Neuroethology - Biology 419/580 |
Bowling Green State University, Spring 2004 |
Outline:
| 1906 | Camillo Golgi Santiago Ramon y Cajal |
Neuroanatomy and neuronal structure |
|---|---|---|
| 1911 | Allvar Gullstrand | Optics of the eye |
| 1914 | Robert Barany | Physiology of the vestibular apparatus |
| 1927 | Julius Wagner-Jauregg | Malaria inoculation treats dementia paralytica |
| 1932 | Edgar Douglas Adrian Sir Charles Scott Sherrington |
Function of neurons in brain and spinal cord |
| 1936 | Dale, Henry Hallett, Sir Loewi, Otto |
Chemical transmission of nerve impulses |
| 1944 | Erlanger, Joseph Gasser, Herbert Spencer |
Differentiated functions of single nerve fibers |
| 1949 | Egas Moniz, Antonio Caetano Hess, Walter Rudolph |
Lobotomy Hypothalamic control activity of internal organs |
| 1957 | Bovet, Daniel | Synthetic endocrine inhibitors |
| 1961 | Von Bekesy, Georg | Function of the cochlea |
| 1963 | Sir John Carew Eccles Sir Alan Lloyd Hodgkin Sir Andrew Fielding Huxley |
Ionic mechanisms of nerve cell membrane |
| 1967 | Granit, Ragnar Arthur Hartline, Halden Keffer Wald, George |
Mechanisms of visual processing and perception |
| 1970 | Julius Axelrod Sir Bernard Katz Ulf Svante von Euler |
Chemical neurotransmission at nerve terminals |
| 1973 | Konrad Zacharias Lorenz Nikolaas Tinbergen Karl von Frisch |
Ethology |
| 1977 | Guillemin, Roger Schally, Andrew Victor |
Production of peptides in the brain |
| 1979 | Cormack, Allan MacLeod Hounsfield, Godfrey Newbold, Sir |
Invention of computer-assisted tomography |
| 1981 | Hubel, David Hunter Sperry, Roger Wolcott Wiesel, Torsten N. |
Information processing in the visual system and different hemispheres |
| 1982 | Samuelsson, Bengt Ingemar Vane, John Robert Bergstrom, Sune K. |
Discovery of prostaglandins |
| 1986 | Cohen, Stanley Levi-Montalcini, Rita |
Control of nerve cell growth |
| 1991 | Neher, Erwin Sakmann, Bert |
Function of single ion channels in cells |
| 1994 | Gilman, Alfred G. Rodbell, Martin |
G-protein coupled receptors and their role in signal transduction |
| 1997 | Prusiner, Stanley B. | Prions as a disease of the CNS |
| 1998 | Robert F. Furchgott Louis J. Ignarro Ferid Murad |
Nitric oxide as a signalling molecule |
| 1999 | Arvid Carlsson Paul Greengard Eric R. Kandel |
Signal transduction in the nervous system |
| 2003 | Paul C. Lauterbur Sir Peter Mansfield |
Magnetic resonance imaging |
| 2004 | Richard Axel Linda B. Buck |
Odorant receptors and the organization of the olfactory system |
The study of the proximate mechanisms (i.e., performance and control) of behavior considers the inclusion of "top-down" approaches as essential. It commonly starts with a characterization of behaviors (robust, repeatable, biologically relevant, and often stereotyped) and progresses with questions about sensory stimuli, predictions for underlying "computations, or the study of motor control. In the process, Neuroethology addresses questions such as:
It specifically relates such considerations to more basic findings in Neuroscience, which has provided us with detailed information on the general mechanisms by which neurons talk to each other. Neuroethology often utilizes dedicated systems which communicate along labelled lines. Sensory systems convert signal energy into electric impulses (e.g. sound perception; graded to all-or-none), while motor systems translate neural activity into behavior (e.g. escape in crayfish, goldfish).
Scientists
Structures of the nervous system (e.g., the human brain) are composed of different, basic cell types: mostly neurons (or nerve cells) and glial cells. A generalized neuron features a series of different, basic components with cell body (i.e., a region of the neuron containing the nucleus), axon (an elongated process for long-distance signalling), axon terminals (the site of information transfer to other cells), and dendrites (highly-branched processes largely involved in receiving and integrating incoming information). Based on functional considerations nerve cells may be classified as sensory neurons (which encode information about the surrounding world), interneurons (which are involved in information processing), and motor neurons (which activate muscle fibers and control muscular contraction). Glial cells surround neurons in the nervous system and support, protect, and communicate with their surround. Glia come in many shapes and size, such as Oligodendrocytes, Astrocytes, Ependymal cells, Microglia, Special glial cells in the central nervous system and Schwann cells, Satellite/Capsule cells, Enteric (gut) glia in the peripheral nervous system. Astrocyte control the specific environment of neurons necessary for succesful signaling. They provide electrical insulation (myelin) of axonal lines (oligodendrocyte for CNS and Schwann cell for PNS myelination). Microglial cells, which line the ventricles of the brain, act as immune cells in CNS. In addition to neurons and glia the brain contains cells making up blood vessels and connective tissues enclosing sheaths.
White (fiber) matter consists of myelinated axons that largely run the longitudinally in the body. Gray (neuronal) matter contains the cell bodies, dendrites, synapses and blood vessels.
Scientists