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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Open Neuroscience Initiative, Austin Lim Jan 2021

Open Neuroscience Initiative, Austin Lim

College of Science and Health Full Text Publications

The Open Neuroscience Initiative is a free-to-use textbook

This project began as a means to overcoming the financial burden that face undergraduate neuroscience students when buying textbooks. By compiling and writing a completely free-to-access textbook that covers the foundations of a typical college introduction to neuroscience course, students would have one less obstacle to overcome in their educational career, allowing them to focus their valuable time and attention on learning rather than finances. To make this project a reality, I began with a humble tweet in May 2019 that managed to gain a tiny bit of traction among the neuroscience …


Using Fmri Bold Imaging To Motion-Correct Associated, Simultaneously Imaged Pet Data, Joseph M. Williamitis Jan 2021

Using Fmri Bold Imaging To Motion-Correct Associated, Simultaneously Imaged Pet Data, Joseph M. Williamitis

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Because magnetic resonance (MR) and positron emission tomography (PET) scanning sessions last long durations, motion blur during scanning constitutes a problem for clinical interpretation. To counteract this, motion-correction algorithms have been developed to reduce smearing between scan slices of MRI, but these algorithms are not commonplace for PET. This feasibility study determined if applying MRI motion-correction algorithms to simultaneously acquired PET data improved PET signal clarity in specific brain regions. Seven subjects received increasing levels of PET tracers while undergoing two separate simultaneous PET/MRI scans. We modified existing fMRI algorithms to apply them to the accompanying PET data. We hypothesized …


Characterization Of B3galt2 And Heg1 Expression In Dorsal Root Ganglia, Alexander H. Nguyen Jan 2020

Characterization Of B3galt2 And Heg1 Expression In Dorsal Root Ganglia, Alexander H. Nguyen

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Proprioception provides unique sensory feedback about the body’s orientation in space and this sensation is essential for creating specific motor functions and coordinated movement. During neurogenesis, unique genetic markers are expressed and classified as early, transient/middle, and late markers depending on their timing of expression. This study focuses on the expression patterns of two late markers: Heg1 and B3galt2. We investigated how expression of these two markers respond to peripheral nerve injury (PNI). We cloned and generated riboprobes to detect expression of B3galt2 and Heg1 in DRGs using in situ hybridization after transection of the sciatic nerve. B3galt2 hybridization in …


Translocation And Phosphorylation Of Ampa Receptors Following Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation In Vivo, Justin Andrew Stafford Jan 2016

Translocation And Phosphorylation Of Ampa Receptors Following Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation In Vivo, Justin Andrew Stafford

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Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is the current technique used clinically to attenuate the effects of various neurological related deficits and augment functions such as memory and learning. The cellular and molecular mechanisms behind tDCS remain largely unknown and this study provides some of the first insights into the mechanisms behind tDCS. Direct current stimulation has been used to increase levels of long term potentiation (LTP) ex vivo suggesting that this stimulation has an effect on the LTP mechanisms of action. Subcellular protein extraction and fractionation methods were used to isolate synaptoneurosomes from various brain regions to assess the effects …


Strain-Dependent Variation In The Early Transcriptional Response To Cns Injury Using A Cortical Explant System, David J. Graber, Brent T. Harris, William F. Hickey Sep 2011

Strain-Dependent Variation In The Early Transcriptional Response To Cns Injury Using A Cortical Explant System, David J. Graber, Brent T. Harris, William F. Hickey

Dartmouth Scholarship

While it is clear that inbred strains of mice have variations in immunological responsiveness, the influence of genetic background following tissue damage in the central nervous system is not fully understood. A cortical explant system was employed as a model for injury to determine whether the immediate transcriptional response to tissue resection revealed differences among three mouse strains. Immunological mRNAs were measured in cerebral cortex from SJL/J, C57BL/6J, and BALB/cJ mice using real time RT-PCR. Freshly isolated cortical tissue and cortical sections incubated in explant medium were examined. Levels of mRNA, normalized to β-actin, were compared using one way analysis …