The basic technique
for brain sectioning was developed by the pathologists of the 19th century, but this project posed unique challenges.
Not exact matches
For years, scientists have believed that the same
sections of the
brain are used by every person to generate emotions like a smile or frown; they fall into a rigid pattern.
It showed enhanced activity in
sections of the
brain responsible
for willfulness and memory — much different patterns than when people were merely fantasizing about a desired future.
Days after reading
sections of the book, results showed heightened connectivity in the areas of the
brain involved in receptivity
for language as well as physical sensation and movement.
They call me the King of Darkness, when I offer you no pain Why would they label me heartless, when your love is my cocaine And your soul is my Rogaine, I have a thirst to know your
brain When you enter my domain got ta take this number
for your name But you don't have to drink cyanide, I'm gonna be right by ya side If we got ta take that riot ride, on the enemy and defy your side Fight
for the place we're building,
for the reproduction of more children Trying to get that number back around 6 billion, I'm gonna rule until then Founded this colony like a pilgrim, anybody try to penetrate this
section or threaten we KILL THEM
It is therefore very probable — and at least demonstrable
for the single
sections by electrophysiological methods — that a human
brain - guided action, which is released by a sensation, is a gapless sequence.
If we follow the argument of the previous
section, there would be some difference,
for whereas the occasions of human experience have considerable temporal breadth in relation to the electronic occurrences in the
brain, we have seen that the occasions of God's experience must be extremely thin in their temporal extension.
Well I'm certainly smiling, your smile inducer
section always works on me Thanks
for including my recipes Kaila and I hope your
brain has a chance to recover this weekend!
We also start building a
section of our
brain, in terms of new neurons and synapses that connect them, just
for our child.
Dr. Marianne Neifert, a pediatrician and author of «Great Expectations: The Essential Guide to Breastfeeding,» explains that nipple incisions
for implants should be avoided if breastfeeding is important to the patient [because] all the milk ducts that drain the different lobes or
sections of the breast kind of convene there [and] it's possible to accidentally cut milk ducts or the nerve that sends the signal to your
brain to release more hormones that then helps you to produce more milk.»
; - how daughters want their dads» input into sex and dating; - how punishment can affect children throughout their lives; - teens and
brains, teens and drugs, teens and bullying, and teens and close family relationships in our Special
Section: Attached Teens; and - the magic number two and babies in Parliament in «Just
for Fun.»
Imaging various
sections of white matter from different angles can help researchers focus on the
brain circuitry important
for proper neuron communication.
For example, mothers who gave birth vaginally actually demonstrated more
brain responses to their baby's cry at 2 - 4 weeks postpartum than mothers who had given birth through a C -
section.
Imaging various
sections of white matter from different angles can help researchers focus on the underlying
brain circuitry important
for proper neuron communication.
That since I had to take iron pills after my c -
section my hormone level didn't drop enough
for my
brain to make me produce milk.
«That you Col. Mohammed Sambo Dasuki whilst being National Security Adviser and Shaibu Salisu, whilst being the Director of Finance and Administration in the Office of the National Security Adviser on or about 12th December 2013 in Abuja within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, and in such capacities entrusted with dominion over certain properties to wit: N90million which was in the account of the ONSA with Diamond Bank Plc, committed criminal breach of trust in respect of the said property by remitting the said sum into the account of
Brains and Hammers Limited
for the purchase of 7 - bedroom duplex house at No. 11 Mansur Bamalli Drive (D1064), Apo 1 Abuja and you thereby committed an offence punishable under
Section 315 of the Penal Code Act, Cap 532, Vol.4, LFN 2004.
Having no one to share lab duties with, I was spending more time in making buffers, cutting
brain sections, keeping records
for the EPA, IACUC, etc. than reading, think, and designing the experiments to take the projects forward.
Latin
for «tough body,» this mass of more than 200 million nerve fibers helps connect the left and right hemispheres of the cerebrum, our
brain's largest and uppermost
section.
We need to rely on our manual settings, the reasoning
sections of our
brain,
for more complex or novel situations, Greene says.
In the late 1990s
brain - imaging studies revealed that discrete regions of the temporal lobe — a
section of the human
brain important
for object recognition — fired up more strongly when people looked at faces than at any other thing.
