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00:01 | All right, now, I think can get started. Only have a |
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00:04 | windows opened. I can't even find I'm looking for. Here we |
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00:10 | And here we are the day before exam. Some of your panicking. |
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00:16 | , not really, but at least me and going What's on the |
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00:19 | Everything's on the exam. Everything we about, everything we're gonna talk about |
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00:23 | be on example up through today's Andi, I don't think we'll take |
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00:27 | time hoping we don't take the entire . I can't promise that because you've |
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00:31 | how slow I talk. Even though talked like a auctioneer. And what |
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00:35 | gonna do today is we're gonna look we're gonna take that information that we've |
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00:38 | looking at this idea of great potentials action potentials and sales talking to each |
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00:42 | . We're gonna kind of try to it all together to understand what's going |
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00:45 | inside the nervous system before we actually into the nervous system. And in |
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00:49 | , if you think about what are things that we've been covering? This |
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00:51 | have you guys even thought about Like what if I've been learning you |
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00:54 | always do that whenever you're in a is kind of just kind of take |
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00:57 | step back and say, what was point? And if the answer |
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01:00 | I don't know, Then one of things happened. Either Professor really |
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01:06 | which is a possibility. I'm not pretend like that's not a possibility. |
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01:10 | you weren't pick getting the big And so if you kind of look |
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01:14 | the big Unit, what have we learning? We've been learning baseline how |
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01:18 | body works, how cells talk to other, right? How they communicate |
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01:22 | general, what the general structure is what the overall layout is. And |
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01:27 | is gonna propel us into all the field. So it doesn't matter which |
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01:30 | you're actually looking in or where you're you are in the body, you |
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01:33 | . Oh, yeah. Cells talk each other. So if I know |
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01:37 | sells, talk to each other and is how it works in one |
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01:39 | this is must be the way it in another system, which is so |
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01:41 | easier, une easier way toe learn rather than trying to memorize each and |
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01:46 | system individually. It's dealing with broader concepts and bringing it together. |
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01:52 | so that's kind of where we are here is we're taking these little tiny |
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01:56 | were kind of bringing them all And what we're looking at is something |
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01:59 | not going to see a lot of we look a cardiac muscle. This |
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02:02 | an electrical synapse, and I bring up now just so we could get |
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02:05 | out of the way that we could forward. The electrical synapse simply is |
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02:08 | two cells talk to each other and connected by connections, right? And |
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02:12 | the idea is that you're moving ions between cells. Most cells don't do |
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02:18 | . Remember how the most cells Are they connected to each other? |
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02:22 | . So how did they talk to other? Chemicals. They throw chemicals |
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02:26 | each other. Right? And so . What we have is you can |
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02:28 | the gap junctions and saying, I'm passing arms back and forth and |
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02:32 | two different ways that we can do . We have what is called reciprocal |
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02:35 | what is called rectifying. Reciprocal is of what they're trying to show you |
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02:39 | If you look closely, you can a little tiny arrows, Um, |
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02:44 | in here and saying, Look, going this way and I'm going that |
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02:48 | , right? And so what we here is we have current moving in |
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02:52 | different directions and so they're talking to another like so and so it's kind |
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02:57 | this rolling. Uh, this rolling basically is equally efficient in both |
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03:03 | Said be reciprocal. Rectifying, on other hand, is one, uh |
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03:08 | one direction, and that's what's really of being shown up here. Even |
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03:12 | this is the same picture, they of threw it in here. It's |
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03:15 | , Look, the current Onley allows to go in one direction. And |
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03:19 | course, if I keep allowing that happen, eventually I'll reach equilibrium. |
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03:22 | what I have to do, I to let the ions out of the |
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03:25 | and the islands come back into the cell, and it just keeps flowing |
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03:29 | that direction, right? It would like walking out of this door to |
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03:33 | right, running around the hallway, back in and saying, Okay, |
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03:36 | just gonna run back through the door right. And so you basically |
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03:40 | have a current flowing in a particular . So electrical synapses can use one |
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03:45 | these two methods. Um, in you're going to see in the future |
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03:49 | not really going to dive deep into . I'm just trying to show you |
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03:52 | , you know, it's there's there's and layers of complication underneath all this |
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03:57 | because what we're interested in in the that our body mostly signals is through |
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04:02 | synapses. All right, through these signals now a synapse is simply the |
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04:11 | between a neuron and its target. right, that's the easiest way to |
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04:16 | it. It's basically we take that on terminal. We bring it |
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04:20 | very close to the cell in which going to be talking. So this |
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04:24 | a form of peregrine interaction, Because that's what peregrine meant and what |
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04:31 | like. It's like you and your in a car. Remember? We've |
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04:37 | talked about this. I think I it once before. Did you? |
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04:39 | have siblings? You guys in here siblings here? Did you ever play |
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04:43 | I'm not touching you game? You what that is? that's when you |
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04:46 | right up. Next time you put hand right in their face, you |
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04:49 | be mad at me. I'm not you and they kind of sit there |
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04:52 | go right. You can't. That's going on. Here is these two |
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04:56 | are almost touching, but not And so what we have is we |
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05:02 | a cell that is the sending selling . We have a cell that's a |
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05:05 | sell. The sending sells the pre sell. The receiving sells the post |
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05:09 | sell. The connection between them is to as the synapse, the space |
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05:14 | between them. Right here. Everything there is called the synaptic cleft. |
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05:22 | so what we have is we have close interaction and so in action potential |
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05:28 | what is going to be sending a along the length of the acts on |
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05:32 | to this point right here. And can see the little lightning bolt flashes |
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05:36 | on the ax on those they're supposed represent action potentials traveling. And we |
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05:44 | , if you listen to the video I posted last night, so sorry |
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05:46 | make you have to listen an extra minutes of me, right? But |
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05:50 | learned that an action potential is simply opening and closing of voltage. Gated |
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05:54 | . Which type of voltage? Gated You guys remember? No, it |
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06:02 | like I didn't watch that Sodium. it's a vulture. Gated sodium |
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06:07 | That's the opening. And then the of the vulture gated potassium channel in |
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06:11 | voltage gated sodium closes so that you see this peak and this fall, |
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06:17 | this is gonna be along the entire of the ax on and then So |
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06:21 | is how the ax potential propagates itself how it rolls. It basically moves |
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06:26 | the way down the length and it down here. And when you finally |
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06:29 | down here to the acts on you no longer have these voltage |
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06:33 | sodium and potassium channels. You change type of channels you have. So |
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06:37 | you have different channels, what do expect? Different responses, right? |
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06:44 | so that's what happens. Instead, have a voltage gated calcium channels, |
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06:47 | you're no longer propagating a signal. you're responding to the signal. And |
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06:52 | what happens is is calcium comes rushing , and when calcium comes rushing |
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06:58 | It causes so calcium comes in. causes vesicles containing neurotransmitter to move to |
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07:07 | into the terminal to the pre synaptic and open up and release its contents |
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07:13 | the synaptic cleft. And now you a chemical signal. Chemical signal moves |
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07:19 | the synaptic cleft binds to a receptor causes a channel to open on the |
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07:25 | synaptic cell. And on the post sell, you're getting a response. |
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07:30 | response would be a grated potential. right, so what we have here |
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07:35 | we've got action potential results in the of neuro transmitter through a couple of |
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07:40 | tiny steps that will go over again again and again until you're sticking of |
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07:44 | it right, which causes the opening a channel in the post synaptic |
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07:49 | which produces a greater potential and with potentials. I can do things with |
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07:54 | one of things I could do with potentials, I can produce an action |
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07:58 | . If the greater potential is strong . I can signal or cause If |
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08:03 | next in line is is another I can create another action potential, |
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08:07 | I could literally have a cell tell cell to fire, which tells another |
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08:10 | of fire, which tells another cellar , which tells another cell to |
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08:13 | And when I say that it sounds stupid, well, why should be |
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08:17 | far? Well, because they're processing . Alright, each of these |
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08:21 | when they're when they're responding, that part of the process. Just like |
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08:26 | computer chip. I'm gonna pretend like don't know how computer chips work. |
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08:30 | here know how computer chip works? , no resistors and circuits. |
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08:34 | So let's all just pretend like we . And that's kind of what's going |
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08:38 | the side of cell. It's the circuitry of the brain. Each cell |
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08:44 | responding to that signal to create a . All right, now, this |
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08:50 | path pattern you can see it's what refer to as being unit directional once |
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08:55 | raised all the ink, so notice moving down the pre synaptic side, |
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09:01 | I'm causing a response in the post cell. The post synaptic cell isn't |
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09:08 | right back there, not having a . It's one cell telling the next |
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09:13 | to do. That's what's occurring at synapse. Now we're going to see |
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09:18 | we can have a conversation in both . But the neuro transmitter and that |
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09:24 | from the actual potential to the neurotransmitter producing that greater potential is uni |
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09:29 | It's always pre synaptic to post Yes. No, the calcium is |
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09:36 | , the calcium is flowing into the synaptic cell. We're gonna We're gonna |
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09:42 | this out a little bit because this just the big picture right here. |
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09:45 | right? Yes, ma'am, of . That's absolutely right. Think about |
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09:54 | like a dance. Alright. In dance, you have someone who's |
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09:58 | Typically, it's the male but kind woman lead in a couple dance in |
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10:04 | male female. That's of course, . It just depends on how the |
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10:08 | arranged. So pre synaptic just simply to sell. That's sending pro synaptic |
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10:13 | means the cell that's receiving that's the definition. Yeah, does not. |
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10:23 | now, we're not gonna be dealing that. That's specific to, |
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10:27 | to the electrical the wrecked because there rectify IRS on rectifying synapses, but |
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10:32 | not going to deal with those that's the beyond this class. All |
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10:39 | now how the vesicles get there have already talked about this? Remember? |
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10:44 | said they were transported. Right? this is just trying to show |
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10:47 | Look, I made my vesicles. my neurotransmitter. I used Antero grade |
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10:52 | to move it down there, and put my vehicle full of neuro |
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10:55 | and I sat it there and stored my neurotransmitter waiting for that signal. |
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11:00 | this is what's kind of cool. think again, there's a lot of |
