentials across a neural network in the nervous system. They are located in the brain and spinal cord and help to receive and conduct impulses.

  4. Neurotransmitter receptor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurotransmitter_receptor

    Neurotransmitter (NT) receptors are located on the surface of neuronal and glial cells.At a synapse, one neuron sends messages to the other neuron via neurotransmitters.. Therefore, the postsynaptic neuron, the one receiving the message, clusters NT receptors at this specific place in its memb

  5. Cognitive neuroscience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_neuroscience

    Some examples of learning disabilities in the brain include places in Wernicke's area, the left side of the temporal lobe, and Broca's area close to the frontal lobe. [3] Also, cognitive abilities based on brain development are studied and examined under the subfield of developmental cognitive neuroscience. This shows brain development over ...

  6. Neural adaptation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neural_adaptation

    Vastly different timescales of adaptation have also been shown to be implemented on the single neuron level, where they can give rise to time-scale free adaptation. [5] At the very extreme of evolutionary timescales, neurons in different parts of retina have been found deploy differing amounts of lateral inhibition to compensate for the high ...

  7. Autoreceptor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoreceptor

    An atypical example is given by the β-adrenergic autoreceptor in the sympathetic peripheral nervous system, which acts to increase transmitter release. [1] The D2 autoreceptor has been shown recently to interact with the trace amine-assorted receptor 1 (TAAR1), a G-Coupled Protein Receptor GPCR, to regulate monoaminergic systems in the brain. [3]

  8. Neurotransmission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurotransmission

    Neurotransmission (Latin: transmissio "passage, crossing" from transmittere "send, let through") is the process by which signaling molecules called neurotransmitters are released by the axon terminal of a neuron (the presynaptic neuron), and bind to and react with the receptors on the dendrites of another neuron (the postsynaptic neuron) a ...

  9. Coincidence detection in neurobiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coincidence_detection_in...

    For example (Fig. 1), in a basic neural circuit with two input neurons—A and B—that have excitatory synaptic terminals converging on a single output neuron (C), if each input neuron's EPSP is sub-threshold for an action potential at C, then C cannot fire unless the two inputs from A and B are temporally close.