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  • 21
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual cortex (area 17) ; Awake monkeys ; Colour ; Contour ; Neuronal organization ; Binocular interaction
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We have recorded from 661 single neurons in the foveal and parafoveal region of area 17 of the awake trained macaque monkey. The functional properties of 538 cells were investigated in detail, with flashed and moving stimuli of varying form and colour. Irrespective of their functional properties such determined, each neuron was also tested with a 2×2° square of various luminance and colour. This was done in order to get an idea how such a simple stimulus is represented by the activities of neurons in area 17. Most of the neurons showed response preference for certain aspects of visual stimuli. We have distinguished the following functional groups: 1. Sustained spectrally selective neurons (21%). These cells respond with tonic discharges to light of their optimal wavelength, and their spectral selectivity corresponded to that of opponent parvocellular cells of the lateral geniculate body. 44% of these cells were excited selectively by long, 23% by middle and 33% by short wavelength light. When slowly moving the 2×2° square of their preferred wavelength across the receptive field, discharge rate remained elevated, as long as the stimulus covered the RF and with little contour enhancement. The majority of the sustained spectrally sensitive cells responded equally well or better to large than to small (1.0°) stimuli, 17.5% were less activated and few of them completely suppressed by larger stimuli. Such cells were poorly orientation sensitive. Only three cells with weak double opponency could be identified (2.7% of this group). 2. Broadband contour (18%) and 3. Panchromatic contour cells (41%). Most neurons of these two groups were strongly activated by spots (1°) centered on their RF. They showed a short phasic response to contrast borders and most of them responded to luminance contrasts, including contrast reversal and colour contrasts equated for luminance. The broadband contour cells showed a slight wavelength preference with only weak or without any opponent suppression, the panchromatic contour neurons did not show any wavelength selectivity. Most showed orientation or direction sensitivity, but very sharp orientation selectivity was less common in spectrally biassed than in panchromatic contour cells (see Fig. 11). They responded tonically to gratings of optimal orientation and therefore may play a role also for cortical representation of textures. 22% of a restricted sample of panchromatic contour cells (or 9% of all cells) were hypercomplex. 4. Light inhibited cells. 7% of all cells were inhibited by small and large light stimuli of any wavelength centered on their receptive field, and were tonically activated by darkspots or contrasts, comparable to the light inhibited cells of the parvocellular lateral geniculate layers. 5. Neurons without consistant visual responses (11%). These neurons could not be driven by any of our visual stimuli. They were usually found in the upper cortical layers. 61 cells were tested for monocular vs. binocular input. 96% were excited from both eyes with various degrees of ocular dominance, but more binocular cells were contralaterally than ipsilaterally dominated (43 and 22%, respectively). Binocular cells showed qualitatively the same functional properties from both eyes, including spectral selectivity if there was any. Binocular summation varied between cells and was in the average 0.7, probably due to interocular inhibition. Some columnar grouping of cells with similar response properties as defined above was found in vertical penetrations, but “mixed” penetrations were common. Spectrally selective cells with the same spectral preference or light inhibited cells often were found close to each other and in the same penetration, but also often mixed with other cells excited by parvocellular input. This spatial organization is consistant with a columnar segregation of cells excited predominantly by one type of parvocellular afferents on the one hand, and contour cells with a mixed excitatory and a strong inhibitory input, on the other hand, but also indicates a considerable mixing and overlap of functional inputs into any axis perpendicular to the cortical surface. The functional organization of area 17 is compared with that of the lateral geniculate body and the prelunate visual area (V4) as investigated with the same methods and by the same laboratory.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 22
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Postcentral gyrus ; Area 1 ; Finger representation ; Neural integration ; Monkeys
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The representation of the hand and fingers in area 1 of the first somatosensory cortex was studied in conscious monkeys by recording single neuronal activity. The results are as follows. (1) We found multi-finger type receptive fields which cover more than one finger discontinuously or wide-field type ones which cover both finger and palmar skin or two halves of the palmar skin together. Multi-finger type receptive fields were also found in some joint manipulation neurons. Multifinger or wide-field type receptive fields were found in nearly 40% of area 1 neurons. The rate was even higher, up to 70%, in the medial part of the cortical finger region. Consequently, the finger representation in area 1 was less discretely somatotopic than that in area 3b. (2) The submodality content of area 1 was almost identical to that of area 3b: 74.5% and 20.9% of identified neurons were, respectively, cutaneous and deep. The distribution of neurons with different submodalities overlapped in area 1. (3) Among area 1 neurons with multi-finger type receptive fields, response characteristics of those with inhibitory receptive fields, those with directional selectivity to moving stimuli, and those with converging afferent inputs, were studied in detail. Evidence is presented to suggest that information from different parts of the body, or from the same body parts but different afferent sources, is integrated in area 1. (4) It is proposed that, within the SI, area 1 is the initial stage of integration of sensory information coming from the thalamus and from area 3a or 3b via cortico-cortical connections.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 23