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11:05 | you do not need to know on slide. All right, this is |
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11:07 | highly detailed slide, but what I to show you is is that that |
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11:10 | ical isn't just floating out there in side is all kind of going la |
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11:14 | la, la, la It's actually right up to the to the plasma |
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11:20 | , and it's almost joined with, not completely opened up to. All |
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11:26 | , So this is what I'm showing it. It prevents complete fusion, |
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11:31 | it's set up ready to fuse with plasma membrane to release its content. |
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11:37 | it needs is a signal, and can see down here if you look |
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11:41 | the bottom of the graph, what it it's the presence of the |
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11:44 | All right, so that's what I'm you right there. That calcium, |
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11:49 | it comes flowing in, causes this called complex, um to be removed |
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11:55 | complexion is removed. Then the next is fusion and the neurotransmitters being |
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12:02 | So what we have here is we a situation where all the vesicles are |
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12:05 | in place. The neurotransmitter already has made. It's all stored up, |
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12:09 | to go. All you need is action potential to come down to the |
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12:13 | on terminal to allow the calcium into cell. That's that bottom step. |
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12:20 | the calcium flows in that vesicles fuses releases its neurotransmitter. So you can |
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12:27 | this is an incredibly quick response. talking milliseconds. Remember when you looked |
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12:33 | the graph of the action potential? you remember? Did you guys look |
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12:36 | see what the time frame on that . It's like whenever you look at |
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12:39 | , look, go back and It's like 0.4 milliseconds, right? |
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12:44 | incredible. That's just for that. of the things you can imagine. |
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12:48 | had little time. It's fast now , you don't need to know all |
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12:54 | these different things back in the I used to teach the details and |
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12:58 | would cry a lot. So, know, I felt bad. |
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13:03 | What I want you to see here kind of what this looks like. |
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13:07 | , this is the neural muscular All right. Neuromuscular Junction tells you |
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13:12 | neuron to a muscle, but this be for neuron to neuron. All |
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13:17 | , But look at how the uh, demonstrates this. You can |
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13:21 | here. Here is the synaptic Alright. In muscles, it's called |
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13:25 | Motor in Plate. I don't know it's labeled that way here someplace. |
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13:29 | , but you can see. Look the look at the pre synaptic. |
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13:32 | look at all of those vesicles lined and ready to go. Right. |
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13:39 | vesicles are ready to release. So someone throws a baseball at your |
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13:44 | what are you ready to do? right. You don't have to sit |
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13:49 | and let me make some neuro I hope I could make it fast |
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13:53 | and get it down to the terminal enough so that I could move my |
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13:57 | . It's ready to go all it is a signal, and that's what |
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14:00 | is allowing it to do. So can imagine all the neurons in your |
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14:05 | have the neurotransmitter already in place in vesicles lined up right up next to |
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14:11 | plasma membrane, ready to go. it needs is that action potential to |
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14:15 | that influx of calcium when the calcium in that allows the vesicles to open |
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14:21 | and release their neurotransmitter. Now, told you guys something a couple days |
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14:29 | , so I know this has got go back in time. We're talking |
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14:32 | signaling pathways, anything that I turn , what must happen? I got |
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14:38 | turn it off right. Otherwise, dad yells at you for keeping the |
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14:42 | on all night. Remember, that thing is true here. If I'm |
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14:48 | neuro transmitter, remember, neuro transmitter simply a signal between two cells. |
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14:53 | telling that sell? I want you respond like this. Do you want |
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14:57 | keep telling it to respond, even so you need to kill that |
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15:02 | So there must be a termination signal every signal that we create. And |
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15:07 | for the neuro transmitter that's being released need to get it out of that |
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15:11 | cleft as fast as possible so we clear it for the next signal to |
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15:15 | along, depending upon how long that's be. It could be in another |
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15:19 | . It could be in seven All right. It doesn't matter. |
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15:22 | idea is that I need to make that the slate is clean so that |
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15:27 | signal could be made. And so gonna have a form of termination. |
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15:32 | , Now, termination is simply that of getting rid of the neuro transmitter |
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15:37 | of that synaptic cleft. And there's lot of different ways to do |
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15:41 | And again, in the picture, have a whole bunch of different types |
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15:45 | neurons. You do not need to which one does which, but you |
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15:49 | know the different mechanisms that are All right, so there are basically |
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15:55 | ways that we can terminate a All right, up over here, |
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15:59 | have a seat of cooling. So is a calling. Uh uh. |
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16:05 | we refer to as a colon uh, neuron. And so it |
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16:09 | acetylcholine, and we have an enzyme sits in there and it's like looking |
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16:15 | acetylcholine and ready to chew it up destroyed as fast as it's being |
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16:19 | Its like the world's most dangerous game Red Rover. Remember Red Rover? |
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16:24 | Rover? Red Rover? Let whoever over the first one run across and |
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16:29 | toe. That's what it is and instead of you just kind of trying |
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16:32 | run across, you've got, I know, wolves trying to eat you |
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16:35 | you're trying toe run across. Maybe you guys played Frogger. That's probably |
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16:41 | before your time, right? It's the fourth game that was ever |
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16:45 | right? But the idea is, trying to get to a destination, |
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16:49 | something is trying to kill me along way. That's what the enzyme |
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16:53 | It's there to destroy the neurotransmitter before has a chance to stick around for |
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16:58 | given period of time. So you imagine for every I'm gonna make up |
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17:03 | . So for every 100 molecules that being released, you can imagine that |
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17:06 | chewing up half of them before they get across. So what you're trying |
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17:10 | do is you're just trying to eliminate fast as possible. And then that |
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17:13 | is also capable of binding up to neurotransmitter and chewing it up at the |
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17:20 | of the receptor. So if it's up to the receptor, the enzyme |
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17:22 | along and showed up there so that no longer bound to the receptor. |
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17:26 | you're no longer producing signal. The thing that I can you can defuse |
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17:30 | . None of these things are showing , but you can imagine this is |
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17:33 | is doing my neuro transmitter here. just gonna use the middle one. |
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17:36 | my neurotransmitter goes la la la la it goes alright. If it's not |
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17:40 | the synapse, can't buy into Interceptor you can't buy into Interceptor No |
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17:45 | Well, sort of. I you can imagine there's receptors all throughout |
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17:49 | body that are capable of binding So there are enzymes that just in |
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17:53 | , looking for things that shouldn't be . They're chewing things up, and |
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17:57 | molecules have a half life, so gonna probably fall apart anyway. But |
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18:01 | the general sense is that if you defuse away from the synapse, you're |
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18:04 | gonna signal. And so that's one the things that can happen is that |
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18:07 | or the neurotransmitter could diffuse out. thing you could do is you're gonna |
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18:12 | a neuron uptake, its own neuro . And what it's gonna do is |
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18:18 | thing you would do if you were around your house. You have found |
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18:21 | all this extra paper lying around, you gonna do with it? Collect |
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18:25 | . But in the trash or I could recycle this and use it |
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18:29 | scratch paper, and that's what neurons . So let's see, in terms |
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18:33 | examples, you could look at Uh, basically, all the ones |
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18:37 | the bottom are showing that as well , well, all of them on |
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18:40 | top as well. So all of are showing it. You can see |
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18:45 | just showing you there's myself. Doesn't matter which one you look |
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18:51 | All right. So I'm just gonna sink on this slide. You can |
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18:53 | see it. All right. So idea here is I'm basically taking up |
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18:57 | stuff that is still there. I'm it up, and I'm either gonna |
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19:01 | it. So that's what you're seeing in the colon ergic receptor. Basically |
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19:05 | it down and then rebuilds it. the others are probably repackaging. Each |
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19:10 | ones are unique, and then the thing I could do, and this |
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19:14 | kind of a unique thing. We think that this was possible, but |
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19:17 | can have other cells take up the . In other words, it binds |
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19:21 | a receptor, but it's not actually the receptor. Instead, what's happening |
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19:25 | that the cell that's receiving it will it in to remove it from the |
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19:30 | . And then we'll break it down that it's no longer available. And |
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19:35 | what this is showing you up here this corner. All right, so |
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19:41 | were representing Astra sites, and you see that they have binding sites for |
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19:46 | neurotransmitter. They're taking it up in it from the synapse. And |
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19:51 | in this way, what we're doing we're just clearing out the synaptic cleft |
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19:55 | that we can have very distinct periods time where signal is occurring and when |
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20:01 | is not occurring. Does that kind makes sense? Got one head nodding |
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20:07 | . Do we have thumbs ups? have No one asked questions. That's |
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20:11 | a good thing. All right. , ultimately, this is what an |
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20:17 | potential is doing. Actual potential is from one side of the sell down |
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20:21 | the acts on terminal cause release of . Neuro transmitter is released out in |
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20:26 | synaptic lapse. Binds to a receptor a response in the post synaptic |
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20:34 | All right, these responses in the synaptic cells are gonna be grated |
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20:40 | All right, But we have special for him because we like to confuse |
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20:44 | , right? That's why we name in very, very tough and difficult |
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20:47 | . We're trying to figure out how we torture students in the classroom? |
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20:53 | not buying it. Okay? What do is we name things like I've |
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20:58 | before. We name things for what do, and so we can either |
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21:04 | a cell, right? Neural transmitter tell the cell become excited. Or |
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21:10 | we can do is we can tell cell you're not allowed to get |
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21:14 | so stop it. Stop what you're . Stop. Right. So that |
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21:19 | be inhibition. So we can cause or weaken cause inhibition. And so |
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21:24 | you can see there's our synapse And when in that video, if you |
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21:28 | the video, I pointed out with potential had these little tiny graphs right |
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21:32 | and in a greater potential. What have is you have a small changing |
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21:38 | membrane potential in response to the signal . So magnitude in a greater potentials |
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21:45 | dependent upon the magnitude of the All right, So if the neuro |
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21:53 | binds to a receptor and that opens channel and that channel happens to be |
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21:58 | cat ion channel, typically what's gonna is that sodium is gonna be moving |
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22:02 | the cell. And when sodium moves the cell 99.9% of the time, |
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22:09 | causing the cell to be deep and that is what we refer to |
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22:13 | excitation. All right, so that's this is trying to show you. |
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22:19 | saying, look again, you have just kind of understand this is a |
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22:23 | system, you know, binary right? Basically on off. |
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22:30 | So if this is the off moving up is the on stage. |
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22:37 | there, that would be a All right, But what we're saying |
