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- 1From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Judith McLaughlin (corresponding author) [1]; Lee Osterhout [1]; Albert Kim [1] Adult second-language (L2) learning is often claimed to be slow and laborious compared to native language (L1) acquisition, but...
- 2From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Glyn W Humphreys [1]; Martin G Edwards [1] People reaching for a drink across a crowded bar avoid the obstacles in their way without thinking about it. Yet obstacle avoidance has proven surprisingly...
- 3From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Lawrence Kruger [1] Soul Made Flesh: The Discovery of the Brain--and How it Changed the World Carl Zimmer Free Press, 2004 367 pp. , $26 Carl Zimmer's provocatively titled new book,...
- 4From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Adam Kohn (corresponding author) [1]; J Anthony Movshon [1] Prolonged inspection of a strong visual stimulus produces vivid visual aftereffects, in which stimuli similar to the adapting stimulus are...
- 5From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Günter U Höglinger (corresponding author) [1, 2]; Pamela Rizk [1]; Marie P Muriel [1]; Charles Duyckaerts [3]; Wolfgang H Oertel [2]; Isabelle Caille [4]; Etienne C Hirsch [1] In Parkinson disease,...
- 6From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Jimok Kim [1]; Bradley E Alger (corresponding author) [1] In hippocampal pyramidal cells, a rise in Ca2+ releases endocannabinoids that activate the presynaptic cannabinoid receptor (CB1R) and transiently...
- 7From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Wei Li (corresponding author) [1]; Steven H DeVries [1] Cone photoreceptors are electrically coupled [1]. The extent of coupling and the specificity among spectral types affect how color signals are...
- 8From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Laurent Groc [1]; Martin Heine [1]; Laurent Cognet [2]; Kieran Brickley [3]; F Anne Stephenson [3]; Brahim Lounis [2]; Daniel Choquet (corresponding author) [1] The basis for differences in...
- 9From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Thanos Tzounopoulos (corresponding author) [1]; Yuil Kim [1]; Donata Oertel [2]; Laurence O Trussell [1] The mammalian dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) is the site of convergence of multiple streams of neural...
- 10From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Sacha B Nelson [1] Like Superman and Lex Luthor or Yoda and Darth Vader, most physiological processes come in matched pairs, with one process eternally trying to undo what the other process has accomplished....
- 11From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Waka Fujisaki [1]; Shinsuke Shimojo [1, 2]; Makio Kashino [1]; Shin'ya Nishida (corresponding author) [1] People have the clear sense of a single audiovisual source while watching movies, but that sense is...
- 12From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): D James Surmeier [1]; Robert Foehring [2] There is a lot of talk in neuroscience circles these days about 'homeostatic plasticity'. The term refers to the ability of neurons to maintain a preferred level of...
- 13From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Tara Karnezis [1, 2]; Wim Mandemakers [3]; Jonathan L McQualter [1]; Binhai Zheng [4]; Peggy P Ho [2]; Kelly A Jordan [1]; Belinda M Murray [1]; Ben Barres [3]; Marc Tessier-Lavigne [2]; Claude C A Bernard...
- 14From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Eric P Hornstein (corresponding author) [1]; Jan Verweij [1]; Julie L Schnapf (corresponding author) [1] The retina is packed with a dense array of cone photoreceptors, permitting good visual acuity. In...
- 15From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): John P Adelman [1]; Paco S Herson [1] Life treats us all to a continuously changing cornucopia of scented experience, and we are always on our olfactory toes. The gatekeepers of olfaction are the...
- 16From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Robert M McPeek (corresponding author) [1]; Edward L Keller [1] Most real-world scenes are cluttered with many different potential saccade goals, so the selection of a single goal from many possibilities is...
- 17From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Stephen M Wilson (corresponding author) [1, 2]; Ayşe Pinar Saygin [4]; Martin I Sereno [4]; Marco Iacoboni [1, 3] To examine the role of motor areas in speech perception, we carried out a functional magnetic...
- 18From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Renee L Shirley [1, 3]; Nicole A R Walter [1, 3]; Matthew T Reilly [1]; Christoph Fehr [2]; Kari J Buck (corresponding author) [1] Physiological dependence and associated withdrawal episodes can constitute a...
- 19From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Hiroaki Misonou (corresponding author) [1, 2]; Durga P Mohapatra [1]; Eunice W Park [2]; Victor Leung [3]; Dongkai Zhen [2]; Kaori Misonou [1, 2]; Anne E Anderson [3]; James S Trimmer [1, 2] Neurons possess...
- 20From: Nature Neuroscience. (Vol. 7, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Igor Schindler [1]; Nichola J Rice [1]; Robert D McIntosh [1]; Yves Rossetti [2]; Alain Vighetto [2]; A David Milner (corresponding author) [1] When we reach out for an object, for example to pick up a cup,...