Not exact matches
For more than a decade, he has embedded electrodes in slices of the hippocampus — which plays a role in learning and memory — and
recorded neurons»
responses to a wide range of
electrical stimuli.
Brian Pollard at the University of Manchester, UK, and colleagues used a new method called functional
electrical impedance tomography by evoked
response (fEITER) to
record the brain activity of 20 people as they responded to a general anaesthetic.
A hair of a diode feeds
electrical pulses into one side of a single cell; an electrode on the other side
records that cell's
response.
Originally developed to test hearing in infants, this test
records the
electrical activity of the brain in
response to sound stimulation.
A light is flashed at the eye and the
electrical response is amplified and
recorded on a computer.