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22:41 | look, I'm going to stimulate the so nothing's going on. I'm |
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22:45 | And so I'm gonna give it a small stimulus. Alright, we're gonna |
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22:49 | gonna use a terrible example, because is not producing a greater potential. |
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22:53 | it's easy to visualize if I come to you and take a little tiny |
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22:57 | and I push it against your you would feel it right, but |
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23:02 | wouldn't hurt. It would just be , Okay, you're poking me. |
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23:04 | it. All right, so that be a small response to a small |
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23:09 | . Alright, now imagine I come you and poke you a little bit |
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23:13 | . Would you respond differently? Would have a larger response? Yeah. |
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23:18 | . Now imagine me taking a running at you and then double fisting that |
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23:22 | and just jamming it into your Would you have even larger response? |
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23:28 | . Okay. Now, presuming that response is the same, it's like |
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23:33 | and then screaming Al right, That be the equivalent. And that's what |
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23:38 | seeing here. This is the This is me coming in with the |
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23:45 | at different strengths. Each of those represent different strengths and let me erase |
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23:49 | ink. All right. So brown weaker than blue, which is weaker |
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23:54 | green, which is weaker than And then the response is over |
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23:59 | You can see I get a small potential. I get a small, |
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24:05 | potential. I get a potential that threshold. And what happens when I |
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24:10 | threshold? What do I get? Shin Potential A response, which is |
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24:16 | you see that massive peak. All , so what we're producing here, |
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24:22 | greatest potential because it is stimulatory is to it as an excited Torrey |
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24:29 | Where is it happening? It's happening the post synaptic cell. So we |
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24:34 | it's an exciting Torrey post synaptic And all of a sudden all those |
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24:38 | letters go away from being scary. just descriptive and easy, right? |
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24:46 | this is Anak Shin potential can cause of a neurotransmitter. If the neurotransmitters |
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24:52 | , it results in an e p p, e p s ps or |
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24:56 | potential. So that means by definition can vary magnitude. They have no |
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25:01 | period because great potentials don't have refractory Onley action potentials due. And then |
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25:07 | , whenever you have something that, a greater potential. You can add |
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25:11 | up together, all right, And get to that in just a |
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25:15 | Now, the converse is true as . I can release a neuro transmitter |
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25:19 | is inhibitory, all right. And does the exact opposite. It basically |
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25:25 | the outflow of potassium. And Because the outflow of potassium that's gonna |
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25:30 | the inside of cell more negative. moves me further and further and further |
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25:34 | from what is called threshold. So basically moving further and further away from |
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25:39 | action potential. All right, so basically saying, no, you can't |
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25:44 | stimulated. You have to move away stimulation. You're becoming less and less |
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25:49 | I should say less unless you are likely to become stimulated as a result |
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25:54 | inhibition. All right, and because this is the greatest potential has |
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25:58 | same characteristics. It varies in It has no refractory period. And |
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26:02 | can be some together to make larger larger and larger membrane potential changes that |
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26:08 | moving further and further away from And that's what these two little graphs |
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26:12 | on the bottom are trying to show . All right. So the difference |
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26:16 | the E P s P excited Torrey synaptic potential and the I P s |
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26:20 | inhibitory post synaptic potential is the direction which the membrane potential is going. |
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26:26 | di polarizing with E P s I'm hyper polarizing with I ps |
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26:30 | and it's just a result of the of neurotransmitter that is binding to a |
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26:34 | . And what type of channel it to be is allowing sodium to go |
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26:38 | or is allowing potassium to go out out for a second. Because there's |
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26:43 | potential for this on the test. it just sodium and potassium? The |
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26:49 | says No, what we have up chlorine as well. All right, |
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26:54 | I can cause chlorine to flow into cell, which would make the inside |
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26:57 | the cell more negative as well. right, so it's not just |
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27:00 | Potassium chlorine can also play a role this as well. At least it's |
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27:04 | is the most common type that doesn't any others, but I'm almost 100% |
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27:09 | . I don't ask anything else. like, What about calcium? Don't |
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27:14 | worry about that? Yes, Chlorine a bugger. All right, so |
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27:25 | , we're talking about equilibrium. You ready to just kind of |
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27:29 | Okay, I'm done with this. gonna go to law school, |
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27:33 | All right. So the equilibrium potential chlorine is about minus 70. All |
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27:41 | , So if I open up chlorine and on arresting neural, which is |
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27:45 | minus 70 what's chlorine? Gonna dio gonna flow into flow out or |
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27:49 | right? It's gonna do nothing at . So what's gonna happen is is |
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27:53 | I'm stimulating the cell so that is polarizing, Then chlorine is gonna start |
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27:59 | into the cell because you're no longer its equilibrium potential. Right? But |
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28:04 | I start hyper polarizing selling, I chlorine channels open. What's gonna |
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28:07 | Chlorine is gonna flow out of the because it's below minus 70. So |
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28:11 | moved relative to where the resting potential . Which is why we tend not |
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28:17 | talk about it. Because it's a of a It's kind of one of |
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28:19 | pain in the butt ones where you to know, Where am I? |
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28:22 | to three equilibrium potential, right. calcium or is not calcium, |
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28:27 | um, potassium is easy because we it's equilibrium potentials. Minus 90. |
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28:32 | you open a potassium channel, it's flow out of the cell. It's |
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28:35 | going to do that right, because trying to trying to bring that |
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28:40 | Tu minus 90. It's just too away. If I open up a |
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28:44 | channel, sodium is gonna Russian because equilibrium potential for that is that plus |
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28:49 | and you're so far away that sodium just gonna Russian themselves fast as I |
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28:54 | . Alright, so chlorine is That's why we kind of tend to |
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28:57 | it. But it's doing its thing upon where which direction We're actually |
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29:04 | Yeah, off ESPN. I uh, after all right. So |
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29:13 | is where I get really frustrated that teaching online versus teaching in the |
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29:17 | because if I had 100 and 50 in here, I'm not mad at |
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29:20 | guys. I'm just mad at the 550. You guys in here, |
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29:24 | could do a visual representation of what looks like. And so I said |
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29:28 | in the video. I want you imagine for a moment I want you |
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29:30 | take a pebble, and I want to look at a nice, smooth |
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29:33 | that has never been disturbed. I you take a pebble and I want |
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29:36 | to drop it into that pond. are you going to get? Ripples |
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29:41 | ripples are gonna move away from this where that stimulation occurred. That's what |
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29:45 | greater potential looks like. It literally away from the side of excitation. |
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29:50 | right, on the side of stimulation probably the proper term. But what |
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29:54 | to the ripples over time? Do grow? Do they say the same |
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29:59 | , or do they get smaller in pond? They get smaller, |
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30:04 | I mean, think of the infinitely thing. Why? It's because there's |
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30:07 | resistance is why that happens in a . But it's kind of the same |
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30:11 | is that if you're thinking of, got ions moving into a cell. |
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30:15 | the point of where stimulation current. got ions moving into the self. |
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30:18 | moving into the cell because they're attracted a negatively charged ion, right? |
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30:25 | so the moment that they kind of up to the other island go |
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30:27 | how you doing? They're no longer the pool that you're measuring right. |
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30:32 | been neutralized. And so as you further and further and further away from |
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30:36 | side of stimulation, you have fewer fewer single ions. Which is why |
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30:42 | like using the example of the two next to each other because we can |
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30:47 | pairing up right? And so you imagine, Here I am. I'm |
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30:51 | eye on the side of stimulation. so many of us were like, |
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30:55 | , we're trying to find our and then you're kind of wandering further |
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30:59 | further away and all your buddies, don't know what girls call their |
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31:05 | You just call him buddies Gallop. see it just doesn't work. Guys |
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31:11 | buddies, all our buddies air hooking . We're just kind of like I'm |
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31:16 | only one over here. But if were to measure me, there'd be |
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31:19 | here at the sight of stimulation. 100. And that's what that difference |
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31:25 | charge is. Why you see that change? Did that answer the |
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31:31 | Did I get a thumbs up? at all. You demonstrate because all |
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31:38 | , we're gonna do a visual. ready? We're backing up all the |
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31:42 | online. Don't get to see right. We're gonna do the |
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31:47 | We're gonna start over here. We're finish over here. It's gonna suck |
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31:49 | there's only 12 2468 10. There's of us. Ready? We're gonna |
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31:54 | the wave. Ready? Go. , you guys. Yeah, |
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31:58 | You're falling asleep in the background. gonna try it again? Because the |
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32:02 | is a response to the person you , With only 10 people. I |
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32:07 | see who's doing it. Try it more time. Ready? You're not |
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32:12 | cool for school because then I get call you out. Ready? All |
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32:16 | . That's an action potential, You saw there was a detrimental movement |
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32:21 | the classroom. Now imagine 150 people here doing that. It's kind of |
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32:25 | . And you can't say you've ever the wave in a classroom other than |
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32:28 | this class. Now with the greatest . What it is is notice We |
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32:32 | at one side of the seller, in the other, the greater potential |
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32:35 | create a wave here, go, so it doesn't go very far. |
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32:41 | right, so you guys don't know to do. You're like Okay, |
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32:44 | , I'm used to do It's kind the same thing. It's just a |
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32:47 | outward from the side of stimulation. that's how we do it visually. |
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32:52 | it's always fun because you've got the who are like I'm too cool for |
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32:55 | . You can't make me do the And we had harassed him for 30 |
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33:00 | . Mhm. But the action potential it starts, it keeps going all |
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33:07 | , that's the kind of the key . They're all right. Once it |
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33:12 | , it keeps going. So that's we do the visual representative, because |
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33:16 | trying to make you visually see the in the pond. That's not always |
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33:21 | to see. It's easy to see doing this right when you're in the |
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33:25 | of it could also make you stop people in, like okay, do |
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33:29 | way stop people like it's like, , then where are we on that |
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33:34 | ? All right, so we got . Torrey, we have inhibitory, |
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33:40 | these air single grated potentials and what trying to do is we're trying to |
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33:46 | that signal that that post synaptic potential need it to get to the axon |
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33:53 | . And if you're getting to the Hillock, what you're trying to do |
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33:56 | you're trying to bring an action potential you're trying to produce that action |
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34:02 | All right, so we're kind of a chicken and egg here, |
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34:05 | We've just described what the action potential doing, and now we're gonna try |
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34:09 | talk about how we produce one. on the dendrite on the receiving and |
