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  1. Dynamic synchronization of ongoing neuronal activity across spinal segments regulates sensory information flow
  2. Modeling zero-lag synchronization of dorsal horn neurons during the traveling of electrical waves in the cat spinal cord
  3. Differential presynaptic control of the synaptic effectiveness of cutaneous afferents evidenced by effects produced by acute nerve section
  4. Modeling of spontaneous zero-lag synchronization and wave propagation in cat spinal cord
  5. Intersegmental Synchronization of Spontaneous Cord Dorsum Potentials as a Clinical Parameter to Evaluate Changes in Neuronal Connectivity Produced by Peripheral Nerve and Spinal Cord Damage
  6. A new feature extraction method for signal classification applied to cord dorsum potential detection
  7. Changes in correlation between spontaneous activity of dorsal horn neurones lead to differential recruitment of inhibitory pathways in the cat spinal cord
  8. Multichannel Detrended Fluctuation Analysis Reveals Synchronized Patterns of Spontaneous Spinal Activity in Anesthetized Cats
  9. Spinal Neurons and Synapses
  10. In search of lost presynaptic inhibition
  11. Changes in synaptic effectiveness of myelinated joint afferents during capsaicin-induced inflammation of the footpad in the anesthetized cat
  12. Tonic and phasic differential GABAergic inhibition of synaptic actions of joint afferents in the cat
  13. Patterns of primary afferent depolarization of segmental and ascending intraspinal collaterals of single joint afferents in the cat
  14. Persistence of PAD and presynaptic inhibition of muscle spindle afferents after peripheral nerve crush
  15. Tonic differential supraspinal modulation of PAD and PAH of segmental and ascending intraspinal collaterals of single group I muscle afferents in the cat spinal cord
  16. Differential modulation of primary afferent depolarization of segmental and ascending intraspinal collaterals of single muscle afferents in the cat spinal cord
  17. Effects of spinal and peripheral nerve lesions on the intersegmental synchronization of the spontaneous activity of dorsal horn neurons in the cat lumbosacral spinal cord
  18. Selectivity of the Central Control of Sensory Information in the Mammalian Spinal Cord
  19. Chapter 31 Central control of information transmission through the intraspinal arborizations of sensory fibers examined 100 years after Ramón y Cajal
  20. Modulation of synaptic transmission from segmental afferents by spontaneous activity of dorsal horn spinal neurones in the cat
  21. Effects of pad on conduction of action potentials within segmental and ascending branches of single muscle afférents in the cat spinal cord
  22. Primary afferent depolarization produced in Aδ and C fibres by glutamate spillover? New ways to look at old things
  23. Presynaptic inhibition in the vertebrate spinal cord revisited
  24. Presynaptic selection of afferent inflow in the spinal cord
  25. Presynaptic Inhibition and Neural Control Pablo Rudomin Ranulfo Romo Lorne M. Mendell
  26. Chapter 9 Selectivity of Presynaptic Inhibition: a Mechanism for Independent Control of Information Flow through Individual Collaterals of Single Muscle Spindle Afferents
  27. Patterns of connectivity of spinal interneurons with single muscle afferents
  28. Selective cortical and segmental control of primary afferent depolarization of single muscle afferents in the cat spinal cord
