Publications by authors named "G P Nase"

Trans-cranial imaging is the least invasive method for optical in vivo studies of structures in the mouse brain and has found wide application over the last few years. An important issue is how and to what extent the cranium and the tissue between the cranium and the focal point detract from the quality of the recorded images. Here we address this issue by recording transmission images in wild type mice at five wavelengths in the visible and near-infrared spectrum.

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The process of brain edema formation has been studied extensively at the macroscopic level. In contrast, little is known about water fluxes and volume changes at the cellular level in the initial phase of brain edema. Insight in these "microscopic" events could pave the way for more efficient prevention and therapy.

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Many studies have suggested that endothelial cells can act as "oxygen sensors" to large reductions in oxygen availability by increasing nitric oxide (NO) production. This study determined whether small reductions in oxygen availability enhanced NO production from in vivo intestinal arterioles, venules, and parenchymal cells. In vivo measurements of perivascular NO concentration ([NO]) were made with NO-sensitive microelectrodes during normoxic and reduced oxygen availability.

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Synchronization of neuronal discharges has been hypothesized to play a role in defining cell assemblies representing particular constellations of stimulus features. In many systems and species, synchronization is accompanied by an oscillatory response modulation at frequencies in the gamma-band. The cellular mechanisms underlying these phenomena of synchronization and oscillatory patterning have been studied mainly in vitro due to the difficulty in designing a direct in vivo assay.

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Inefficient visual search can become efficient with practice [Vision Research 35 (1995) 2037; 40 (2000) 2925]. In this study, we wondered whether this improvement depends on unique visual features associated with the target, on differences in item-specific brightness distribution between target and distractors, or only on a change in the allocation of attention and thus global search strategy. We found that both, unique visual features and differences in brightness distribution lead to parallelisation with practice of originally inefficient search.

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