Colloquium on Auditory Neuroscience: Development, Transduction, and Integration /

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Bibliographic Details
Meeting name:Colloquium on Auditory Neuroscience: Development, Transduction, and Integration (2000 : Irvine, Calif.)
Imprint:Washington, D.C. : National Academy of Sciences, 2001.
Description:1 online resource (pages 11690-11857) : illustrations (some color)
Language:English
Series:National Academy of Sciences colloquium series
National Academy of Sciences colloquium series.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11152616
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Hudspeth, A. James.
Konishi, Masakazu, 1933-2020.
ISBN:0309570042
9780309570046
0309074223
9780309074223
Digital file characteristics:data file
Notes:"Reprinted from the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, volume 97, p. 11690-11857, October 24, 2000"--1st prelim page.
Includes bibliographical references.
Print version record.
Other form:Print version: Colloquium on Auditory Neuroscience: Development, Transduction, and Integration (2000 : Irvine, Calif.). Colloquium on Auditory Neuroscience: Development, Transduction, and Integration. Washington, D.C. : National Academy of Sciences, 2001
Table of Contents:
  • COLLOQUIUM ON Auditory Neuroscience: Development, Transduction, and Integration
  • NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
  • National Academy of Sciences Colloquia Bound Reprints Available
  • Contents
  • Introduction
  • AUDITORY NEUROSCIENCE: DEVELOPMENT, TRANSDUCTION, AND INTEGRATION
  • Development of the Inner Ear
  • Transduction of Stimuli in the Inner Ear
  • Processing of Sound in the Brainstem
  • Analysis of Complex Sounds by the Forebrain
  • Colloquium
  • NOTCH SIGNALING IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE INNER EAR: LESSONS FROM DROSOPHILA
  • Materials and Methods
  • Results
  • DiscussionMOLECULAR GENETICS OF PATTERN FORMATION IN THE INNER EAR: DO COMPARTMENT BOUNDARIES PLAY A ROLE?
  • Inner Ear Morphogenesis and Gene Expression Patterns
  • Compartment and Boundary Model of Inner Ear Development
  • Sensory Organs Arise at the Boundaries of Broader Gene Expression Domains
  • The Endolymphatic Duct Arises at a Putative Medial-Lateral (M-L) Boundary
  • Lineage-Restriction Compartments in the Dorsal Otocyst Revealed by Fate Mapping the Chicken Otic Cup
  • Three Compartments Appear to Intersect at the Dorsal Pole of the Vesicle
  • Is the Hindbrain a Source of Patterning Information for Inner Ear A-P Compartments?Testing a Compartment Boundary Model of Ear Morphogenesis
  • PATTERNING OF THE MAMMALIAN COCHLEA
  • Gross Development of the Cochlea
  • Gross Patterning of the Cochlea
  • Conclusion
  • CELLULAR STUDIES OF AUDITORY HAIR CELL REGENERATION IN BIRDS
  • Hair Cells: Old and New
  • Methods for Stimulating Hair Cell Regeneration in the Basilar Papilla
  • Avian Hair Cell Progenitors: Identity and Behavior
  • Repatterning the Mature Sensory Epithelium
  • Whatâ€?s Wrong with Us?
  • HAIR CELL RECOVERY IN MITOTICALLY BLOCKED CULTURES OF THE BULLFROG SACCULEMitotic HC Regeneration
  • Nonmitotic HC Regeneration
  • Normal and Mitotically Blocked Cultures of the Bullfrog Saccule
  • Cell Proliferation in Saccular Cultures
  • Morphology and Immunoreactivity in MBC Cultures
  • Morphology and Immunoreactivity in MBGT Cultures
  • HC Loss and Recovery in MBGT Cultures
  • Transitional Cells and Immature Hair Cells in MBGT Cultures
  • Scar Formation and SC Loss During HC Recovery
  • Conclusions
  • TWO MECHANISMS FOR TRANSDUCER ADAPTATION IN VERTEBRATE HAIR CELLSTransduction Model
  • Calcium Metabolism
  • Adaptation
  • Future Directions
  • COCHLEAR MECHANISMS FROM A PHYLOGENETIC VIEWPOINT
  • The Tympanic Middle Ear as the Initiator of Profound Change
  • The Lineages of Modern Amniotes and Their Characteristic Hearing-Organ Morphologies
  • Frequency-Selectivity Mechanisms and Tonotopicity from a Phylogenetic Viewpoint
  • Coding of Intensity from a Phylogenetic Viewpoint
  • The Phytogeny of the Cochlear Amplifier