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Monkey ; Postcentral gyrus ; Finger representation ; Vertical neuronal arrays ; Converging inputs
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Single neuronal activity was recorded in the crown of the postcentral gyrus (areas 1 and 2) in 5 conscious monkeys. A total of 93 penetrations were made in the hand and finger region of 9 hemispheres and 827 neurons were isolated. The receptive field characteristics of neurons recorded along each of 88 penetrations which entered perpendicularly to the cortical surface were compared. The majority of neurons in this region were responsive to skin stimulation. In 54 penetrations, neurons related to different sensory submodalities were mixed. In 30, skin neurons predominated, and in 8, ‘deep’ neurons, while in the remaining 16 penetrations neurons related to different submodalities were equally mixed. In 16 penetrations, neurons responded exclusively to stimulation of skin, hair or nails. In 9 penetrations, neurons were exclusively related to joint manipulation or other types of ‘deep’ submodality. In 9 penetrations, unidentified neurons were in the majority. In each penetration, the receptive field positions varied considerably on the same finger or encompassed more than one finger. Although neurons of the same submodality, either skin or ‘deep’ tended to be set in an array, the most adequate stimulus could vary among neurons of a given array. The variability in the receptive field positions or the most adequate stimuli remained constant irrespective of the angle of the electrode penetration in the cortex. The results are compatible with the idea that vertically arranged neuronal array receive inputs of multiple sources, both thalamacortical and corticocortical, so that interactions between different inputs can readilly occur.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 24
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Monkey ; Postcentral gyrus ; Vertical neuronal arrays ; Functional surfaces ; Active touch
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Single neuronal activity was recorded in the crown of the postcentral gyrus (areas 1 and 2) in 5 conscious monkeys. A total of 88 penetrations entered perpendicularly to the cortical surface. Among them, 6 examples are chosen and the receptive field characteristics of constituent neurons were described in some detail. Receptive fields of neurons recorded along a particular penetration were variable in their positions, but the largest receptive field usually covered the others. Neurons with the largest receptive fields were found most frequently in the infragranular layers. Often they included inhibitory receptive fields. The inhibitory receptive fields were arranged side-by-side to the excitatory ones, rather than in a center-surround fashion. The key stimulus common to neurons in a vertical penetration was the contact of an object to the receptive field achieved during animal's active behavior to manipulate the object. We thus designated the largest receptive field as a functional surface. Our results demonstrate that a vertical array of neurons in this cortical region can be regarded as a functional assemblage which deals with a set of information concerning one of various aspects of active touch.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 25
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Postcentral gyrus ; Area 3b ; Finger representation ; Functional subdivisions ; Monkeys
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The representation of fingers in the first somatosensory cortex was studied in conscious monkeys by recording single neuronal activity, and the following results were obtained: (1) In area 3a, most neurons responded to joint manipulation or other types of deep stimuli. The representation of five fingers was somatotopically arranged. (2) In area 3b, 77.7% and 20.9% of identified neurons responded to cutaneous and deep stimuli respectively. (3) Neurons responding to light mechanical stimuli and with receptive fields on the distal finger segment were found in the most anterior part of area 3b while those responding better to specific mechanical stimuli, such as rubbing, scraping, pinching, tapping, etc. of finger glabrous skin, were found in the more posterior part. The representation of the five fingers was somatotopically arranged. (4) Neurons responding to light or specific mechanical stimulation of the dorsal hairy skin of fingers were found in the posterior part of area 3b. The independent somatotopic representation of four fingers was recognized within this region. (5) Neurons responding to mechanical stimulation of the palmar skin were found in two separate regions, the medial one for the ulnar half and the lateral one for the radial half of the palm. (6) These results indicate that the representation of fingers in areas 3a and 3b of the conscious monkey is divided into multiple somatotopic subdivisions each representing a functional region of the hand and fingers. (7) Neurons with multi-finger receptive fields were occasionally found in area 3b, mostly in layer VI. Some of them had inhibitory receptive fields. Multifinger type receptive fields were more commonly found in area 1.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 26
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Computational mechanics 1 (1986), S. 243-257 
    ISSN: 1432-0924
