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  2. Nerve conduction velocity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nerve_conduction_velocity

    Saltatory conduction. In neuroscience, nerve conduction velocity (CV) is the speed at which an electrochemical impulse propagates down a neural pathway.Conduction velocities are affected by a wide array of factors, which include age, sex, and various medical conditions.

  3. Cable theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cable_theory

    Further mathematical theories of nerve fiber conduction based on cable theory were developed by Cole and Hodgkin (1920s–1930s), Offner et al. (1940), and Rushton (1951). Experimental evidence for the importance of cable theory in modelling the behavior of axons began surfacing in the 1930s from work done by Cole, Curtis, Hodgkin, Sir Bernard ...

  4. Clinical neurophysiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinical_neurophysiology

    Physiologists perform the majority of EEGs, evoked potentials and a portion of the nerve conduction studies. They are then clinically reported either by the physiology staff or the medical staff. Their professional organisations are the British Society for Clinical Neurophysiology and the Association of Neurophysiological Scientists

  5. Neuromechanics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuromechanics

    The use of EMG to identify nervous systems disorders is known as a nerve conduction study (NCS). Nerve conduction studies can only diagnose diseases on the muscular and nerve level. They cannot detect disease in the spinal cord or the brain. In most disorders of the muscle, nerve, or neuromuscular junction, the latency time is increased. [12 ...

  6. Category:Neurophysiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Neurophysiology

    Nerve conduction study; Nerve conduction velocity; Neural control of limb stiffness; Neural facilitation; Neural oscillation; Neural substrate of locomotor central pattern generators in mammals; Neural top–down control of physiology; Neuroethology; Neuromodulation; Neuromodulation (medicine) Neuromuscular junction; Neuromuscular medicine ...

  7. All-or-none law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All-or-none_law

    In physiology, the all-or-none law (sometimes the all-or-none principle or all-or-nothing law) is the principle that if a single nerve fibre is stimulated, it will always give a maximal response and produce an electrical impulse of a single amplitude. If the intensity or duration of the stimulus is increased, the height of the impulse will ...

  8. Nervous system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nervous_system

    In the peripheral nervous system, the most common problem is the failure of nerve conduction, which can be due to different causes including diabetic neuropathy and demyelinating disorders such as multiple sclerosis and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Neuroscience is the field of science that focuses on the study of the nervous system.

  9. Action potential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_potential

    The most intensively studied type of voltage-dependent ion channels comprises the sodium channels involved in fast nerve conduction. These are sometimes known as Hodgkin-Huxley sodium channels because they were first characterized by Alan Hodgkin and Andrew Huxley in their Nobel Prize-winning studies of the biophysics of the action potential ...