Cerebellar Modules: Molecules, Morphology, and Function (Progress in Brain Research)
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
The present volume of
The first section of the book, Development, concentrates on the genetic basis of different aspects of compartmentalized development including a most important contribution on the postnatal development of the climbing fiber system. Gene expression is also an important element in the next section, Interneurons, which provides striking new data and hypotheses on the functional anatomy of granule cells, Golgi cells and unipolar brush cells. Particularly interesting are several contributions that offer a novel view on parallel fiber function. The section Modules and Circuits provides a number of state-of-the-art analyses using electrophysiological, and classical and transneuronal virus tracing techniques. The emphasis lies on the olivocerebellar circuits and the oculomotor system The final section, Models and Learning, offers an insight into the progress on the mechanisms and network organization of adaptation and learning, not only in classical paradigms like oculomotor and eye blink responses but also in studies linking gene expression to behavioral paradigms
The editors are confident that the exciting data and concepts collected in this volume will strengthen the multidisciplinary approach in the field of cerebellar research.
Book Info
Erasmus Univ., Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Contains the proceedings of the second meeting titled Cerebellar Modules: Molecules, Morphology and Function, held August 1998, in Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Cerebellar Modules: Molecules, Morphology, and Function (Progress in Brain Research),N.M. Gerrits,T.J.H. Ruigrok,C.I. De Zeeuw,Elsevier Science,0444501088,Cerebellum,Cerebral Physiology,Congresses,Life Sciences - Anatomy & Physiology,Life Sciences - Biology - General,Medical / Nursing,Neurobiology,Neurology - General,Neuroscience,Physiology,Science,Science/Mathematics,anatomy & histology,Medical / Neuroscience,Molecular biology,Neurosciences
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