Neurophysiological Techniques Applications to Neural Systems

“Neurophysiological Techniques Applications to Neural Systems” by Alan A. Boulton, published by Humana Press on August 21, 2013, is a softcover reprint of the original 1st edition from 1990, comprising 377 pages. This book explores the development of neurophysiology, focusing on the techniques of electrophysiology and their application to various research topics, including ion channels and human behavior. The contributions from various authors illustrate how cellular neurophysiology relates to classical neuroanatomy, providing a foundation for functional analysis.
Readers will find discussions on both traditional and innovative techniques for studying ion channels and cellular processes, as well as insights into the challenges of recording from cells in the spinal cord and peripheral nervous system. The book also includes a review of the use of extracellular unit potentials in the brain and an examination of the neural mechanisms underlying normal behavior through evoked potentials in humans. This edition serves as a comprehensive resource for those interested in the intersection of neuroscience and medical science.
Official synopsis Publisher
The development of neurophysiology, the study of the activity of living nervous tissue, has relied heavily on the techniques of electrophysiology. This emphasis is revealed in volumes 14 and 15 of this series, which show how electrophysiological techniques can be applied to research topics ranging from ion channels to human behavior. Kitai and Park show how cellular neurophysiology can be related to classical neuroanatomy, an important basis for any type of functional analysis. Wonderlin, French, Arispe, and Jones describe new (single channel) and more traditional (whole cell) techniques for studying the role of ion channels in cellular pr- esses, a field that is currently developing very rapidly. An exciting nontraditional approach to the study of cellular electrophysiology is discussed by Hopp, Wu, Xiao, Rioult, London, Zecevic, and Cohen in their paper on optic measurement of membrane pot- tials. Humphrey and Schmidt offer a thoughtful review of the uses and limitations of the technique of recording extracellular unit potentials in the brain. Hoffer presents an introduction to a field that is of great interest but is technically very difficult-the reco- ing from cells and axons in the spinal cord and peripheral nervous system in freely moving animals. An electrophysiological approach to the analysis of the neural mechanisms of normal behavior is presented by Halgren in a wide-ranging review of the field of evoked potentials in humans.
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