119 research outputs found

    Basal ganglia glucose utilization after recent precentral ablation in the monkey

    Full text link
    In the macaque monkey, unilateral ablation of areas 4 and 6 of Brodmann result initially in a signficant decrease of glucose metabolic activity in the ipsilateral caudate nucleus, putamen, globus pallidus, substantia nigra, and subthalamic nucleus. The contralateral hemisphere shows nonsignificant but consistently decreased activity in the caudate nucleus, putamen, and globus pallidus. Cerebral blood flow is decreased in the same pattern as the glucose metabolic activity. The change in glucose metabolic activity result from loss of neurons known to project directly from the cerebral cortex to the basal ganglia and also from indirect effect(diaschisis) in basal ganglia structures that do not receive connections from the cerebral cortex.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/50310/1/410170503_ftp.pd

    Quisqualate- and NMDA-sensitive [ 3 H]glutamate binding in primate brain

    Full text link
    Excitatory amino acids (EAA) such as glutamate and aspartate are probably the neurotransmitters of a majority of mammalian neurons. Only a few previous studies have been concerned with the distribution of the subtypes of EAA receptor binding in the primate brain. We examined NMDA- and quisqualate-sensitive [ 3 H]glutamate binding using quantitative autoradiography in monkey brain (Macaca fascicularis) . The two types of binding were differentially distributed. NMDA-sensitive binding was most dense in dentate gyrus of hippocampus, stratum pyramidale of hippocampus, and outer layers of cerebral cortex. Quisqualate-sensitive binding was most dense in dentate gyrus of hippocampus, inner and outer layers of cerebral cortex, and molecular layer of cerebellum. In caudate nucleus and putamen, quisqualate- and NMDA-sensitive binding sites were nearly equal in density. However, in globus pallidus, substantia nigra, and subthalamic nucleus, quisqualate-sensitive binding was several-fold greater than NMDA-sensitive binding. In thalamus, [ 3 H]glutamate binding was generally low for both subtypes of binding except for the anterior ventral, lateral dorsal, and pulvinar nuclei. In the brainstem, low levels of binding were found, and strikingly the red nucleus and pons, which are thought to receive glutamatergic projections, had approximately 1/20 the binding observed in cerebral cortex. These results demonstrate that NMDA- and quisqualate-sensitive [ 3 H]glutamate binding are observed in all regions of primate brain, but that in some regions one subtype predominates over the other. In addition, certain areas thought to receive glutamatergic projections have low levels of both types of binding.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/50225/1/490270412_ftp.pd

    Spontaneous neuronal unit activity in the primate basal ganglia and the effects of precentral cerebral cortical ablations

    Full text link
    The discharge properties of single neuronal units in the putamen, caudate nucleus, and globus pallidus were studied in awake primates. The effects of restricted deafferentation of the striatum were determined by recording single unit activity in animals with unilateral ablation of areas 4 and 6 of Brodmann. The most striking change was on the regularity of unit firing in the putamen. Units in the normal putamen exhibited a wide range of firing rates and variability. In many units discharge rate was very slow. After the lesion, putaminal units discharged in steady spike trains with highly regular patterns of interspike intervals having on average a 63% reduction in the coefficient of variation. Contrary to expectations, average firing rates actually increased slightly (22%) from a median value of 4.88 Hz in controls to 5.95 Hz in lesioned animals. Although the rates and variability observed in lesioned animals completely overlapped the range of the sample observed in controls, the distributions were shifted such that there were more units with regular discharge patterns and slightly faster firing rates. The caudate nucleus showed no significant change in firing rate or variability. In the globus pallidus, firing rate decreased significantly in the internal segment, and both segments showed an increase in discharge variability. The findings demonstrate that the cerebral cortex strongly influences the spontaneous discharge properties in the basal ganglia. The effects on the variability of spontaneous activity are greater than on the maintenance of tonic firing.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/28574/1/0000377.pd

    A densitometer for quantitative autoradiography

    Full text link
    A low cost spot densitometer system is described. This system is useful for quantitative autoradiography of local cerebral glucose utilization, blood flow, receptor binding and other applications requiring densitometry on films. The densitometer can be used alone or interfaced to a microcomputer.The densitometer consists of a photographic enlarger, a digital multimeter, and the densitometer electronics. We have described how to construct, test and use the densitometer and how to interface the densitometer to a microcomputer.The advantages of this system are: (1) the ability to enlarge the image for accurate measurements from `small' areas; (2) a completely unobscured image during measurement; (3) low cost and (4) ease of use.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/25072/1/0000503.pd

