نتایج جستجو برای: sensory deprivation

تعداد نتایج: 119454  

2011
Anubhuti Goel Linda W. Xu Kevin P. Snyder Lihua Song Yamila Goenaga-Vazquez Andrea Megill Kogo Takamiya Richard L. Huganir Hey-Kyoung Lee

Sensory experience, and the lack thereof, can alter the function of excitatory synapses in the primary sensory cortices. Recent evidence suggests that changes in sensory experience can regulate the synaptic level of Ca(2+)-permeable AMPA receptors (CP-AMPARs). However, the molecular mechanisms underlying such a process have not been determined. We found that binocular visual deprivation, which ...

Journal: :Brain research. Developmental brain research 2001
J H McLean A Darby-King W S Bonnell

We hypothesized that brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) may be down-regulated in the olfactory bulb ipsilateral to experimental naris occlusion. Unilateral naris occlusion was performed on rats at postnatal day three (P3). On P10, P30, and P60 olfactory bulbs were weighed and assayed for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), BDNF, and TrkB by Western blotting to determine the response of BDNF and it...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2012
Megumi Kaneko Yuxiang Xie Juan Ji An Michael P Stryker Baoji Xu

Sensory experience in early postnatal life shapes neuronal connections in the brain. Here we report that the local synthesis of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in dendrites plays an important role in this process. We found that dendritic spines of layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons of the visual cortex in mutant mice lacking dendritic Bdnf mRNA and thus local BDNF synthesis were normal at 3 w...

Journal: :Behavioural brain research 2013
Samuel Deurveilher Nathan Ryan Joan Burns Kazue Semba

People often sleep deprive themselves voluntarily for social and lifestyle reasons. Animals also appear to stay awake longer as a result of their natural curiosity to explore novel environments and interact socially with conspecifics. Although multiple arousal systems in the brain are known to act jointly to promote and maintain wakefulness, it remains unclear whether these systems are similarl...

Journal: :Neuron 2005
Kevin Fox Rachel O.L. Wong

In the visual and somatosensory systems, maturation of neuronal circuits continues for days to weeks after sensory stimulation occurs. Deprivation of sensory input at various stages of development can induce physiological, and often structural, changes that modify the circuitry of these sensory systems. Recent studies also reveal a surprising degree of plasticity in the mature visual and somato...

Journal: :Hormones and Behavior 2015
Philip M. Sinnett Michael R. Markham

Energetic demands of social communication signals can constrain signal duration, repetition, and magnitude. The metabolic costs of communication signals are further magnified when they are coupled to active sensory systems that require constant signal generation. Under such circumstances, metabolic stress incurs additional risk because energy shortfalls could degrade sensory system performance ...

Journal: :Neuroscience letters 2008
K C Biju Thomas Gerald Mast Debra Ann Fadool

In the olfactory bulb, apoptotic cell-death induced by sensory deprivation is restricted to interneurons in the glomerular and granule cell layers, and to a lesser extent in the external plexiform layer, whereas mitral cells do not typically undergo apoptosis. With the goal to understand whether brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) mediates mitral cell survival, we performed unilateral nari...

2014
Seif Eldawlatly Karim G. Oweiss

Cortical reorganization following sensory deprivation is characterized by alterations in the connectivity between neurons encoding spared and deprived cortical inputs. The extent to which this alteration depends on Spike Timing Dependent Plasticity (STDP), however, is largely unknown. We quantified changes in the functional connectivity between layer V neurons in the vibrissal primary somatosen...

Journal: :Current Biology 2016
Stephen G. Lomber Blake E. Butler

Two recent studies have independently demonstrated that short periods of visual deprivation early in human development can have long-term functional consequences on sensory perception and on the balance between auditory and visual attention.

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