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34:13 | getting these greater potentials. And this kind of what a neuron looks |
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34:17 | Does the neuron look like it's all its lonesome? The little blue things |
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34:21 | other acts on terminals, yellow things accent. Excuse me? Are, |
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34:25 | Astro sites? Do you think this cell right here is getting a lot |
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34:31 | input from other cells? Yeah. is like you on your favorite form |
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34:35 | social media. I'm just gonna pretend Facebook because I'm old and, I |
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34:38 | know, tick tock and all the strange things there that are ruining your |
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34:42 | . All right, let's pretend for moment that you are reliant on your |
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34:46 | million friends that you have befriended on , right? All your closest |
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34:51 | Yeah. And you are dating and you're trying to make a decision |
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34:55 | whether or not you need to dump person. And so you go to |
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34:58 | four million friends on Facebook and Hey, I'm gonna conduct a |
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35:02 | Should I dump this person, or I stay together? And then now |
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35:07 | just waiting for all that feedback from four million of your closest friends to |
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35:11 | out what you need to do, ? Have you ever done this not |
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35:15 | about breaking up with somebody? But you had a poll to find out |
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35:17 | information? Yeah, and that's what can imagine is each one of these |
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35:22 | is producing a signal, right? if you are that neuron, if |
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35:27 | this purple neuron you can imagine you're input from some cells that are saying |
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35:32 | want you to turn on. I you to become excited. Your |
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35:34 | Other cells are saying No, no. You're not supposed to be |
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35:38 | . And you're trying to figure out do I do all right? Because |
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35:42 | cells are creating e P s Some cells are producing I ps ps |
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35:47 | you and each of these things need well the island's air flowing in. |
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35:51 | need to reach to a certain threshold order for you to produce your action |
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35:56 | . And this is where summation All right, You heard the words |
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36:00 | mate, these cells are capable of being some that's what greater potentials. |
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36:05 | so what you're doing is you're adding the different magnitudes. You have things |
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36:09 | are causing deep polarization. Alright, could be small, some could be |
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36:13 | . You could have other cells that producing inhibitions. So basically hyper |
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36:17 | some could be small, some could big and the net result of all |
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36:22 | these different inputs. If they're enough get you over threshold, it's gonna |
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36:27 | an action potential in the purple cell will then travel down the axon. |
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36:32 | summation of the E P s ps the I PS PS equals a g |
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|
36:37 | S p or the grand post synaptic , right? You gotta say it |
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|
36:43 | the grand. You know, it's just grant grand post synaptic potential. |
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|
36:48 | right, now the type of summation we could do is what is referred |
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|
36:52 | as either temporal or spatial. without me flipping this wide slide, |
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|
36:56 | know that you read this stuff, we're not even gonna do that because |
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|
36:59 | know that skimmed everything. So what temporal refer to? We hear the |
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37:04 | temporal time. Good, good. That's what I heard you say. |
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37:08 | though you may not have said All right, it's hard to see |
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37:12 | matching division, right? And then a spatial refer to space. |
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|
37:18 | so, again, simple terms. see how it applies. All |
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|
37:22 | we got temporal summation on spatial This little picture right here kind of |
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37:26 | you that. All right, So we're gonna do is we're gonna walk |
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37:28 | no summation of spatial tome or spatial temporal. All right, so we |
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|
37:32 | get a vision of what's going on . We're going to demonstrate. This |
|
|
37:35 | well. So what we have here we have a single neuron, |
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|
37:40 | This is our receiving. So this our post synaptic cell, and then |
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|
37:44 | have a Siris of different pre synaptic and what we're going to say is |
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|
37:50 | pretend one. I'm just gonna put one right there. Pre synaptic cell |
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37:56 | . All right, so it's just by itself. So over here at |
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38:00 | dendrite, if you measure that, see there's that nice little deep |
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|
38:04 | but that deep polarization is going to down the cell and get to the |
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38:08 | hillock. And it's not quite strong to get the threshold. If I |
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38:11 | get the threshold, do I get action potential? Nope. No action |
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38:16 | . Um, measuring way down here the acts on just to prove |
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38:19 | All right, so this e p P does not have the big enough |
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|
38:24 | strong enough magnitude to produce an action by itself. But let's bring in |
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|
38:30 | buddy. Let's say number two fires with number one. Okay, so |
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|
38:36 | what this is showing you. Look we get up here. We get |
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38:39 | much larger grated potential, much eh? PSP, we've some the |
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|
38:46 | MPs piece together. And so what we get? Well, if we |
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38:51 | here at the Axon Hillock, we actual potential being produced. Now they're |
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38:57 | you that two are occurring here, it's not always gonna be, |
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39:00 | It could be one. It could seven. It just depends on how |
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39:03 | you are, all right. And can see that whatever I produce here |
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39:07 | the Axon Hillock is reproduced way down the acts on. In other |
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|
39:11 | it's once it's been produced. It right? So if we did the |
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|
39:15 | again and I said, Okay, the wave do the wave, you'd |
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39:18 | two of them. All right, just happen. Let's add in that |
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|
39:22 | one. So there's number three right . So here's one plus two plus |
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|
39:28 | . You can see it's even So do you see this summation? |
|
|
39:32 | ? It's It's additive. Alright, not even saying what the magnitudes |
|
|
39:36 | but you add whatever the magnitude one to the magnitude of number two to |
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|
39:40 | magnitude of number three, and all a sudden now you've got a very |
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39:44 | , excited Torrey response, which results more time spent over threshold, more |
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|
39:50 | I spent over threshold, the more potentials, I produce more action |
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|
39:54 | I produced the MAWR that end up down the ax on so What we |
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|
39:59 | here is we have a additive Yes, sir. Submission. Of |
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|
40:08 | , That's a good question. Can wait until the next slide? He's |
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|
40:14 | you can wait. All right, that's spatial. So you can see |
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40:21 | these air different neurons or different pre cells producing their own E p s |
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40:27 | and in that post synaptic cell, . So remember, e p s |
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|
40:30 | is occurring in the post synaptic Alright, in response to its |
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|
40:34 | So each of these individual cells are by space, and they're all producing |
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|
40:40 | excited Torrey signal which results in three E p s PS. That when |
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|
40:44 | together makes a large GPS p, is how we get those action |
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|
40:50 | Let's look a temporal. All temporal, you're dealing with just one |
|
|
40:56 | . All right, so that's what is saying. It's like, all |
|
|
40:58 | , we're back toe. Just our , um, pre synaptic cell. |
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|
41:06 | what we're gonna do is we're gonna the rate at which this thing is |
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|
41:10 | , right? And if I increase rate at which I'm firing, it |
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|
41:13 | I'm increasing the rate at which I'm neuro transmitter. If I'm increasing the |
|
|
41:16 | , which I'm releasing neurotransmitter, that there's march neuro transmitter out in that |
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|
41:21 | cleft. I'm still trying to get of it as fast as I |
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|
41:24 | but I'm overcoming that rate of termination so I can produce a larger eh |
|
|
41:30 | in other words, an additive effect that single one. So let's just |
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|
41:35 | I have a magnitude For each PSP I produced. I get a magnitude |
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|
41:38 | plus five million volts. So if do +123 quickly in succession, I'm |
|
|
41:43 | get five million volts plus five million plus five million volts altogether. So |
|
|
41:47 | getting a larger E p s PS 15 million volts. And if it's |
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|
41:53 | enough so you can see how they're on top of each other because there's |
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|
41:57 | refractory period, they just get bigger bigger. I could bring myself over |
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|
42:02 | if I bring myself over threshold. produce action potentials for however long now |
|
|
42:06 | , the artists use three. It's necessarily going to be three. It |
|
|
42:10 | be one. It could be It could be 37 right? It's |
|
|
42:13 | the artist was making things confusing, to create a 1 to 1 |
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|
42:17 | That's usually not what happens. ma'am. Mhm. Well s. |
|
|
42:28 | let me let me try to demonstrate versus Spatial. All right, I'm |
|
|
42:32 | clap once. Now I want you clap with me. 123 All |
|
|
42:37 | Now you clap with us again. Now you. 123 Try again. |
|
|
42:44 | All right. Did the sound get and louder? Is each of us |
|
|
42:47 | ? That would be spatial. All , now, here's temporal. |
|
|
42:50 | keep in mind I'm not as good the picture. All right, So |
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|
42:57 | one right rest, another one. ? But if I start bring things |
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|
43:02 | together they started stacking on each right? So that's really what it |
|
|
43:09 | . It's not that I'm clapping It's just that the time in between |
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|
43:12 | are getting smaller and smaller and So the answer to your question |
|
|
43:17 | could one neuron be firing more and frequently? Yes. And it could |
|
|
43:22 | be producing a much larger signal. the magnitude part. But it could |
|
|
43:27 | be working in conjunction with other neurons are producing their own signals, and |
|
|
43:31 | they're not acting as fast, But adding into that whole pool. Does |
|
|
43:36 | make sense for great? It's One second signals is able to. |
|
|
43:53 | , so remember s so I'm gonna the question here. So the question |
|
|
43:57 | , is it able to switch between two? There's no switching. It's |
|
|
44:02 | the timing, right? So special simply the fact that 22 things orm |
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|
44:07 | are acting together temporal, as I , is basically that one neuron firing |
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|
44:13 | a greater frequency. And so the to your question is, they don't |
|
|
44:17 | . They just do right. But might be observing spatial sub nation in |
|
|
44:23 | case. Or you might be observing summation in one case. Or you |
|
|
44:28 | be observing both occurring simultaneously. go ahead and ask your question. |
|
|
44:37 | also, Mason, because you temple into summation. No, no, |
|
|
44:47 | . So there there is no So there's no guarantee that any summation |
|
|
44:55 | result in an action potential. The time you're gonna get in action potentials |
|
|
44:59 | you get the the grand post synaptic above threshold. So you could literally |
|
|
45:05 | 10 inputs that don't produce a strong signal to get to threshold so that |
|
|
45:11 | not the guarantee. The idea here how are we adding signals together? |
|
|
45:14 | really, really kind of the key . And if a neuron is firing |
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|
45:18 | greater frequency in producing E P s , that would be unexamined of how |
|
|
45:24 | getting temporal sub nation. Because we're allowing the the post synaptic sell to |
|
|
45:32 | come back down to resting potential. just adding on top of the the |
|
|
45:37 | p S p that you just produced microsecond ago, right? And that's |
|
|
45:42 | you're seeing this kind of climb as as you're seeing there, whereas with |
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45:47 | to I'm just gonna race all the on this slide here with regard to |
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45:52 | right, What you're doing is you're in mawr and Mawr cells, each |
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45:58 | their own e p S p. what you're doing with summation is you're |
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46:02 | up the E P s PS that occurring simultaneously, So can you have |
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46:08 | temporal? I'm just forget that multiple no, so temporal is always gonna |
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46:14 | within a single neuron. All so it's it's increasing the rate of |
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46:19 | in one neuron, whereas in spatial increasing the number of neurons firing |
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46:26 | The difficulty in understanding these definitions is notice that both of them have a |
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46:32 | of time in them. So special multiple cells firing at the same |
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46:37 | That's not very helpful with temporal Temporal a cell single cell firing with greater |
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46:45 | over a period of time. That's and that's where it gets kind |
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46:49 | confusing. You're welcome. Got another online because hold on one second, |
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46:57 | questions coming in, then we'll get you. Yeah, more except |
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47:05 | Oh, so the question that's being is, What do I mean by |
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47:09 | more time over threshold? All So if you watch that video in |
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47:13 | the action potential, remember in action Onley produced once we open up all |
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47:18 | channels and that occurs when a certain reached all right and it's it's kind |
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47:24 | a chicken and egg thing, so don't wanna dive too deep in |
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47:27 | but as long as your as your potential in your cell stays above |
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47:33 | you're gonna be producing action potentials in words. You you can imagine action |
