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 | CREATING COORDINATION IN THE CEREBELLUM, 148
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To order this title, and for more information, click here
Edited By
Chris I. De Zeeuw, Department of Neurosciences, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Federico Cicirata, Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiologiche, Universita Catania, Catania, Italy
Included in series
Progress in Brain Research, 148
Description
Creating Coordination in the Cerebellum provides a multidisciplinary collection of chapters on the cerebellum with topics covering
the entire spectrum from development and molecular neurobiology, cell physiology and plasticity to motor control, system physiology,
functional imaging and pathology. The book not only presents novel discoveries obtained with recently developed technologies, but also
gives new general concepts in global issues of cerebellar development and functions. By doing so it sets the standard for cerebellar
research of the 21st century.
Audience
Neuroscientists, neurobiologists and neurologists.
Contents
List of contributors.
Preface by Jan Voogd.
Acknowledgements.
I. Development of the cerebellum.
1. Development of the olivocerebellar
system: migration and formation of cerebellar maps C. Sotelo and A. Chedotal.
2. The genetics of early cerebellar development:
networks not pathways K. Herrup, C. Murcia, F. Gulden, B. Kuemerle and N. Bilovocky.
3. Regionalization of the isthmic and cerebellar
primordial N. Narboux-Neme, A. Louvi, P. Alexandre and M. Wassef.
4. Bcl-2 protection of axotomized purkinje cells in organotypic
culture is age dependent and not associated with an enhancement of axonal regeneration A.M. Ghoumari, R. Wehrle, C. Sotelo and I.
Dusart.
II. Structural cerebellar plasticity.
5. Axonal and synaptic remodeling in the mature cerebellar cortex R. Cesa
and P. Strata.
6. Fate restriction and developmental potential of cerebellar progenitors: Transplantation studies in the developing
CNS P. Grimaldi, B. Carletti, L. Magrassi and F. Rossi.
III. Cell physiological cerebellar plasticity.
7. Long-term
potentiation of synaptic transmission at the mossy fiber - granule cell relay of cerebellum E. D'Angelo, P. Rossi, D. Gall, F. Pestori,
T. Nieus, A. Maffei and E. Sola.
8. Climbing fiber synaptic plasticity and modifications in Purkinje cell excitabilityM.T. Schmolesky,
C.I. De Zeeuw and C. Hansel.
9. Bases and implications of learning in the cerebellum - adaptive control and internal model mechanism M. Ito.
IV. Imaging of cerebellar activity.
10. Synaptic transmission and long-term depression in Purkinje cells in an
in vitro block preparation of the cerebellum isolated from neonatal ratsA. Arata, and M. Ito.
11. Optical imaging of cerebellar
functional architectures: Parallel fiber beams, parasagittal bands and spreading acidification T.J. Ebner, G. Chen, W. Gao and K.
Reinert.
12. Imaging cerebellum activity in real time with magnetoencephalographic data A.A. Ioannides and P.B.C. Fenwick.
13. The cerebellum in the cerebro-cerebellar network for the control of eye and hand movements - a fMRI study M.F. Nitschke, T. Arp,
G. Stavrou, C. Erdmann and W. Heide.
V. Oscillations and synchrony in cerebellar cortex and inferior olive.
14. Fast oscillation
in the cerebellar cortex of calcium binding protein-deficient mice: a new sensorimotor arrest rhythm G. Cheron, L. Servais, B. Dan,
D. Gall, C. Roussel and S.N. Schiffmann.
15. Oscillations in the cerebellar cortex: a prediction of their frequency bands R.
Maex and E. De Schutter.
16. Gap junctions synchronize synaptic input rather than spike output of olivary neurons W. Kistler,
C.I. De Zeeuw.
VI. Cerebellar motor control.
17. Is the cerebellum ready for navigation? L. Rondi-Reig and E. Burguiere.
18. The lateral cerebellum and visuomotor controlN.L. Cerminara, A.L. Edge, D.E. Marple-Horvat and R. Apps.
19. Coupling of
hand and foot voluntary oscillations in patients suffering from cerebellar ataxia: Different effect of lateral or medial lesions on coordination G. Cerri, R. Esposti, M. Locatelli and P. Cavallari.
20. Modulation of cutaneous reflexes in hindlimb muscles during locomotion
in the freely walking rat; A model for studying cerebellar involvement in the adaptive control of reflexes during rhythmic movements R. Bronsing, J. Van der Burg and T.J.H. Ruigrok.
VII. Cerebellar neuro-anatomical organization.
21. The basilar pontine
nuclei and the nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis subserve distinct cerebrocerebellar pathways F. Cicirata, M.F. Serapide, R. Parenti,
M.R. Panto, A. Zappala, A. Nicotra and D. Cicero.
22. Conservation of the architecture of the anterior lobe vermis of the cerebellum
across mammalian species R.V. Sillitoe, H. Marzban, M. Larouche, S. Zahedi, J. Affanni, and R. Hawkes.
VIII. Excitability
in cerebellar cortex.
23. Pharmacology of the metabotropic glutamate receptor mediated current at the climbing fiber to Purkinje
cell synapse L. Zhu, P. Strata and P.R. Andjus.
24. Nicotinic receptor modulation of neurotransmitter release in the cerebellum
G. De Filippi, T. Baldwinson and E. Sher.
25. Role of calcium binding proteins in the control of cerebellar granule cell neuronal
excitability: experimental and modeling studies D. Gall, C. Roussel, T. Nieus, G. Cheron, L. Servais, E. D'Angelo and S.N. Schiffmann.
26. Between in and out: Linking morphology and physiology of cerebellar cortical interneuronsJ.L. Simpson, H.C. Hulscher, E. Sabel-Goedknegt
and T.J.H. Ruigrok.
IX. Cerebellar pathology.
27. Sexual dismorphism in cerebellar structure, function and response to
environmental perturbationsK. Nguon, B. Ladd, M.G. Baxter and E.M. Sajdel-Sulkowska.
28. Cerebellar dysfunction in multiple
sclerosis: Evidence for an acquired channelopathyS.G. Waxman.
29. Don't get too excited: Mechanisms of glutamate-mediated Purkinje
cell death J.E. Slemmer, C.I. De Zeeuw and J.T. Weber.
X. Epilogue.
30. Epilogue R.R. Llinas.
Bibliographic & ordering Information
Hardbound, 430 pages, publication date: DEC-2004
ISBN-13: 978-0-444-51754-8
ISBN-10: 0-444-51754-5
Imprint: ELSEVIER
Price: Order form
USD 250 GBP 125 EUR 185
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Last update: 29 Aug 2008
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