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Publications of year 1987

Books and proceedings
  1. M. B. Green, J. H. Schwarz, and E. Witten. Superstring theory, volume 2. Cambridge Monographs on Mathematical Physics, 1987.
    Keywords: physics, strings theory.
    @Book{gree_schw_witt,
    author = {Green, M. B. and Schwarz, J. H. and Witten, E.},
    editor = {},
    title = {Superstring theory},
    volume = {2},
    publisher = {Cambridge Monographs on Mathematical Physics},
    year = {1987},
    keywords = {physics, strings theory},
    rating = {B} 
    }
    


Articles in journal or book chapters
  1. M. A. Meredith, J. W. Nemitz, and B.E. Stein. Determinants of multisensory integration in superior colliculus neurons. I. Temporal factors. Journal of Neuroscience, 10:3215-3229, 1987.
    Keywords: sensory integration, perception, neuroscience.

    Abstract: One of the most impressive features of the central nervous system is its ability to process information from a variety of stimuli to produce an integrated, comprehensive representation of the external world. In the present study, the temporal disparity among combinations of different sensory stimuli was shown to be a critical factor influencing the integration of multisensory stimuli by superior colliculus neurons. Several temporal principles that govern multisensory integration were revealed: (1) maximal levels of response enhancement were generated by overlapping the peak discharge periods evoked by each modality; (2) the magnitude of this enhancement decayed monotonically to zero as the peak discharge periods became progressively more temporally disparate; (3) with further increases in temporal disparity, the same stimulus combinations that previously produced enhancement could often produce depression; and (4) these kinds of interactions could frequently be predicted from the discharge trains initiated by each stimulus alone. Since multisensory superior colliculus neurons project to premotor areas of the brain stem and spinal cord that control the orientation of the receptor organs (eyes, pinnae, head), they are believed to influence attentive and orientation behaviors. Therefore, it is likely that the temporal relationships of different environmental stimuli that control the activity of these neurons are also a powerful determinant of superior colliculus-mediated attentive and orientation behaviors.

    @Article{mere_nami_stei_87,
    author = {Meredith, M. A. and Nemitz, J. W. and Stein, B.E.},
    title = {Determinants of multisensory integration in superior colliculus neurons. I. Temporal factors},
    journal = {Journal of Neuroscience},
    year = {1987},
    volume = {10},
    pages = {3215-3229},
    abstract = {One of the most impressive features of the central nervous system is its ability to process information from a variety of stimuli to produce an integrated, comprehensive representation of the external world. In the present study, the temporal disparity among combinations of different sensory stimuli was shown to be a critical factor influencing the integration of multisensory stimuli by superior colliculus neurons. Several temporal principles that govern multisensory integration were revealed: (1) maximal levels of response enhancement were generated by overlapping the peak discharge periods evoked by each modality; (2) the magnitude of this enhancement decayed monotonically to zero as the peak discharge periods became progressively more temporally disparate; (3) with further increases in temporal disparity, the same stimulus combinations that previously produced enhancement could often produce depression; and (4) these kinds of interactions could frequently be predicted from the discharge trains initiated by each stimulus alone. Since multisensory superior colliculus neurons project to premotor areas of the brain stem and spinal cord that control the orientation of the receptor organs (eyes, pinnae, head), they are believed to influence attentive and orientation behaviors. Therefore, it is likely that the temporal relationships of different environmental stimuli that control the activity of these neurons are also a powerful determinant of superior colliculus-mediated attentive and orientation behaviors.},
    url = {http://www.jneurosci.org/cgi/content/abstract/7/10/3215},
    rating = {B},
    keywords = {sensory integration, perception, neuroscience} 
    }
    



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Comments and ratings are for personnal use, they do not claim to reflect academic value. It is only an indication of their relevance with respect to my own interests and the success they happened to have in the scientific community.



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Last modified: Tue Dec 7 18:47:06 2004
Author: davidp.


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