    Computer-assisted estimates of lesion sizes and shrinkage in denervated areas from receptor autoradiograms using a digitizing tablet

    Full text link
    Area measurements taken from receptor autoradiograms were employed to estimate the size of striatal kainate lesions and the amount of shrinkage in deafferented projection areas. There was no significant difference in the size of substantia nigra (SN) on the denervated side as compared to the intact side one week and one month after unilateral striatal lesions. Although there was no change in the size of globus pallidus (GP) on the lesioned side one week after the lesion, there was a 17% shrinkage one month after the lesion. At 3-4 months after the lesion, the amount of shrinkage was 19% in SN and 16% in GP.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/24901/1/0000328.pd

    Non-adiabatic and time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy for molecular systems

    Get PDF
    We quantify the non-adiabatic contributions to the vibronic sidebands of equilibrium and explicitly time-resolved non-equilibrium photoelectron spectra for a vibronic model system of Trans-Polyacetylene. Using exact diagonalization, we directly evaluate the sum-over-states expressions for the linear-response photocurrent. We show that spurious peaks appear in the Born-Oppenheimer approximation for the vibronic spectral function, which are not present in the exact spectral function of the system. The effect can be traced back to the factorized nature of the Born-Oppenheimer initial and final photoemission states and also persists when either only initial, or final states are replaced by correlated vibronic states. Only when correlated initial and final vibronic states are taken into account, the spurious spectral weights of the Born-Oppenheimer approximation are suppressed. In the non-equilibrium case, we illustrate for an initial Franck-Condon excitation and an explicit pump-pulse excitation how the vibronic wavepacket motion of the system can be traced in the time-resolved photoelectron spectra as function of the pump-probe delay

    Job Creation and Trade in Manufactures: Industry-Level Analysis Across Countries

    Get PDF
    This paper examines industry-level responses of manufacturing employment in the context of globalization using a large sample of developed, developing, and transition economies. We find that developing countries need atypically high rates of value-added growth (about 10 %) to increase manufacturing employment appreciably (about 4 %). The employment benefits of export orientation are also modest even in “comparative advantage” industries of developing countries. However, diversifying the export basket contributes significantly to employment growth, particularly in the medium- and high-technology industries. Import competition does not undermine employment growth in low-technology industries of developing countries while it displaces jobs in the same industries in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and transition economies. For developing countries, import-induced job losses are higher in the more capital-intensive medium-technology industries. Jobs in high-technology industries are less sensitive to imports with positive relationships observed in the OECD. Investment also complements job creation in low-technology industries of developing countries that have yet to industrialize

    Exporting and labor demand : micro-level evidence from Germany

    Get PDF
    It is widely believed that globalization affcts the extent of employment and wage responses to economic shocks. To provide evidence for this, we analyze the effect of firms' exporting behavior on the elasticity of labor demand. Using rich, German administrative linked employer-employee panel data from 1996 to 2008, we explicitly control for self-selection into exporting and endogeneity concerns. In line with our theoretical model, we find that exporting at both the intensive and extensive margins significantly increases the (absolute value of the) unconditional own-wage labor demand elasticity. This is not only true for the average worker, but also for different skill groups. For the median firm, the elasticity is three-quarters higher when comparing exporting to nonexporting firms

    Age and skill bias of trade liberalisation? : heterogeneous employment effects of EU Eastern Enlargement

    Get PDF
    This study analyses the 2004 Eastern Enlargement to the European Union to obtain evidence on the employment effects of an increase in trade liberalisation. The Enlargement is thought to generate a trade-induced demand shock with no (or only limited) supply effects. Besides the variation over time induced by the Enlargement, identification of the effects is based on a Melitz (2003) type productivity term to differentiate firms by the extent of exposure to the demand shock. The idea is that the effects of the demand shock should be driven by differences in firm-level productivity from the period before the new member countries actually entered the EU. German linked employer-employee data allow to observe the relation of initial establishment productivity with employment changes over a long panel from 1995 to 2009. The estimates show that the Enlargement had a negative effect on establishment-level employment growth, which is driven by increased worker separations and increased job destruction. Besides the overall employment effect, the study focuses on effect heterogeneity across age and skill groups of the workforce. These estimates point to a skill bias in the effect of the Enlargement that disadvantages low- and medium-skilled workers in terms of higher worker separation and job destruction. In addition, lowskilled workers suffer fewer accessions by firms, where against medium-skilled workers enjoy increased accessions and creation of new jobs. Besides this indication for a skill bias, there are no clear indications that point to an age bias in the employment effect of the Eastern Enlargement
    corecore