All Relations between representation and cerebellum

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Martin Bares, Ovidiu Lungu, Tao Liu, Tobias Waechter, Christopher M Gomez, James Ash. Impaired predictive motor timing in patients with cerebellar disorders. Experimental brain research. vol 180. issue 2. 2008-04-04. PMID:17256160. there is evidence that the cerebellum is important for the neural representation of time in a variety of behaviors including time perception, the tapping of specific time intervals, and eye-blink conditioning. 2008-04-04 2023-08-12 human
Tadashi Yamazaki, Shigeru Tanak. A spiking network model for passage-of-time representation in the cerebellum. The European journal of neuroscience. vol 26. issue 8. 2008-02-01. PMID:17953620. a spiking network model for passage-of-time representation in the cerebellum. 2008-02-01 2023-08-12 Not clear
Tadashi Yamazaki, Shigeru Tanak. A spiking network model for passage-of-time representation in the cerebellum. The European journal of neuroscience. vol 26. issue 8. 2008-02-01. PMID:17953620. to study possible computational mechanisms of the pot representation we built a large-scale spiking network model of the cerebellum. 2008-02-01 2023-08-12 Not clear
Tadashi Yamazaki, Shigeru Tanak. A spiking network model for passage-of-time representation in the cerebellum. The European journal of neuroscience. vol 26. issue 8. 2008-02-01. PMID:17953620. these results suggest that the recurrent network in the granular layer and nmda channels in granule and golgi cells play an essential role in the timing mechanisms in the cerebellum, whereas the glomerulus serves to realize a robust representation of time. 2008-02-01 2023-08-12 Not clear
Thomas Lundeberg, Iréne Lund, Jan Näslun. Acupuncture--self-appraisal and the reward system. Acupuncture in medicine : journal of the British Medical Acupuncture Society. vol 25. issue 3. 2008-01-08. PMID:17906602. these higher order cognitive processes are initially mediated in prefrontal cortical loci but later shift control iteratively to internal cerebellar representations of these processes. 2008-01-08 2023-08-12 Not clear
R Chris Miall, Lars O D Christensen, Owen Cain, James Stanle. Disruption of state estimation in the human lateral cerebellum. PLoS biology. vol 5. issue 11. 2007-12-20. PMID:18044990. the cerebellum has been proposed to be a crucial component in the state estimation process that combines information from motor efferent and sensory afferent signals to produce a representation of the current state of the motor system. 2007-12-20 2023-08-12 human
P Marklund, P Fransson, R Cabeza, A Larsson, M Ingvar, L Nyber. Unity and diversity of tonic and phasic executive control components in episodic and working memory. NeuroImage. vol 36. issue 4. 2007-10-18. PMID:17524668. 'unitary' control modulations were temporally dissociated into (1) shared tonic components involving medial and lateral prefrontal cortex, striatum, cerebellum and superior parietal cortex, assumed to govern enhanced top-down context processing, monitoring and sustained attention throughout task periods and (2) stimulus-synchronous phasic components encompassing posterior intraparietal sulcus, hypothesized to support dynamic shifting of the 'focus of attention' among internal representations. 2007-10-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
Joanne E Dudeney, Kirk N Olsen, E James Keho. Time-specific extinction and recovery of the rabbit's (Oryctolagus cuniculus) conditioned nictitating membrane response using mixed interstimulus intervals. Behavioral neuroscience. vol 121. issue 4. 2007-10-12. PMID:17663605. these results support both abstract and cerebellar models of conditioning that encode the cs into a cascade of microstimuli, while challenging theories of extinction that rely on changes in cs processing, us representations, and contextual control. 2007-10-12 2023-08-12 rabbit
Rebecca M C Spencer, Timothy Verstynen, Matthew Brett, Richard Ivr. Cerebellar activation during discrete and not continuous timed movements: an fMRI study. NeuroImage. vol 36. issue 2. 2007-07-18. PMID:17459731. based on this, we have proposed that the cerebellum plays a key role in event timing-the representation of the temporal relationship between salient events related to the movement (e.g., flexion onset or contact with a response surface). 2007-07-18 2023-08-12 human
Marco J Russo, Enrico Mugnaini, Marco Martin. Intrinsic properties and mechanisms of spontaneous firing in mouse cerebellar unipolar brush cells. The Journal of physiology. vol 581. issue Pt 2. 2007-07-11. PMID:17379636. while the properties of cerebellar neurons have generally been studied in much detail, little is known about the unipolar brush cells (ubcs), a type of glutamatergic interneuron that is enriched in the granular layer of the mammalian vestibulocerebellum and participates in the representation of head orientation in space. 2007-07-11 2023-08-12 mouse
