Nucleus (Neuroanatomy)

In neuroanatomy, a nucleus is a central nervous system structure that is composed mainly of gray matter, and which acts as a hub or transit point for electrical signals in a single neural subsystem. For example, the lateral geniculate nucleus mediates signals in the vertebrate visual system. The vestibular nucleus stores head motion information and guides eye movements via the vestibulo-ocular reflex. Other examples include the Raphe nucleus, which is involved in sleep, and the suprachiasmatic nucleus, which controls circadian rhythm. All the nerve cell axons terminating on a nucleus tend to employ the same neurotransmitter at their synapses. As a result, the effects of certain psychoactive drugs are concentrated in particular nuclei. Morphine is believed to act via synapses of the arcuate nucleus, for example.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
steve rochinski
democratic farmers' party of germany
shell (projectile)
dbd
european super cup
lifemapper
distributed.net
vision serpent
john knowles
hugh l. dryden
robert todd lincoln
jay rockefeller
kathleen ferrier
goddard space flight center
langley research center
california proposition 53 (2003)
figurine
haimirich
california proposition 54 (2003)
rollout photography
audi alteram partem
cypselus
thomas stevens
exploding bridgewire detonator
herne bay
charles greeley abbot
olive branch petition
biological weapons convention
medical test
panten de dolores
yeovil town f.c.
society for american baseball research
haci osman
angel (disambiguation)
allan cup
traditional korean thought
middle colonies
marianne
biopsy
korean buddhist temples
the man who mistook his wife for a hat
korean confucianism
robert r. gilruth
kaminaljuyu