Sitting too much is linked to changes in a
section of the
brain that is critical
for memory, according to a preliminary study by UCLA researchers of middle - aged and older adults.
These fresh
brain sections, kept in carefully monitored freezers, are hot properties
for advanced neuroscience research.
He currently serves as Senior Advisor to the NFL Head, Neck and Spine Committee;
Section Co-Chair Mackey - White National Football League Players Association Health and Safety Committee; - Founder and Medical Director Sports Legacy Institute; Member World Rugby Concussion Advisory Group; Adjunct Professor Exercise and Sport Science and Medical Director National Center
for Catastrophic Sports Injury Research, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC; Co-Director, Neurologic Sports Injury Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Senior Advisor
Brain Injury Center and Adjunct Staff, Children's Hospital, Boston, Vice President Chair Scientific Advisory Committee National Operating Committee on Standards
for Athletic Equipment (NOCSAE).
Scientists in the laboratory of C. Ronald Kahn, M.D., head of Joslin's Integrative Physiology and Metabolism research
section, found that
brain cholesterol synthesis, the only source of cholesterol
for the
brain, drops in several mouse models of diabetes.
The green line indicates the position of
sections that correspond to a middle part of the
brain used
for this in situ hybridization experiment.
The antibodies used
for this slide are from left to right, ab92547, this is a rabbit monoclonal antibody to vimentin and in this image it is staining astrocytes in Macaque
brain sections.
Statistical analyses of the number of Acks signals detected in in situ hybridization experiments using
sections corresponding to the middle
brain parts (n = 5, 5, and 4
for 0, 30, and 60 min, respectively) revealed that there was a significant increase in the number of Acks signals at 30 and 60 min after the bee ball formation in both the Class I and the Class II KCs, and at 60 min after the bee ball formation in the
brain area between the DLs and the OLs, and in the OLs (Figure 4S).
Frozen coronal
brain sections (10 µm thick) were fixed in 4 % paraformaldehyde in phosphate buffer (PB; pH 7.4) overnight at 4 °C, treated with proteinase K (10 µg / ml)
for 15 min and then with HCl (0.2 N)
for 10 min, followed by acetic - anhydride solution
for 10 min at room temperature.
Brains were fixed with 4 % paraformaldehyde in 100 mM sodium tetraborate, pH 9.5,
for 3 h, cryoprotected with 20 % sucrose - potassium - PBS (KPBS), and
sectioned into coronal (30 μm)
sections using a sliding microtome (Leica Microsystems Inc, Buffalo Grove, IL, USA).
Alain Destexhe, Research Director of Unité de Neurosciences CNRS, Gif - sur - Yvette, France Bruno Weber, Professor of Multimodal Experimental Imaging, Universitaet Zuerich, Switzerland Carmen Gruber Traub, Fraunhofer, Germany Costas Kiparissides, Certh, Greece Cyril Poupon, Head of the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Spectroscopy unit of NeuroSpin, University Paris Saclay, Gif - sur - Yvette, France David Boas, Professor of Radiology at Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, University of Pennsylvania Hanchuan Peng, Associate Investigator at Allen
Brain Institute, Seattle, US Huib Manswelder, Head of Department of Integrative Neurophysiology Center for Neurogenomics and Cognitive Research, VU University, Amsterdam Jan G. Bjaalie, Head of Neuroinformatics division, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo, Norway Jean - François Mangin, Research Director Neuroimaging at CEA, Gif - sur - Yvette, France Jordi Mones, Institut de la Macula y la Retina, Barcelona, Spain Jurgen Popp, Scientific Director of the Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology, Jena, Germany Katharina Zimmermann, Hochshule, Germany Katrin Amunts, Director of the Institute Structural and functional organisation of the brain, Forschungszentrum Juelich, Germany Leslie M. Loew, Professor at University of Connecticut Health Center, Connecticut, US Marc - Oliver Gewaltig, Section Manager of Neurorobotics, Simulation Neuroscience Division - Ecole Polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Geneve, Switzerland Markus Axer, Head of Fiber architecture group, Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM - 1) at Forschungszentrum Juelich, Germany Mickey Scheinowitz, Head of Regenerative Therapy Department of Biomedical Engineering and Neufeld Cardiac Research Institute, Tel - Aviv University, Israel Pablo Loza, Institute of Photonic Sciences, Castelldefels, Spain Patrick Hof, Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, US Paul Tiesinga, Professor at Faculty of Science, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands Silvestro Micera, Director of the Translational Neural Engineering (TNE) Laboratory, and Associate Professor at the EPFL School of Engineering and the Centre for Neuroprosthetics Timo Dicksheid, Group Leader of Big Data Analytics, Institute Structural and functional organisation of the brain, Forschungszentrum Juelich, Germany Trygve Leergaard, Professor of Neural Systems, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo, Norway Viktor Jirsa, Director of the Institute de Neurosciences des Systèmes and Director of Research at the CNRS, Marseille, F