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47:37 | being produced. I'm gonna try to this. All right, So here's |
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47:43 | see. This is what I'm Here's my graph. Right here is |
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47:48 | threshold. If I produce an action , once I hit that threshold, |
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47:54 | getting my peak. So if I bring myself up to that threshold via |
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47:59 | potentials, then as long as I'm that threshold, I will never come |
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48:04 | down to rest. That doesn't I'll just keep doing that over and |
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48:08 | and over again, all right. that's what this is trying to show |
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48:12 | is like, Oh, look, reached threshold. So as long as |
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48:16 | above that threshold for any period of , right? In other words, |
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48:19 | long as the, uh, the is not allowed to come back down |
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48:23 | rest, it will keep firing. it's above the threshold Now here I'm |
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48:30 | the threshold for a longer period of . That's that's why you're getting multiple |
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48:34 | potentials. And so there's still a period in there. The difference is |
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48:38 | that I'm not allowing the cell to reach rest. The greater potential is |
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48:44 | the the influx of sodium at such rate that the cell never comes down |
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48:49 | rest. That's what is trying to . All right. Even though sell |
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48:52 | to get the rest is not going It's kind of like having kids. |
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48:55 | never gonna get rest ever again. , you had There's one more question |
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49:03 | , and then we've got to get because we're getting stuck on some simple |
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49:06 | here. Yes. So quick. eso the difference between no summation. |
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49:13 | summation is basically the frequency at which when you're on is going through. |
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49:21 | correct. That's all it iss You're . All right, So there was |
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49:26 | question that came up a little bit and said Okay, well, what |
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49:29 | ? If I have an e, s p n and I PSP |
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49:31 | it is the same thing. This this is kindergarten math. Alright, |
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49:35 | just gonna use kindergarten math as an . Well, and that's not kindergarten |
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49:38 | grade math. All right, when start learning to add your numbers, |
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49:41 | I take something, has a magnitude plus five and something has a magnitude |
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49:44 | minus five. What is what happens I add those two things together. |
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49:51 | get zero right, so they cancel other out. So this is what |
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49:55 | when u V p FPs and I ps, they cancel each other |
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49:59 | And so you can imagine I might some that's plus seven something that's minus |
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50:03 | and then So now I have a in the membrane potential. That's plus |
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50:07 | . That's still cancelation, right? just not a perfect cancelation. And |
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50:12 | that's what cancelation is. It's simply an EP, ESPN and I PSP |
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50:16 | against one another. And so you imagine if we went back to that |
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50:20 | picture where I showed you that single with all these thousands of inputs, |
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50:24 | some of them are E P s , and some of them are I |
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50:27 | ps their dueling to determine what that of that cell is. All |
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50:32 | because you're canceling out some of the . But again, going back to |
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50:37 | stupid example of that poll on you ask your four million friends. |
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50:41 | I break up with those people? know, the cruelty of the Internet |
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50:44 | like 70% of them say yes, . And you're gonna do whatever they |
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50:49 | because, well, you're getting your from Facebook, and what you're gonna |
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50:53 | is you're gonna say OK, even 30% of the poll said no, |
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50:59 | said yes. So that's enough to me over threshold to cause me to |
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51:05 | my decision to dump my significant And that's really all thes cells, |
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51:10 | doing other cells. Tell me what do. Other cells tell it what |
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51:15 | do if the signal is strong enough reach threshold produced by action potential, |
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51:22 | action potential. If the signal is strong enough, I don't reach |
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51:28 | no action potential. I don't produce signal. Simple. All right, |
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51:37 | what kind of synapses exist in the ? Lots of different types, the |
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51:41 | common type, are the ones from on the dendrites. There's also what's |
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51:45 | access Penis. We're not gonna spend lot of time talking about the spines |
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51:48 | dendrites, but it's kind of a area. That's kind of like like |
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51:53 | synapse, you know? I it's it's specialized toe, have receptors |
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51:57 | stuff, but there's access Penis, then you can actually terminate on the |
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52:01 | , so that would be a You could even have some that end |
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52:04 | on the cell body. So you're even closer to the Axon hillock. |
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|
52:08 | you could imagine those were probably pretty powerful. But the idea is, |
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52:12 | , a zoo longtime stimulating, selling receiving side. Those are the most |
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52:16 | types of synapses. So accident named for where you're doing access Penis |
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52:21 | for where you're where you're connected, somatic, you know, Shaft |
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52:27 | Okay, whatever. And then, course, because we can't just have |
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52:31 | rules. We have to have complex you could have other ones that are |
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52:35 | more complex. And these were like axle back sonic. And then the |
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52:39 | weird ones, like the din drove . Those were like those space |
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52:42 | uh, um, cells that don't axons, right? And then then |
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52:48 | . But we're not gonna worry about . We just keep it simple for |
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52:51 | , right? Act so dendritic Somatic access Penis are probably all you |
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52:58 | to know. Now, just to that there are constants in life, |
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53:04 | can also attenuate signals, just just axons can. Right? So if |
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53:11 | have very, very small, thin thing, we have slower signals. |
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53:15 | would be attenuation. Attenuation is um cancel or toe lower. That's |
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53:20 | it means, right? So how I dendrite attenuate a signal, make |
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53:26 | smaller, right, create greater That's the most common way. All |
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53:32 | , so they have high resistance, current, so it's harder to get |
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53:34 | signal down and this is just trying show you it's like, Look, |
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53:37 | is the exact same strength Got a synaptic cell is producing a similar release |
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53:44 | the amount of neuro transmitter. So you were to measure the E. |
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53:47 | S P at the site of of exactly the same but because we're dealing |
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53:54 | a smaller dendrite on the left side here. Okay, What we do |
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54:00 | we can't produce an action potential, , because we have greater resistance, |
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54:07 | we have lower current on the right side. However, we got a |
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54:12 | , fat, juicy dendrite which allows greater flow of neurotransmitter, which means |
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54:18 | we have really good responsiveness at the Hillock. Enough to produce an action |
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54:24 | . So what we're seeing here is cells themselves can regulate how they're going |
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54:29 | receive their signals. In other they can filter their own responsiveness. |
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54:35 | of like you can on Facebook. that poll, I'm only gonna listen |
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54:39 | my closest 200 million friends, right Lee. The ones that I actually |
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54:44 | are the people I'm gonna pay attention , rather than all the people that |
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54:48 | ever friended ever since the dawn of on the creation of Facebook or ticktock |
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54:56 | whatever horrible thing you use now This kind of makes sense. So |
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55:01 | not just in the axons that they regulate through the dendrites as well in |
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55:07 | of size. Now the other thing , is that signals inside these |
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55:15 | So remember cells or talking to other , And so that means you're |
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55:20 | Imagine you all holding hands in You would be a network, |
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55:24 | If you had more than two you could actually hold on to more |
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55:27 | one people. And that's kind of these neurons do is they're interconnected with |
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55:31 | another. And so information is being through these connections of who's telling what |
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55:37 | do. And so these networks could either focus or they could be |
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55:42 | Focused means they're confined us very specific . All right, so you can |
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55:47 | a network, a signal comes in it works in a very specific location |
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55:50 | get a specific result, right or we can say. It could be |
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55:56 | the virgin. Other words. It signals to multiple places throughout the C |
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56:01 | s so that you could get a spread response. Alright, again dumb |
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|
56:06 | . Just so that you can see I'm referring to. Here. You |
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56:09 | outside, you smell barbecue. First that signal goes to the amygdala. |
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56:15 | you happy because barbecue is awesome, ? Even if you don't like barbecue |
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56:20 | cooking meat for some reason, just people's mouths of water, right? |
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56:23 | that would be another signal. Your begins toe water, right? And |
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56:27 | do you do? You breathing more . You start walking faster, |
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56:32 | All sorts of things. You start things like like piles of brisket because |
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56:38 | Texas. This is the proper right? And so you can see |
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56:41 | . This would be a divergent right? That that would be stimulating |
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56:48 | systems so that you get a wider response. The thing is, |
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56:52 | that for any sort of network, the number of inputs going in the |
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56:56 | of outputs that air going out are limited. So notice if I smell |
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57:01 | , I'm not gonna be stimulating systems have nothing to do with food, |
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57:08 | ? I'm not gonna be making my work harder. My heart is not |
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57:11 | be what my heart might be faster cause I'm excited. But you see |
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57:15 | I'm trying to get at, And the other thing is, is |
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57:18 | the more neurons you having a the greater number of synapses and there's |
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57:22 | delay because that neuro transmitter when it's , is not actively seeking out its |
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57:27 | . It's diffusing into that space. so there's a synaptic delay at each |
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57:34 | . So if you have a single , it would be a very quick |
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57:37 | because you just have the delay at one synapse. But if you have |
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57:40 | synapses, you have tow add up that delay, which means you have |
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57:45 | longer time for response. Now dumb example. This is not how |
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|
57:50 | really works, but it helps you visualize it. You're walking in the |
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57:54 | . You're looking at your phone because seen what you guys do. All |
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|
58:00 | , car starts honking at you. do you do? Do you leap |
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58:04 | of the way? No, it's brains. China process honking. Means |
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|
58:12 | it a video game now is It's probably danger. I should probably |
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58:19 | out where that danger is coming right? It's because your brains trying |
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58:23 | figure it all out lots of as opposed to the fight or flight |
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58:27 | , would be like a jump out the way told you of the terrible |
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|
58:35 | . Now we like to think of York City's chemicals, these neurotransmitters being |
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|
58:39 | and simple. The truth is, they're not. There's hundreds and hundreds |
|
|
58:43 | neurotransmitters. Spend your time just playing Wikipedia at the list of neurotransmitters that |
|
|
58:49 | and you'll become overwhelmed very, very , all right, but it's the |
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|
58:54 | that that is our chemical. And what I first want to know is |
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|
58:57 | we classify them based on their Alright, and I'm not again. |
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59:01 | not gonna do not memorize these lists stuff. All right? I'm not |
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|
59:05 | say the one that you should definitely know is to see the cooling. |
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|
59:10 | , Okay, so let's see. calling is a neurotransmitter. Okay, |
|
|
59:13 | that's good. And then we'll look some very specific ones. Like the |
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|
59:16 | A cola means we'll see. All , um, they are a type |
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59:20 | mono. Mean, we got Where's my history? Down here. |
|
|
59:26 | , we have the amino acids. guys write about them. Those air |
|
|
