29 results match your criteria: "University Medical Center Freiburg Freiburg[Affiliation]"

Regulation of action potential delays via voltage-gated potassium Kv1.1 channels in dentate granule cells during hippocampal epilepsy.

Front Cell Neurosci

December 2013

Cellular Neurophysiology, Department of Neurosurgery, University Medical Center Freiburg Freiburg, Germany ; Oscar Langendorff Institute of Physiology, University of Rostock Rostock, Germany.

Action potential (AP) responses of dentate gyrus granule (DG) cells have to be tightly regulated to maintain hippocampal function. However, which ion channels control the response delay of DG cells is not known. In some neuron types, spike latency is influenced by a dendrotoxin (DTX)-sensitive delay current (ID) mediated by unidentified combinations of voltage-gated K(+) (Kv) channels of the Kv1 family Kv1.

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Intention concepts and brain-machine interfacing.

Front Psychol

November 2012

Epilepsy Center, University Medical Center Freiburg Freiburg, Germany ; Institute for Biology III, University of Freiburg Freiburg, Germany ; Bernstein Center Freiburg, University of Freiburg Freiburg, Germany.

Intentions, including their temporal properties and semantic content, are receiving increased attention, and neuroscientific studies in humans vary with respect to the topography of intention-related neural responses. This may reflect the fact that the kind of intentions investigated in one study may not be exactly the same kind investigated in the other. Fine-grained intention taxonomies developed in the philosophy of mind may be useful to identify the neural correlates of well-defined types of intentions, as well as to disentangle them from other related mental states, such as mere urges to perform an action.

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Human brain processes underlying real-life social interaction in everyday situations have been difficult to study and have, until now, remained largely unknown. Here, we investigated whether electrocorticography (ECoG) recorded for pre-neurosurgical diagnostics during the daily hospital life of epilepsy patients could provide a way to elucidate the neural correlates of non-experimental social interaction. We identified time periods in which patients were involved in conversations with either their respective life partners (Condition 1; C1) or attending physicians (Condition 2; C2).

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