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Systems Research
CELLULAR BASIS OF SENSORY INFORMATION PROCESSING:
Sound, light, tactile, and chemical stimuli are translated
into neural signals. The brain must process this information
using neurons, neural networks, and synapses and ultimately
create what we recognize as a sensory experience. This study
of this underlying machinery is the heart of the cellular
basis of information processing. Within the Department of
Neuroscience are laboratories that study the cellular basis
of sound localization, neural networks, neurotransmitters,
synapse formation, and employ anatomical and electrophysiological
methods both in vivo and in vitro.
Systems neuroscience follows the pathways
of information flow within the central nervous system, attempts
to define the kinds of processing occurring there, and uses
this information to help explain behavioral functions. Investigators
work to understand sensory and perceptual systems and motor
control. Research groups are asking how axonal systems develop,
how they respond to damage, and how they change as a result
of alterations in internal, chemical, and sensory environmental
conditions. |