Brain Institute, Seattle, US Huib Manswelder, Head of Department of Integrative Neurophysiology Center
for Neurogenomics and Cognitive Research, VU University, Amsterdam Jan G. Bjaalie, Head of Neuroinformatics division, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo, Norway Jean - François Mangin, Research Director Neuroimaging at CEA, Gif - sur - Yvette, France Jordi Mones, Institut de la Macula y la Retina, Barcelona, Spain Jurgen Popp, Scientific Director of the Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology, Jena, Germany Katharina Zimmermann, Hochshule, Germany Katrin Amunts, Director of the Institute Structural and functional organisation of the
brain, Forschungszentrum Juelich, Germany Leslie M. Loew, Professor at University of Connecticut Health Center, Connecticut, US Marc - Oliver Gewaltig, Section Manager of Neurorobotics, Simulation Neuroscience Division - Ecole Polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Geneve, Switzerland Markus Axer, Head of Fiber architecture group, Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM - 1) at Forschungszentrum Juelich, Germany Mickey Scheinowitz, Head of Regenerative Therapy Department of Biomedical Engineering and Neufeld Cardiac Research Institute, Tel - Aviv University, Israel Pablo Loza, Institute of Photonic Sciences, Castelldefels, Spain Patrick Hof, Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, US Paul Tiesinga, Professor at Faculty of Science, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands Silvestro Micera, Director of the Translational Neural Engineering (TNE) Laboratory, and Associate Professor at the EPFL School of Engineering and the Centre for Neuroprosthetics Timo Dicksheid, Group Leader of Big Data Analytics, Institute Structural and functional organisation of the brain, Forschungszentrum Juelich, Germany Trygve Leergaard, Professor of Neural Systems, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo, Norway Viktor Jirsa, Director of the Institute de Neurosciences des Systèmes and Director of Research at the CNRS, Marseille, F
brain, Forschungszentrum Juelich, Germany Leslie M. Loew, Professor at University of Connecticut Health Center, Connecticut, US Marc - Oliver Gewaltig,
Section Manager of Neurorobotics, Simulation Neuroscience Division - Ecole Polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Geneve, Switzerland Markus Axer, Head of Fiber architecture group, Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM - 1) at Forschungszentrum Juelich, Germany Mickey Scheinowitz, Head of Regenerative Therapy Department of Biomedical Engineering and Neufeld Cardiac Research Institute, Tel - Aviv University, Israel Pablo Loza, Institute of Photonic Sciences, Castelldefels, Spain Patrick Hof, Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, US Paul Tiesinga, Professor at Faculty of Science, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands Silvestro Micera, Director of the Translational Neural Engineering (TNE) Laboratory, and Associate Professor at the EPFL School of Engineering and the Centre
for Neuroprosthetics Timo Dicksheid, Group Leader of Big Data Analytics, Institute Structural and functional organisation of the
brain, Forschungszentrum Juelich, Germany Trygve Leergaard, Professor of Neural Systems, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo, Norway Viktor Jirsa, Director of the Institute de Neurosciences des Systèmes and Director of Research at the CNRS, Marseille, F
brain, Forschungszentrum Juelich, Germany Trygve Leergaard, Professor of Neural Systems, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo, Norway Viktor Jirsa, Director of the Institute de Neurosciences des Systèmes and Director of Research at the CNRS, Marseille, France
and affinity of antibody ACI - 5400 were characterized by a panel of methods: (i) measuring the selectivity
for a specific phospho - Tau epitope known to be associated with tauopathy, (ii) performing a combination of peptide and protein binding assays, (iii) staining of
brain sections from mouse preclinical tauopathy models and from human subjects representing six different tauopathies, and (iv) evaluating the selective binding to pathological epitopes on extracts from tauopathy
brains in non-denaturing sandwich assays.