59:29 | because they're specific to whether they're Torrey inhibitory. But you can see |
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|
59:34 | other stuff that you probably never even about it being a neurotransmitter. We |
|
|
59:37 | about 80 p, for example, being involved in what energy? It's |
|
|
59:43 | 80 p is energy. Whatever You know, you take a biology |
|
|
59:46 | , first thing, they drill in head, right? It's a neuro |
|
|
59:50 | . Well, well, great. you for confusing me, Dr |
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|
59:54 | That's just one more thing to throw the pile of crap that I am |
|
|
59:56 | to be able to forget. And then we have other things. |
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|
60:00 | gas is I mean, nitric oxide a neurotransmitter. Carbon monoxide is actually |
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|
60:07 | neuro transmitter. Uh huh. I carbon monoxide was bad. Yes, |
|
|
60:12 | hemoglobin, Yes, but not for brain to use. And so you |
|
|
60:17 | see there's other things in here that a role in signaling. So what |
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|
60:22 | want, you know, these are ones that I want you to |
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|
60:24 | All right? I told you. the cooling. It could be |
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|
60:27 | Torrey inhibitory depends on which system you're at. So today you don't need |
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|
60:30 | know what that is for the You don't need to know which one |
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60:32 | excited, Torrey or inhibitory. It's we talk about and say, Here's |
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|
60:36 | seat of Colin. It's acting Torrey. That's where you go. |
|
|
60:38 | , this is what I put that market, all right? It is |
|
|
60:43 | own special category because it was the one discovered and nothing else is like |
|
|
60:47 | . It's like, great. And was just irritating thing. They were |
|
|
60:51 | , we discovered how nerves talk to other. We figured it all |
|
|
60:54 | Let's go look for things that look a set of coleene and nothing looks |
|
|
60:58 | it's gonna clean as far as all other Nero transmitters. Fine. Next |
|
|
61:04 | are the amino acids. What we've here is we've started off as an |
|
|
61:08 | acid. We've made some modifications. you guys are familiar with glutamate? |
|
|
61:12 | . You feel familiar with a spark ? I mean, if you've ever |
|
|
61:16 | your amino acid table at any point your life, you should go. |
|
|
61:19 | , I recognize this Spartak acid. , glycemic acid that you might see |
|
|
61:24 | on the table. Glycerine. You heard of right, you know. |
|
|
61:28 | . Those amino acids. Yes, also neurotransmitters. And then we have |
|
|
61:32 | , which is a modification of right? So glutamate and aspartame. |
|
|
61:37 | . Those are excited. Torrey gabba and glycerine are inhibitory nature. |
|
|
61:42 | whenever you see them, just put in those categories. Is excited. |
|
|
61:45 | , this is inhibitory these down We're gonna see frequently, Which is |
|
|
61:50 | I pulled him out. The biogenic . This includes histamine. You've heard |
|
|
61:53 | histamine, right? Primarily. Think in terms of allergies. When I |
|
|
61:58 | stopped up nose, I take a histamine. Alright. But that's not |
|
|
62:04 | only place where it is serotonin. heard of serotonin. Okay, |
|
|
62:07 | Um, cattle. Coleman you've probably heard of by itself. That's a |
|
|
62:12 | or category. But you've heard of and norepinephrine were really epinephrine. You |
|
|
62:17 | go. No, by another It's called adrenaline. That's epinephrine. |
|
|
62:22 | is its cousin. It's nor right? And so they're very closely |
|
|
62:26 | . What? They dio and You guys have heard off, |
|
|
62:29 | So these are the ones you should kind of. All right. I'm |
|
|
62:33 | be familiar with them because these are or useful neuro transmitters. Now, |
|
|
62:39 | I bring these up is because of I want to understand is that depending |
|
|
62:43 | what type of system you're looking these neurotransmitters can behave in either a |
|
|
62:47 | method, way or convergent. What means is divergent. Means is |
|
|
62:51 | if I bind to a specific receptor a specific cell, I'm gonna create |
|
|
62:55 | unique response. So I release and it acts on this selling on |
|
|
62:59 | Selling on this selling creates unique responses each of those cells. All |
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|
63:03 | that'll be divergent. Con Virgin, the other hand, says I've got |
|
|
63:06 | cell and it doesn't matter which one these neuro transmitter binds to its own |
|
|
63:12 | because they always buy into their specific . But they work through a specific |
|
|
63:16 | and they produced the exact same So that means if I'm a cell |
|
|
63:20 | you give me dopamine, you give serotonin. You give me a seat |
|
|
63:23 | Colin. Doesn't matter. I'm gonna the same response because each of these |
|
|
63:28 | lead to that response. And what really telling you is that multiple systems |
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|
63:34 | communicating with the cell through their own way of communication to produce the response |
|
|
63:40 | that particular cell so divergent versus conv means how creating these networks. How |
|
|
63:47 | I respond to a particular neurotransmitter? does the neurotransmitter that I release produce |
|
|
63:53 | specific response coming into the home Love only come into the home stretch |
|
|
64:02 | before test. It's like finally unburden . Now this is kind of a |
|
|
64:10 | way of regulating a signal. It's called pre synaptic inhibition and pre |
|
|
64:17 | facilitation again see big words easy to out, especially if you're a |
|
|
64:23 | But we are better than freshman, ? Everyone not your head to say |
|
|
64:27 | I'm better than a freshman. Even you're a freshman, Sam better than |
|
|
64:31 | freshman, right? And we look the word we say. Okay, |
|
|
64:34 | does pre synaptic mean? It's on the synapse. So it's acting. |
|
|
64:40 | is acting in the cell that is , and it says pre synaptic |
|
|
64:45 | So I'm inhibiting the pre synaptic cell facilitation. I am facilitating helping the |
|
|
64:51 | synaptic cell. And so in this , what I want you to |
|
|
64:55 | All right, we're gonna keep it , right? We can see over |
|
|
64:58 | . I have an exciting story. , right that excite or in your |
|
|
65:02 | would produce an E p S Right, So it produces an E |
|
|
65:06 | S p in there. There's my , which is strong enough that causes |
|
|
65:10 | action potential. The potential travels And you can see here that I |
|
|
65:14 | travel to three different pathways because I these different, um um branches. |
|
|
65:24 | blanking on the word right now. is the word. I'm looking for |
|
|
65:27 | different collaterals. And on each of , I have a cell that is |
|
|
65:32 | to that neuro transmitter. All so you can imagine I'm gonna stimulate |
|
|
65:36 | , so I'm gonna stimulate that. I'm going to stimulate that sell All |
|
|
65:40 | with pre synaptic inhibition. What I is that I have an inhibitory neuron |
|
|
65:45 | on one of those collaterals specifically right before it goes. And so what |
|
|
65:51 | basically saying is you're not allowed to whatever you do, do not release |
|
|
65:56 | neurotransmitter. So even though that that occurs and goes down that collateral, |
|
|
66:04 | inhibition prevents that cell from releasing its transmitter So the target cell gets no |
|
|
66:13 | . So I'm acting on which sell pre synaptic cell, right? So |
|
|
66:18 | would be the pre synaptic terminal right . What's happening in the post synaptic |
|
|
66:23 | ? Nothing, right, because it's inhibited. The pre synaptic inhibition effect |
|
|
66:29 | one? No, because it's not on that terminal. Does pre synaptic |
|
|
66:34 | work on that terminal? No, it's not acting on that terminal. |
|
|
66:38 | on Lee here at that one terminal that pre synaptic um, neuron is |
|
|
66:49 | . Let's flip it around. Gonna excite to sell? Well, |
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|
66:54 | we're not going to excite the sell all. All right, just pretend |
|
|
66:57 | is no actual potential, no action being produced. So this cell has |
|
|
67:01 | response. This one would be no . This one will be no |
|
|
67:05 | This is not inhibitory neuron. now, this is an excited Torrey |
|
|
67:09 | . So this is an excited to on its stimulating that terminal. So |
|
|
67:13 | would we expect to happen in that self? You could say it |
|
|
67:20 | You get a response. So this is now firing. What's happening? |
|
|
67:24 | one is this one being stimulated? . Is this from being stimulated? |
|
|
67:31 | . So notice facilitation allows me to the pre synaptic cell in a very |
|
|
67:38 | manner to create a response in a synaptic cell. I don't have to |
|
|
67:44 | the whole cell stimulated. That's what and facilitation are. In essence, |
|
|
67:51 | basically turning on or turning off. this is doing so in a way |
|
|
67:55 | circumvents the normal pathways, right? working around. It's like asking your |
|
|
68:02 | to do something and she says And so you go ask your dad |
|
|
68:05 | telling your mom. And what does dad do? Sure. Go |
|
|
68:08 | You just worked around. Your mom work around the mom. Fifth, |
|
|
68:19 | neuro modulator is allowing us to change interaction between the pre synaptic still in |
|
|
68:28 | post synaptic sell. Now I mentioned that the communication between pre synaptic and |
|
|
68:34 | synaptic is one way you guys remember saying that that's what the neurotransmitter with |
|
|
68:39 | . What you're doing is the post cell releases a chemical that's not a |
|
|
68:45 | transmitter. Back to the pre synaptic or the post synaptic Selcan release a |
|
|
68:53 | back to itself or the pre synaptic release a different signal to the post |
|
|
68:59 | self. You see, there's a of communication going on or the pre |
|
|
69:02 | Selcan talk to itself. And what gonna do is it's going to change |
|
|
69:06 | relationship between the two cells. Give the example. Pre snapped cell post |
|
|
69:13 | self. This priest next cell releases molecules of neurotransmitter on the post synaptic |
|
|
69:19 | . We have five receptors, so basically a 1 to 1 ratio. |
|
|
69:23 | I want to increase the communication between two things, what can I |
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69:27 | What are some of the things that could do to increase how much these |
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69:31 | talk to each other. I got choices. I got neurotransmitter got |
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69:34 | What can I do? I can either one. If I put more |
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69:39 | transmitter, then this one is going respond more frequently because there's more neurotransmitters |
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69:44 | the synapse. If I put more , there's a greater chance that neurotransmitters |
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69:48 | find a receptor. So this is form of facilitation through modulation. How |
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69:54 | I get more receptors? I send signals. Say, Hey, you |
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69:57 | to make more receptors. Okay? do that. Send a signal back |
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70:00 | the pre synaptic steps you need to more neurotransmitter. And that's what all |
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70:05 | this is telling you. It's just you how we go about doing |
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70:08 | All right, The signal is external the neurotransmitter. It's a unique |
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70:15 | so I can increase the amount of transmitter, or I can decrease the |
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70:19 | of neurotransmitter. If I'm inhibiting I can increase the amount of receptor |
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70:24 | can decrease the amount of receptor, in doing so, I'm now changing |
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70:30 | degree of communication between those two Does that make sense? Yeah. |
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70:40 | . Now, typically, this is be done through g protein coupled |
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70:45 | Now, I don't think this is significant. This slide, what I |
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70:51 | to just kind of demonstrate to you that neurotransmitters air very, very |
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70:54 | but one you start dealing with facilitation stuff like that. You start slowing |
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71:00 | because there's modulation that's taking place. start slowing down. Um, the |
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71:06 | in neurons to be clear. Remember two terms on a Tropic and Madaba |
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71:13 | . Do you guys remember those two Very early on. I on a |
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71:17 | basically says, I've got a channel opening and closing a channel to allow |
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71:21 | to move in and out of the Meta. But Tropic says I've got |
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71:24 | signaling cascade. I activate a receptor activates a cascade of events, all |
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71:30 | , And so typically, I on on a tropic responses are very, |
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71:34 | quick and short lived because all I'm is allowing, uh, ions to |
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71:38 | through and I get a quick Basically, I'm just causing deep polarization |
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71:42 | hyper polarization with Metta Tropic because everything already there. I'm basically activating, |
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71:49 | I've got to turn a whole bunch different things on, so it takes |
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71:51 | little bit longer than the neurotransmitter and we're not even talking about, |
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71:56 | the the other type of signaling, is that long form of long distance |
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72:00 | through nuclear receptors. All right, this doesn't even count. We're just |
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72:04 | about within the context of a I can activate either a channel or |
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72:09 | can activate a pathway. Now, of the things I could do with |
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72:13 | pathways is I can actually activate It's just gonna take longer because I |
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72:18 | work through that signaling cascade. So there on the far left side, |
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72:23 | can see that would be an example an eye on a tropic. |
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72:27 | Here's my neurotransmitter. I'm opening up channel. Things flow in, Get |
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72:31 | quick response. Easy peasy right Look at the other one here. |
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72:39 | binding. I activate, Activate something . And then that activation results in |
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72:46 | activation of something else. So there's whole bunch of steps in here, |
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72:49 | ? It's basically you do this and it's just a Siris of dominoes knocking |
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72:53 | other open. So finally, at end of the Domino chain, I've |
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72:56 | a channel so I can still get eye on a tropic response. It |
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73:01 | is a result of meta but tropic . Look at this one. Do |
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73:07 | think this occurs much, Much, later? Well, let's take a |
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73:15 | . Here's number one. There's number . Number two is going over |
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73:19 | right? But number two causes the of this. So there's number |
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73:23 | There's my cycle of K and It binds there. There's number five |
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73:26 | finally I fost for late this thing that's opening up the channel. |
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73:31 | in this case, potassium is moving . Oh my goodness. That's like |
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73:35 | seconds later, you know, as to instantaneous. And remember, in |
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73:42 | cell milliseconds count. Very quick Very slow response. Now glutamate receptors |
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73:55 | this alright, glutamate receptors. glutamate is an exciting torrey neurotransmitter. |
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74:02 | can act through a G protein coupled . We refer to this as M |
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74:07 | . All right, so metta tropic receptor. That's where the name comes |
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74:12 | so it can act through meta But typically what we use is we're |
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74:16 | be looking at I on a tropic . The most common type is the |
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74:20 | . A receptor. It's a very fast response, right. What |
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74:23 | see here is we see the glutamate binds to the ample receptor. It's |
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74:28 | sodium channel. When it opens sodium comes in and it gets |
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74:33 | very excited, excited and happy. right, great, wonderful. Some |
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74:38 | also leaves some calcium moves as But the other thing that happens if |
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74:43 | produce enough glutamate, what's gonna happen that you're gonna cause this cell to |
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74:48 | polarize and that deep polarization results in change in the shape of the NMDA |