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Abstract An approach to improve the accuracy of the incremental solutions to a nonlinear problem, through a strategy to control the size of the increment, based on stationary of an argumented energy functional, is presented. The problem of control of an optimum step size in the incremental theory is formulated for a fixed number of increments. The variables in this argumented functional are: (i) the incremental displacement vector, (ii) the scalar parameters λ i which characterize the size of each of the increments, i = 1,..., N, and (iii) a Lagrange multiplier μ which enforces the constraint that the sum of all the normalized increments, i. e., Σλi is equal to 1. The optimality condition provides us a rigorous approach which gives rise to an iterative procedure because of nonlinearity of the stationary condition. If the number of increments is not prescribed, a noniterative procedure can be obtained, where the incremental sequence is controlled adaptively with less computational effort. The extension of the proposed method to non-selfadjoint problems, where a potential energy function does not exist, is also discussed. Numerical examples demonstrate the remarkable improvement in the accuracy of the solution by optimizing the incremental sequence, as well as the effectiveness of the adaptive control procedure proposed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 27
    ISSN: 1432-1076
    Keywords: Hypergalactosaemia ; Portal-hepatic venous shunt ; Hepatic arterio-venous shunt ; Portosystemic shunting ; Newborn screening
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Hypergalactosaemia was discovered in a newborn girl during routine metabolic screening. Hereditary enzyme deficiency was ruled out. She had multiple hepatic haemangiomas with portal-hepatic venous and hepatic arterio-venous shunts. Since she showed signs of high-output heart failure due to the arterio-venous shunt, hepatic artery embolization was performed at age 3 months. A galactose tolerance test was performed before and after embolization and when the haemangioma no longer appeared on ultrasonography. Even after embolization, the level of blood galactose was abnormally elevated in the galactose tolerance test, but the blood galactose was eliminated more rapidly than before embolization. When the hepatic haemangioma was no longer detected by ultrasonography, the peak galactose level decreased. We surmise that the hypergalactosaemia was due to these shunts. In cases of hypergalactosaemia of unknown cause; liver haemangioma with portal-hepatic venous shunting should be considered as a possible cause. If a hepatic arteriovenous shunt also exists, this may contribute to the effect of the portosystemic shunting.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 28
    ISSN: 1432-1076
    Keywords: Cleidocranial dysplasia syndrome ; Atresia ani ; Urogenital anomalies ; Psoriasis ; Autosomal recessive inheritance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A cleidocranial dysplasia syndrome associated with atresia ani, urogenital anomalies, and psoriasis-like skin lesions is reported in two siblings (1 boy, 1 girl) in a family of Japanese descent. There is no family history of cleidocranial dysplasia syndrome and/or psoriasis. Consanguinity is denied.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 29
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    European journal of clinical pharmacology 34 (1988), S. 55-59 
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: doxapram ; ventilatory function ; occlusion pressure ; serum drug concentration ; concentration-effect relationship
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary To investigate the means by which doxapram affects the control of ventilation, ventilatory function and P0.1 have been related to serum doxapram concentration during a 45-min infusion of doxapram hydrochloride in 7 healthy, conscious subjects under normoxic conditions. Serum doxapram concentrations increased during the infusion: 1.88, 2.48, 3.42, and 3.97 µg/ml after 5, 10, 30 and 45 min, respectively. The majority of significant changes in the measurements from the baseline were observed at 30 and 45 min: $${{\dot V}}_{{E}}$$ , VT, P0.1, P0.1/end-tidal CO2 tension, VT/Ti and blood pressure were increased, and end-tidal CO2 tension was decreased. No significant changes in Pdimax, Ti/Ttot, $${{\dot V}}_{{E}}$$ /P0.1, and P0.1/(VT/Ti) were observed. A correlation was observed between the % increases in P0.1 and $${{\dot V}}_{{E}}$$ and doxapram concentration, and between $${{\dot V}}_{{E}}$$ and P0.1. The doxapram-induced increase in $${{\dot V}}_{{E}}$$ appears to be caused by increased neural drive. It is related to the serum drug concentration in the conscious subject.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 30
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    European journal of clinical pharmacology 24 (1983), S. 469-474 
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: zopiclone ; nitrazepam ; photopalpebral reflex (PPR) ; hypnotic effect ; side effects ; healthy volunteers
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The averaged photopalpebral reflex (PPR) represents the mean of summed reflex contractions of the orbicularis oculi muscle in response to periodic photic stimuli. The latency of PPR can be used to assess a drug effect on human arousal level, since it is prolonged if there is a reduction in the arousal level of the subject. In the present study of the clinical effects of zopiclone, healthy male volunteers aged 18–22 years were given zopiclone 5 mg and 10 mg, nitrazepam 5 mg and 10 mg, or placebo, in a double-blind, cross-over design. Changes in the latencies of PPR were examined from 0.5 to 4 h after medication. Both zopiclone and nitrazepam prolonged the latency in a dose-dependent manner, but the prolongation induced by zopiclone appeared more rapidly, was slightly more marked and lasted for a shorter period than that induced by nitrazepam. Zopiclone produced slightly fewer subjective changes, such as vagueness of thought and weakness, than did nitrazepam. From these results, it is suggested that zopiclone possesses a potent hypnotic action which appears more rapidly and is slightly more potent and shorter lasting than that of nitrazepam. In addition, zopiclone may also exhibit fewer side effects, such as vagueness of thought and weakness than nitrazepam, and it may cause less “hang over”.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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