  29. Segmental and supraspinal control of synaptic effectiveness of functionally identified muscle afferents in the cat
  30. Changes in PAD patterns of group I muscle afferents after a peripheral nerve crush
  31. Raphe magnus and reticulospinal actions on primary afferent depolarization of group I muscle afferents in the cat.
  32. Selective cortical control of information flow through different intraspinal collaterals of the same muscle afferent fiber
  33. Population synaptic potentials evoked in lumbar motoneurons following stimulation of the nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis during carbachol-induced atonia
  34. Chapter 13 Segmental and descending control of the synaptic effectiveness of muscle afferents
  35. Presynaptic modulation of spinal reflexes
  36. Reticulospinal actions on primary afferent depolarization of cutaneous and muscle afferents in the isolated frog neuraxis
  37. Viewpoints and Controversies
  38. Central Control of Sensory Information
  39. Neuroscience: From Neural Networks to Artificial Intelligence
  40. Differential action of (?)-baclofen on the primary afferent depolarization produced by segmental and descending inputs
  41. Bulbospinal inhibition of PAD elicited by stimulation of afferent and motor axons in the isolated frog spinal cord and brainstem
  42. Differential effects of (?)-baclofen on Ia and descending monosynaptic EPSPs
  43. Effects of stimulation of group I afferents from flexor muscles on heterosynaptic facilitation of monosynaptic reflexes produced by Ia and descending inputs: a test for presynaptic inhibition
  44. Presynaptic inhibition of muscle spindle and tendon organ afferents in the mammalian spinal cord
  45. Supraspinal control of a short-latency cutaneous pathway to hindlimb motoneurons
  46. PAD patterns of physiologically identified afferent fibres from the medial gastrocnemius muscle
  47. Mechanisms involved in the depolarization of cutaneous afferents produced by segmental and descending inputs in the cat spinal cord
  48. Identification of common interneurons mediating pre- and postsynaptic inhibition in the cat spinal cord
  49. Activation of brainstem serotoninergic pathways decreases homosynaptic depression of monosynaptic responses of frog spinal motoneurons
  50. Specific and potassium components in the depolarization of the Ia afferents in the spinal cord of the cat
  51. Presynaptic depolarization of unmyelinated primary afferent fibers in the spinal cord of the cat
  52. Effects of 4-aminopyridine on synaptic transmission in the cat spinal cord
  53. Presynaptic Control of Information Transmission in the Vertebrate Spinal Cord
  54. Depolarization of c fiber terminals of cutaneous nerves in the cat spinal cord
  55. Evidence of two different mechanisms involved in the generation of presynaptic depolarization of afferent and rubrospinal fibers in the cat spinal cord
  56. Locomotion in the decerebrate stingray
  57. The influence of the gamma system on cross-correlated activity of Ia muscle spindles and its relation to information transmission
  58. A method for the dynamic continuous estimation of excitability changes of single fiber terminals in the central nervous system
  59. Facilitation of synaptic activity in the frog spinal cord produced by 4-aminopyridine
  60. The effects of gallamine on field and dorsal root potentials produced by antidromic stimulation of motor fibres in the frog spinal cord
  61. Effects of 4-aminopyridine on transmission in excitatory and inhibitory synapses in the spinal cord
  62. The effect of activation history on tension production by individual muscle units
  63. Ultrastructural observations in the frog spinal cord in relation to the generation of primary afferent depolarization
  64. Is there electrical interaction between motoneurons and afferent fibers in the spinal cord?
  65. Presynaptic modulation of synaptic effectiveness of afferent and ventrolateral tract fibers in the frog spinal cord
  66. Presynaptic modulation of la fiber synaptic effectiveness without concurrent postsynaptic inhibitory conductances
  67. The organization of primary afferent depolarization in the isolated spinal cord of the frog
  68. Primary afferent depolarization and flexion reflexes produced by radiant heat stimulation of the skin
  69. Catch Property in Single Mammalian Motor Units
  70. A tetrodotoxin-resistant primary afferent depolarization
  71. Primary Afferent Depolarization Evoked by a Painful Stimulus
  72. Excitability changes of superior laryngeal, vagal and depressor afferent terminals produced by stimulation of the solitary tract nucleus
  73. The effects of afferent volleys on the correlation between monosynaptically activated motoneurones
  74. The effects of primary afferent depolarization on excitability fluctuations of Ia terminals within the motor nucleus
  75. Effects of Presynaptic and Postsynaptic Inhibition on the Variability of the Monosynaptic Reflex
  76. Primary afferent depolarization produced by vagal visceral afferents
  77. The release of acetylcholine from the spinal cord of the cat by antidromic stimulation of motor nerves
  78. Pharmacological evidence for the existence of interneurons mediating primary afferent depolarization in the solitary tract nucleus of the cat
  79. Some Aspects of the Control of Cricothyroid Muscle Activity
  80. A Dynamic Analysis of Arterial Blood Pressure Control Systems
  81. Induced Arterial Oscillations of Blood Pressure as a Method for Investigating Regulation of Level of Blood Pressure
  82. SECTION OF BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES: ACTION OF LUNG CHEMORECEPTORS ON THE CARDIOINHIBITORY CENTER*