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      Effects of Drought Stress on Chlorophyll Fluorescence Parameters, Chlorophyll Content and Grain Yield of Wheat Cultivars

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      Journal of Biological Sciences
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          Brain circuits for the internal monitoring of movements.

          Each movement we make activates our own sensory receptors, thus causing a problem for the brain: the spurious, movement-related sensations must be discriminated from the sensory inputs that really matter, those representing our environment. Here we consider circuits for solving this problem in the primate brain. Such circuits convey a copy of each motor command, known as a corollary discharge (CD), to brain regions that use sensory input. In the visual system, CD signals may help to produce a stable visual percept from the jumpy images resulting from our rapid eye movements. A candidate pathway for providing CD for vision ascends from the superior colliculus to the frontal cortex in the primate brain. This circuit conveys warning signals about impending eye movements that are used for planning subsequent movements and analyzing the visual world. Identifying this circuit has provided a model for studying CD in other primate sensory systems and may lead to a better understanding of motor and mental disorders.
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            The blinking spotlight of attention.

            Increasing evidence suggests that attention can concurrently select multiple locations; yet it is not clear whether this ability relies on continuous allocation of attention to the different targets (a "parallel" strategy) or whether attention switches rapidly between the targets (a periodic "sampling" strategy). Here, we propose a method to distinguish between these two alternatives. The human psychometric function for detection of a single target as a function of its duration can be used to predict the corresponding function for two or more attended targets. Importantly, the predicted curves differ, depending on whether a parallel or sampling strategy is assumed. For a challenging detection task, we found that human performance was best reflected by a sampling model, indicating that multiple items of interest were processed in series at a rate of approximately seven items per second. Surprisingly, the data suggested that attention operated in this periodic regime, even when it was focused on a single target. That is, attention might rely on an intrinsically periodic process.
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              Intention-related activity in the posterior parietal cortex: a review

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Biological Sciences
                J. of Biological Sciences
                Science Alert
                17273048
                18125719
                June 1 2007
                June 1 2007
                : 7
                : 6
                : 841-847
                Article
                10.3923/jbs.2007.841.847
                8880a30c-2b7f-402e-9e0a-3fd9b67abf28
                © 2007
                History

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