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74:58 | . Now, glue to make also an M d a. And it's |
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75:01 | channel. But it's a channel that open unless it has been modified. |
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75:07 | so what happens is is, if produce enough glutamate, you're gonna open |
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75:10 | the AM pose, which causes the B a receptor open up. So |
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75:13 | you've got two channels, and now getting an even greater deep polarization. |
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75:17 | a slower response, but you get much larger response as a result of |
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75:23 | activity, and then they have a type. What's called the kind |
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75:28 | Um, these could be found on synaptic cells. So you can imagine |
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75:31 | play a role in how much glutamate gonna release. So if I want |
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75:36 | release a lot of glutamate, why I just tell the cell? |
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75:40 | by the way, I want you release more glutamate. So I bind |
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75:43 | the receptor glue that binds to itself creates a positive feedback loop just as |
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75:48 | example. What we're talking about here basically causing cells to have different |
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75:58 | What is referred to as plasticity? means changeable. All right. Doesn't |
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76:05 | Barbie doll means changeable. All The nervous system is plastic, all |
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76:13 | ? And what this is showing you this particular examples here is an |
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76:17 | Neuron. Alright. And what this does is when it's stimulated, releases |
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76:20 | certain amount of neurotransmitter, right? I stimulate the cell on a regular |
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76:27 | because a certain amount of neuro transmitter be released if I stimulate the cell |
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76:33 | , how do I get a bigger ? Well, I can't release the |
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76:35 | amount of neurotransmitter gotta release more, in fact I can't produce more. |
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76:39 | so instead, I'm gonna produce two types of neurotransmitters. Most cells do |
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76:44 | at least two different types of so they have a slow signal |
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76:50 | and then they have a large signal . And that's what this is showing |
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76:53 | is like top. There's your low stimulation. I'm just releasing with one |
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76:59 | down here in the bottom, I'm all sorts of stuff, and as |
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77:02 | result, I get a much bigger . This is a plastic response I'm |
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77:09 | not dependent upon, you know, stimulation to cause more neurotransmitter. I'm |
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77:15 | able to change how that neurotransmitter that neuron behaves in response to the type |
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77:21 | stimulation it gets. I know we're down to the wire here. For |
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77:27 | of you who are paying attention at , I got two slides. I |
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77:30 | we'll stick through the entire to slide I really don't feel like recording |
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77:33 | Anything else do you guys feel like recording two slides with the material? |
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77:37 | just want me to just shut up get it done so neurons can be |
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77:44 | in how they produce their signals. much you know, Transmitted released. |
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77:49 | sort of response? To give, they respond. So one of the |
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77:52 | that we can respond is we can our responsiveness to the type of signals |
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77:58 | we're getting. We have terms for . So up there at the top |
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78:01 | the graph, it's showing you the red lines represent action potentials, |
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78:06 | It's saying this is the rate at action potentials are acting on this |
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78:11 | Right? So here's the stimulation. how do I respond to that? |
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78:16 | , over time I get really sick tired of being stimulated the exact same |
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78:20 | . So do I respond the same ? Put another way, your sibling |
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78:25 | poking you in the head over and and over again. Now, this |
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78:30 | just part of your life. How you respond to the first time you |
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78:33 | really kind of irritated, like Stop right. But they're bigger than |
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78:38 | You're the younger sibling. In this , you can't do anything. So |
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78:42 | a while, it's just okay. is how I live Now you become |
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78:49 | , right? That's what happened. see the synaptic strength, it's basically |
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78:56 | going down and down and down because amount of stimulation isn't enough to get |
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79:00 | rise out of you anymore. All , That's the example there. |
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79:05 | How did they figure this stuff This is the fun stuff. I |
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79:08 | you guys want to get out They started with slugs, right? |
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79:12 | they would tap on there. I . All right, These air sea |
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79:15 | . So they're big slugs and you their Istock. What would a flood |
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79:18 | when you tap its Istock? Suck right in, right. And then |
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79:22 | would cautiously put that stock right back of it. You smack it |
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79:26 | it would suck it out. And keep doing it after a while. |
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79:28 | just like Okay, I guess this the way I live now it's become |
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79:33 | pichu. Waited. All right. there are different ways you can see |
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79:38 | terms of increasing synaptic strength. You see here, here's my pulses. |
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79:42 | then I have a Siris of strong in a row. Facilitation. Look |
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79:46 | happens. Boom ! My response is goes way, way, way up |
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79:50 | response to the action potentials. But , Dan, it comes as soon |
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79:54 | the stimulation ends. So I'm responding mawr strongly in facilitation. Potentially ation |
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80:03 | outlast the stimulation, so it rises response to the increase in the action |
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80:08 | . But you get a maintained so it's occurring even beyond that, |
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80:17 | ? Basically, you ramped up your , and so even though the signaling |
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80:21 | down, you're still over responding to initial, um, period of |
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80:30 | Depression is just kind of the reverse potentiality shin. All right, |
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80:35 | um e don't have a picture of here, but it zits another form |
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80:41 | plasticity showing a much larger response. why do we care about this? |
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80:46 | is the last slide. And why these things up? First off, |
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80:48 | want to understand. The nervous system plastic. It changes its malleable relative |
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80:54 | the type of signaling and type of . And you should kind of already |
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80:58 | this, that you are capable of . Are you guys capable of change |
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81:01 | u mass squares in my classroom? . All right, so change. |
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81:08 | your body changes in response to new . But what's really interesting is this |
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81:14 | how our brain deals with learning. changes the interactions between cells through what |
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81:21 | called long term potentially ation. A term depression, right? In other |
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81:26 | , it changes the response between the and maintains that change. And this |
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81:32 | how we hold on to information. interactions between those cells is gonna be |
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81:39 | . So this is what a memory . Did you guys ever see the |
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81:42 | can never remember The name is the spotless Mind movie with, um |
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81:49 | thank you, Jim Carrey. Where was. Basically he and his girlfriend |
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81:52 | up there trying to race their And so it's this idea of going |
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81:56 | and this cell holds a memory. not how memory is held. A |
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82:00 | is really a Siris of neurons interconnected each other, firing at a specific |
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82:07 | in a specific rate in the specific . Right? So when you make |
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82:11 | experience, you actually create that signal what your body does is it keeps |
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82:17 | it, modifying the interactions. for example, if I'm a neuron |
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82:21 | I'm interacting with these two neurons and create something that potentially, it's |
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82:26 | but depress is here, I may , over time withdraw my interaction with |
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82:30 | neuron where I'm depressed and reinforce that . And now I've created a new |
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82:39 | . This is how the nervous system . It's plastic, and so that |
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82:44 | done for the exam. What were ? You're like What? Yeah, |
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82:51 | for the exams. Exam is on , right? What you need to |
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82:56 | is everything we've talked up to this , all right? Most of the |
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83:00 | is baseline information that we're gonna be . Moving forward. That doesn't mean |
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83:04 | all knowledge stuff. It's basically how I going to use this stuff? |
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83:08 | do these terms mean, Right, then how are they applicable? There |
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83:12 | some application type stuff on example. all multiple choice. For those of |
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83:18 | who are wondering, Do you have show up to class now? You |
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83:22 | at home, take your test, Big Brother watch you show off your |
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83:28 | or whatever your spaces. If you to take it at McDonald's or |
|
|
83:32 | that's cool. To free WiFi, still have to wear a mask. |
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83:35 | sure there any questions Online? All right, One second we got |
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83:44 | question was how many questions. There 50 questions over the 60 minute |
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83:48 | It's a 60 minute exam. It's an hour and a half, so |
|
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83:51 | get to be done. Most people exam between 45 50 minutes. So |
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83:56 | It's not like brutal average on the , typically in a typical semester is |
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84:02 | us five. I'm shooting for I designed the exam that way. |
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84:05 | don't panic if you're like that's what shooting for an average. Alright, |
|
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84:10 | you're used to seeing 75 eighties. , we're trying to challenge you |
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84:16 | but that also means there's a That's right, because hundreds don't tell |
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84:21 | anything about you. Sixties. Tell something about what you've learned. What |
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84:25 | have. Let me answer the question . Then go ahead. My |
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84:33 | Go ahead. How so? What need to remember? Is that an |
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84:48 | , the action potential that we are . So it depends on how you're |
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84:51 | this question. So remember the action is the signal in the post synaptic |
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84:56 | that causes the release of neuro That neurotransmitter results in the E p |
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85:01 | P or the I P S p the priest or excuse me in the |
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85:06 | synaptic self so action potential is in pre synaptic cell and is being resulting |
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85:11 | the E P S P R i s p and post synaptic so one |
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85:15 | to the next. But the E s ps and the I PS ps |
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85:20 | added together in the post synaptic cell you can now call that post synaptic |
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85:26 | the next pre synaptic self. And in the next cell, you're trying |
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85:30 | stimulate the next cell down the So the E p s ps that |
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85:33 | producing in the post synaptic cell if great enough, they can overcome threshold |
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85:38 | caused the action potential. So what looking at here is basically kind of |
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85:42 | doe I produce an action potential that in the production of a neurotransmitter that |
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85:47 | in a response in the post synaptic . And then what does that response |
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85:51 | do? Well, it resulted another potential which stimulates the next cell down |
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85:56 | line in the same exact way. that kind of makes sense. Did |
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85:59 | answer the question or did I kind circumvent? Yeah. Okay. |
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86:05 | Thank you. Another question online, heard. Yes, yes. So |
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86:13 | see right now The time is I even see. It's 2 27. |
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86:17 | 2 30 the practice exams are My practice exams Remember our questions. |
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86:23 | have thrown off the exam. All . In other words, I don't |
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86:27 | they're useful questions anymore. But what does do is it allows you to |
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86:31 | how I write a question. Does kind of makes sense? So in |
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86:35 | words, don't rely on content reliant how does he ask questions so that |
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86:39 | can see that I do not write trying to trick you. That's why |
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86:44 | want you to be a confident I'm trying to test whether or not |
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86:47 | learned what I taught you and whether learn how to apply that information. |
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86:52 | not looking for ways to screw your . If I want to write a |
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86:54 | that screwed your world, I could that and you could do the same |
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86:58 | for me. We could literally out one another, and you could prove |
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87:01 | I'm an idiot and I could prove you're an idiot and we walk out |
