47 research outputs found

    THTR 294.01: Seminar - Professional Skills

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    THTR 395.04: Practicum - Montana Rep

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    THTR 595.01: Practicum - Directing - Montana Rep

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    THTR 595.05: Practicum - Montana Rep

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    THTR 320.02: Acting III

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    THTR 323.01: Auditioning

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    THTR 677.01: Problems in Directing

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    THTR 532.01: Graduate Seminar in Dramaturgy

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    THTR 332.01: Dramaturgy

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    Light-Induced Responses of Slow Oscillatory Neurons of the Rat Olivary Pretectal Nucleus

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    Background: The olivary pretectal nucleus (OPN) is a small midbrain structure responsible for pupil constriction in response to eye illumination. Previous electrophysiological studies have shown that OPN neurons code light intensity levels and therefore are called luminance detectors. Recently, we described an additional population of OPN neurons, characterized by a slow rhythmic pattern of action potentials in light-on conditions. Rhythmic patterns generated by these cells last for a period of approximately 2 minutes. Methodology: To answer whether oscillatory OPN cells are light responsive and whether oscillatory activity depends on retinal afferents, we performed in vivo electrophysiology experiments on urethane anaesthetized Wistar rats. Extracellular recordings were combined with changes in light conditions (light-dark-light transitions), brief light stimulations of the contralateral eye (diverse illuminances) or intraocular injections of tetrodotoxin (TTX). Conclusions: We found that oscillatory neurons were able to fire rhythmically in darkness and were responsive to eye illumination in a manner resembling that of luminance detectors. Their firing rate increased together with the strength of the light stimulation. In addition, during the train of light pulses, we observed two profiles of responses: oscillationpreserving and oscillation-disrupting, which occurred during low- and high-illuminance stimuli presentation respectively. Moreover, we have shown that contralateral retina inactivation eliminated oscillation and significantly reduced the firin
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