Sanes and Lichtman estimate that Brainbow's colorful labeling has decreased the mapping time
for a given
section of
brain by at least an order of magnitude.
Histological
sectioning - In preparing each
brain for histology, the hindbrain is separated from the cerebral hemisphere by
sectioning at the level of the substantia nigra.
Negative controls including the secondary antibody alone and uninfected monkey tissue were used, as was an ex vivo
section of infected macaque
brain tissue [43]
for the positive control.
Brains were cut into 30 µm coronal
sections on a sliding microtome (Leica) and the free - floating
sections were used
for immunostaining.
A series of mouse
brain sections is explored
for protein expression and distribution in a large number of
brain regions.
Affiliation Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Donders Institute
for Brain, Cognition, and Behaviour, Department of Cognitive Neuroscience,
Section Biophysics, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
In his capacity of practicing telemedicine
for mental illnesses, Dr Dave will request tests which will analyze the client's
brain chemistry based on nutrient levels (please see our Blog
section for interesting articles and descriptions of these various nutrients and their effects on our
brains and overall health!).
The region of hypothalamus is the
brain's posterior
section and is the center of regulation
for visceral (intuitive) functions like body temperature, sleep cycles, and pituitary gland's activity.
A recent study of
brain chemicals in Alzheimer's patients confirmed they had greatly reduced glutathione levels in the hippocampus, the
section of the
brain responsible
for learning and memory — and one of the first regions affected by the disease.
For the very best tips and tricks on how to save your
brains in Dead Island: Riptide, use our in - depth guide in our FAQs
section.
The game isn't very long, but it's full of action and
brain - teasing puzzles which will have you entertained
for about 5 - 6 hours which never has a dull moment or monotonous
section.
You conning them; that» the planet is getting warmer» made the
section of their
brains for» common sense» clinically dead = it's your fault!!!
here in the Finger Lakes NY (a place where
brain death is rampant among the population as the sun is dimmed 98 % (NINETY EIGHT percent) of the time, the spraying NEVER stops - jets pass overhead every 3 minutes like clock work, if the dark grey chemicals EVER clear & blue sky pokes through, the jet assaults are massive, then 7 -8-9 or more jets at a time can be seen spraying us back under the grey chemical sun blocking shield & once again the sun is no longer present
for another 28 days but
for few small breaks in the chemical «clouds» of death & then the jets can be observed spraying those
sections of blue clearing.
This is the editor and lead author
for the historical
section of the IPCC report, who clearly has anthropogenic effects on the
brain.
Doctors and hospitals who fail to properly diagnose illnesses in the mother, provide timely Cesarean
sections, appropriately plan
for delivery of babies who may be too large
for vaginal delivery, or who don't detect problems like prolapsed umbilical cords may create conditions where the baby's
brain is starved of oxygen, resulting in lifelong deficits in motor function and coordination.
He is on the Leaders Forum of the American Association
for Justice (AAJ) and belongs to the Products, Professional Negligence, Motor Vehicle, and Toxic, Environmental — Pharmaceutical
Sections of AAJ, and to the Birth Trauma Litigation Group, the Medical Negligence Information Exchange Group, and the
Brain Injury Association.
Deborah Watts had filed suit
for malpractice, alleging that a delay in receiving an emergency cesarean
section led to her son Naython being born with devastating
brain injuries.
Section 2 of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA 2005) provides that «a person lacks capacity in relation to a matter if at the material time he is unable to make a decision
for himself in relation to the matter because of an impairment of, or a disturbance in the functioning of, the mind or
brain.»
An examination
for the purposes of
section 40 that relates only to the issue of whether the insured person has a
brain impairment that results in a score of 9 or less on the Glasgow Coma Scale referred to in subclause 2 (1.2)(e)(i).