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87:04 | here going well, who team of All right, because there's lots of |
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87:09 | in the world that I don't but the goal of an exam. |
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87:14 | right. And this is really important the who have test anxiety. The |
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87:18 | of the oven exam is not to to find out what type of person |
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87:22 | are, but we kind of equate right. If I don't do well |
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87:26 | tests, it must mean I'm That's not what it means. It |
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87:29 | Did you or did you not learn information? All right, So if |
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87:33 | worried, ask yourself. Have I the information, and if you've learned |
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87:37 | information, you're J all right? I'm not trying to find ways to |
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87:42 | it difficult for you. I'm just to see Did you learn this |
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87:46 | All right. And nine times out 10 things, my favorite part about |
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87:49 | a professor, you know, students to my office. I mean, |
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87:53 | really do that now, but and be like, I don't understand how |
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87:57 | missed this question. And I'll sit , you know, kind of |
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87:59 | let him calm down. Let's walk it. And they're just like I |
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88:03 | believe I missed that. I can't I missed that. I can't believe |
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88:06 | has to do with how you're studying you're retaining information. So if you |
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88:10 | how to study and hold on you're gonna be fine. Because, |
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88:14 | I said, I don't write trick . I'm not sitting there trying to |
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88:17 | how can I make you get, know, make this one question so |
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88:22 | everyone is No, no, that's the goal, all right? It's |
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88:26 | hard to write test questions like Well, I guess it's not, |
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88:30 | I don't see the point in And then the other half of that |
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88:33 | was it was practice exam, uh right. So the best way |
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88:40 | kind of figure out what's gonna be the exam is everything I talked about |
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88:44 | the class or really in the video well. Anything that's on the slides |
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88:48 | fair game. So I'm not gonna for some obscure fact that's in the |
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88:52 | , because I know it's dense and and it goes beyond much of the |
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88:56 | that we think I think is important junior level class. So you rely |
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89:01 | the power points that your baseline, there's something in the power points that |
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89:05 | don't quite get. It's like I'm gonna use an example. I don't |
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89:10 | this potentially ation versus depression or, , thing We'll go to the book |
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89:15 | see if it does a better job explaining it to you than I did |
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89:19 | the three minutes that I produced the about it in class. Alright, |
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89:23 | allows you to slow things down. of think about it. Look at |
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89:27 | examples, you know, and see that helps you. But I'm not |
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89:31 | pull random stuff from the textbook, right? Because that that that could |
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89:36 | devastating. I don't even know stuff the textbook. Right? So notes |
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89:43 | book to supplement anything else, Yes. Eso with regard to temporal |
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89:59 | spatial submission, remember, with temporal , your your decreasing the amount of |
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90:04 | that a single neuron is firing so you're not allowing the cell to come |
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90:09 | rest. So that means you're getting and closer to threshold. The more |
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90:14 | Lee you're firing. All right, let me just back up so you |
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90:18 | see the picture here. For those you who are looking for it. |
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90:21 | guys don't have to stick around if have someplace to go. I'm just |
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|
90:24 | try to finish answering these questions. we go. Alright. So if |
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90:30 | time between each of the subsequent, , neurons firing get smaller and smaller |
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90:36 | smaller, that means your signals are closer and closer together. Which means |
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90:40 | never allowing yourself to come to which allows you to reach threshold. |
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90:44 | right. Spatial summation, on the hand, is more than one neuron |
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90:50 | at the same time. So the neurons firing at the same time, |
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|
90:52 | bigger the signals that it's going to together, right? It's standing on |
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90:57 | of each other's shoulders, do that of makes sense. Sort of. |
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91:04 | , all right, But okay, , give mhm life. Right. |
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91:21 | , you know, I've been looking the test. So there there are |
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91:24 | specific things that you probably should like, not specific pathways, you |
|
|
91:30 | , like, what does this pathway like? But maybe what you should |
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|
91:34 | . I mean, because I know do ask questions like, you |
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91:37 | what would be in effect, er this type of G protein coupled |
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91:41 | I might give you a list of , right? So, for |
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|
91:45 | a an example of a transducer in G protein coupled receptor pathway would be |
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|
91:50 | G alfa protein or the G You know, that would be the |
|
|
91:54 | , I might say. Okay, the Cal module in pathway, what |
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|
91:58 | be the second messenger? All that would be calcium. Alright. |
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|
92:03 | looking at those pathways, um, specific ones we looked and there |
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|
92:07 | like, two major ones. And like, a third one. That's |
|
|
92:10 | of a minor one. If you of look at those and understand kind |
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|
92:13 | understand, that's great. But I'm gonna ask you. Here's the insulin |
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|
92:17 | , you know? How does insulin ? We've never talked about it because |
|
|
92:20 | that zit was just not something that think is important at this point. |
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|
92:25 | . But at the same time, also talked about hormones, right? |
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|
92:29 | I showed you the hormones of the hormones of the pituitary glands. |
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|
92:34 | I would know what's regulating what know coming from the hypothalamus, know what's |
|
|
92:38 | the anterior pituitary and how they're being , because that's something that is, |
|
|
92:43 | not hard. It's actually fairly But at the same time, if |
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|
92:47 | haven't looked at it, you're not connect those dots right? So you'd |
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|
92:51 | like, Okay. Thyroid stimulating hormone produced in the anterior pituitary. It's |
|
|
92:56 | on the thyroid gland to produce thyroid , but it's being regulated by thyroid |
|
|
93:02 | releasing hormone from the hypothalamus and knowing three of those you know is |
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|
93:09 | I'm not asking. What does it at the very end, right? |
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93:12 | does thyroid hormone do? We didn't about that. We'll get to that |
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93:15 | . But I figured it be better get this portion of hormones out of |
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93:19 | way. So I would know those specific pathways for the hypothalamus, the |
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93:25 | gland, and, um, what target tissue is. Yes, |
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93:35 | Are the quiz questions applicable to So all right, So the question |
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93:42 | , are the are the quizzes helpful terms of how the how to prepare |
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93:45 | the test. So I would say air how I write questions. So |
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93:49 | already kind of experiencing that? But I would call those would be very |
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93:52 | steak type questions in other words, basic knowledge questions. I might be |
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93:57 | you to to be more applicable in of the knowledge. So I may |
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94:02 | , Well, why? I will you knowledge question. It's the only |
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94:04 | we could get ourselves buffered, So if you think of a |
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94:07 | you know, if I want to an average in a certain way, |
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94:09 | got to give you guys easy questions get everybody to a certain threshold, |
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94:14 | ? And then after that, that's the hard questions come in. It's |
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94:16 | , How do I separate out the student from the B students from the |
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94:19 | students? That's where the hard questions in. So I would say maybe |
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94:23 | of exams are, like, like the quiz quizzes are. But |
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94:27 | after that, that's when it's going be more like, Okay, here's |
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94:30 | situation. What do you expect to based on what you've learned? All |
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94:36 | . And those shouldn't be hard if understand conceptually what what we've been talking |
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94:42 | then, that it won't be Um, there's some that are you |
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94:47 | look and go What the hell, there's like one or two of |
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94:51 | Alright? And those were really the the best way I know I would |
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94:59 | use this quiz is kind of as framework of is this material that I |
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95:03 | , right? So the best way think again is to study is to |
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95:06 | of look at what was this lecture ? What was I trying to |
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95:09 | And that's kind of the big And then from there, you kind |
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95:12 | say All right, so if I trying to learn X what is x |
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95:16 | of? Well, there's x one two x three x four x five |
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95:19 | are the the learning objectives. Eso for like today's class would say |
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95:24 | we're trying to learn. What? trying to learn the synapse, |
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95:27 | We're trying to learn how, uh p s ps and I ps |
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95:32 | You know, we're looking at potentially . In other words, you |
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95:34 | the plasticity of cells and so you of use those this kind of that |
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95:38 | umbrella And then what you do is kind of distinguish what makes this different |
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95:41 | that. So why is an P s p different than an I |
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95:44 | s p different than a GPS P are they? So that's kind of |
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95:47 | definition levels, and you say well, how do I produce any |
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95:51 | ? How do you know? So kind of give you more of a |
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95:55 | edge is like Okay, so if increase number of action potentials that air |
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95:59 | E p s PS, what would expect to happen to the G |
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96:02 | S P? That's a simple question you can probably answer. That's not |
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96:07 | a I memorized the fact and vomited answer, And that's where I'm trying |
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96:10 | get you guys going to is that less of the, you know, |
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96:14 | me vomit, memorized fax All But I don't think you'll notice the |
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96:20 | . I mean, it's it's hard tell when you're taking the test, |
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96:24 | you know, when you're writing, like, Oh, these are |
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96:27 | memorize this fact. Here's the Any other questions online? I hope |
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96:31 | answered the question. Okay, they don't have to being There is |
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96:40 | pictures on the exams, so anything you're gonna have to require from a |
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96:45 | will have to be learned and stored memory. Right? So the idea |
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96:50 | like, right now I'm not looking . But could you could you draw |
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96:53 | and envision what a G protein coupled pathway would look like through a, |
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96:59 | , you know, you know, would a second messenger system look |
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97:02 | And if you could mentally draw that's that's a good thing, because |
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97:06 | not gonna give you a picture and , Identify the transducer. I want |
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97:09 | to think about What is that? does this look like to me? |
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97:13 | that's knowledge that's storing information. I I answered that question thing. |
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97:20 | you have to know, Major. . I mean, if that was |
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97:25 | question, Do I need to know pathways? The two big ones? |
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97:28 | talked about the the protein kind of cyclic amp pathway, the Kalamazoo calcium |
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97:33 | module in pathway. Those are the big ones. And then beyond |
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97:37 | I'm not asking anything. No. , no, because muscles do not |
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97:54 | using special summation. All right, , The answer is to that question |
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98:01 | , which we haven't talked about They ah, single muscle fiber is |
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98:06 | by a single neuron. So if want to get a muscle to |
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98:10 | in other words, to produce a , what you need to do is |
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98:14 | need to temporarily temporally some eight. other words, increased the number of |
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98:20 | stimulating that neuron, resulting in a and stronger twitch, which will result |
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98:25 | in tetanus. All right, so not too neurons. It's one |
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98:29 | so you can never have spatial summation a muscle. I hope that answered |
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98:36 | question. Anything else? All let's go home and have a good |
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98:44 | . Who thank you for showing |
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