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- 1From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Yassar Chakfe [1, 2]; Charles W. Bourque (corresponding author) [1] The release of vasopressin (antidiuretic hormone) from the neurohypophysis is regulated by the electrical activity of osmosensitive...
- 2From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Yaffa Yeshurun [1]; Marisa Carrasco (corresponding author) [1, 2] Although many studies demonstrate that attending to a specific location improves performance on a variety of visual tasks, how and where this...
- 3From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Christopher S. Furmanski (corresponding author) [1]; Stephen A. Engel [1] Visual perception critically depends on orientation-specific signals that arise early in visual processing. Humans show greater...
- 4From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): S. Murray Sherman [1] Hubel and Wiesel opened the modern era of visual neuroscience four decades ago with their finding that visual cortical neurons are selective for the orientation of elongated visual...
- 5From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Matthew C. Tresch [1]; Ole Kiehn (corresponding author) [1] Every function of the vertebrate nervous system depends on the coordination of activity across neural populations. This issue of neuronal...
- 6From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Laurence H. Tecott [1] Important progress is being made in the development of new drug treatments for anxiety. Disorders of anxiety are among the most prevalent conditions in psychiatry, producing widespread...
- 7From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Sohail F. Tavazoie [1]; R. Clay Reid (corresponding author) [1] Early studies of the effects of visual deprivation demonstrated the essential role of sensory experience in the development of the highly...
- 8From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): C. Lüscher (corresponding author) [1, 2, 3]; R. A. Nicoll [4, 5]; R. C. Malenka [6]; D. Muller [1] Dynamic changes in the structural characteristics of the postsynaptic membrane and, in particular, of...
- 9From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Jeremy Hall [1]; Kerrie L. Thomas (corresponding author) [1]; Barry J. Everitt [1] The hippocampus is required for many forms of long-term memory in both humans and animals [1], and formation of long-lasting...
- 10From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Saobo Lei [1]; Michael F. Jackson [1]; Zhengping Jia [2]; John Roder [3]; Donglin Bai [4]; Beverley A. Orser [4]; John F. MacDonald (corresponding author) [1] The role of nitric oxide (NO) in long-term...
- 11From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Shin'Ichiro Satake [1]; Fumihito Saitow [1]; Junko Yamada [1, 2]; Shiro Konishi (corresponding author) [1] Information processing in the brain is thought to exploit not only classical homosynaptic...
- 12From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): J. Lisa Zheng [1]; Wei-Qiang Gao (corresponding author) [1] Hair cells are the mechanosensory cells that convert sound and motion signals into electrical impulses in cochlea and vestibular end organs of the...
- 13From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Anders Björklund (corresponding author) [1]; Olle Lindvall (corresponding author) [1] The nervous system, unlike many other tissues, has a limited capacity for self-repair; mature nerve cells lack the...
- 14From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedOn 13 April this year, the German Parliament narrowly rejected a constitutional amendment that would have recognized the rights of animals. The proposed change involved only a few words, but by giving animal rights the...
- 15From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): R. M. McKernan (corresponding author) [1]; T. W. Rosahl [1, 2]; D. S. Reynolds [1, 2]; C. Sur [1, 2]; K. A. Wafford [1]; J. R. Atack [1]; S. Farrar [1]; J. Myers [1]; G. Cook [1]; P. Ferris [1]; L. Garrett...
- 16From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): S. P. Lieske [1]; M. Thoby-Brisson [2]; P. Telgkamp [2]; J. M. Ramirez (corresponding author) [1, 2] It is well established that ventilation is state dependent: emotions such as love and sadness can...
- 17From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Roger A. Nicoll [1]; Matthew Frerking [1]; Dietmar Schmitz [1] Synaptic communication between neurons involves conversion of a presynaptic electrical signal, the action potential, into a chemical signal, the...
- 18From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Jack L. Feldman [1]; Paul A. Gray [1] Although breathing seems simple and effortless, until recently little was known about the neural circuitry underlying this essential behavior. Mammalian breathing...
- 19From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Jeffrey Anderson [1]; Ilan Lampl [1]; Iva Reichova [1]; Matteo Carandini [2]; David Ferster (corresponding author) [1] When stimulated with an optimal drifting grating, a complex cell in visual cortex...
- 20From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 3, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedNeurotransmitter release during action potentials is thought to require transient, localized [Ca[sup.2+]][sub.i] as high as hundreds of micromolar near presynaptic release sites. Most experimental attempts to...