Lars H Pinborg, Charlotte Videbaek, Morten Ziebell, Torben Mackeprang, Lars Friberg, Hans Rasmussen, Gitte M Knudsen, Birte Y Glentho. [123I]epidepride binding to cerebellar dopamine D2/D3 receptors is displaceable: implications for the use of cerebellum as a reference region. NeuroImage. vol 34. issue 4. 2007-05-14. PMID:17175177. the low density of cerebellar dopamine d(2)/d(3) receptors provides the basis for using the cerebellum as a representation of free- and non-specifically bound radioligand in positron emission tomography (pet) and single photon emission computed tomography (spect) studies. 2007-05-14 2023-08-12 Not clear
Lars H Pinborg, Charlotte Videbaek, Morten Ziebell, Torben Mackeprang, Lars Friberg, Hans Rasmussen, Gitte M Knudsen, Birte Y Glentho. [123I]epidepride binding to cerebellar dopamine D2/D3 receptors is displaceable: implications for the use of cerebellum as a reference region. NeuroImage. vol 34. issue 4. 2007-05-14. PMID:17175177. using the cerebellum as a representation of free and non-specifically bound radioligand and neglecting the specifically bound component may lead to results that erroneously imply that antipsychotic drugs bind to extrastriatal dopamine d(2)/d(3) receptors with a higher affinity than to striatal dopamine d(2)/d(3) receptors. 2007-05-14 2023-08-12 Not clear
Christoph Christmann, Caroline Koeppe, Dieter F Braus, Matthias Ruf, Herta Flo. A simultaneous EEG-fMRI study of painful electric stimulation. NeuroImage. vol 34. issue 4. 2007-05-14. PMID:17178235. higher unpleasantness rating was associated with suppression of activity in areas known to be involved in stimulus categorization and representation (ventral premotor cortex, pcc, parietal operculum, insula) and enhanced activation in areas initiating, propagating, and executing motor reactions (acc, sma proper, cerebellum, primary motor cortex). 2007-05-14 2023-08-12 human
Dennis A Nowak, Helge Topka, Dagmar Timmann, Henning Boecker, Joachim Hermsdörfe. The role of the cerebellum for predictive control of grasping. Cerebellum (London, England). vol 6. issue 1. 2007-05-04. PMID:17366262. one structure which has been related to the neural representation of internal models is the cerebellum. 2007-05-04 2023-08-12 Not clear
Dennis A Nowak, Helge Topka, Dagmar Timmann, Henning Boecker, Joachim Hermsdörfe. The role of the cerebellum for predictive control of grasping. Cerebellum (London, England). vol 6. issue 1. 2007-05-04. PMID:17366262. given its stereotyped cytoarchitecture, the widespread connections with cortical and subcortical sensory-motor structures and the neural activity of cerebellar purkinje cells during sensory-motor tasks, the cerebellum has long been considered to play a major role in the establishment and maintenance of sensory-motor representations related to voluntary movement. 2007-05-04 2023-08-12 Not clear
Eleni Kapreli, Spyros Athanasopoulos, Matilda Papathanasiou, Paul Van Hecke, Dimitrios Keleki, Ronald Peeters, Nikolaos Strimpakos, Stefan Sunaer. Lower limb sensorimotor network: issues of somatotopy and overlap. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 43. issue 2. 2007-04-26. PMID:17405668. although a large overlap was evident in primary sensorimotor cortex (sm1) and cerebellum representations of the three lower limb joints, a somatotopic arrangement was recognizable with reference to center of mass coordinates of each individual joint in the above areas. 2007-04-26 2023-08-12 human
Trygve B Leergaard, Sveinung Lillehaug, Erik De Schutter, James M Bower, Jan G Bjaali. Topographical organization of pathways from somatosensory cortex through the pontine nuclei to tactile regions of the rat cerebellar hemispheres. The European journal of neuroscience. vol 24. issue 10. 2007-01-30. PMID:17156205. the granule cell layer of the cerebellar hemispheres contains a patchy and noncontinuous map of the body surface, consisting of a complex mosaic of multiple perioral tactile representations. 2007-01-30 2023-08-12 rat
Trygve B Leergaard, Sveinung Lillehaug, Erik De Schutter, James M Bower, Jan G Bjaali. Topographical organization of pathways from somatosensory cortex through the pontine nuclei to tactile regions of the rat cerebellar hemispheres. The European journal of neuroscience. vol 24. issue 10. 2007-01-30. PMID:17156205. we discuss the present findings in the context of transformations from cerebral somatotopic to cerebellar fractured tactile representations. 2007-01-30 2023-08-12 rat
Scott H Frey, Valerie E Gerr. Modulation of neural activity during observational learning of actions and their sequential orders. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. vol 26. issue 51. 2007-01-08. PMID:17182769. we find that relative to resting baseline, passive action observation increases activity within inferior frontal and parietal cortices implicated in action encoding (mirror system) and throughout a distributed network of areas involved in motor representation, including dorsal premotor cortex, pre-supplementary motor area, cerebellum, and basal ganglia (experiments 1 and 2). 2007-01-08 2023-08-12 human
Chuh-Hyoun Lie, Karsten Specht, John C Marshall, Gereon R Fin. Using fMRI to decompose the neural processes underlying the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test. NeuroImage. vol 30. issue 3. 2006-10-26. PMID:16414280. non-frontal activations were found to be related to (uninstructed relative to instructed) set-shifting (cerebellum) and working memory representations (superior parietal cortex, retrosplenium). 2006-10-26 2023-08-12 Not clear