触角神经元

We humans dont always make the best choices. But now a study in the journal Neuron demonstrates that maybe our brains do make the best possible decisionsbut only if its done unconsciously. Alex Pouget at the University of Rochester takes a look at un

发表于:2018-12-02 / 阅读(172) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(十二)月

第六篇 神经系统 Section 6 Nervous System 第一章 总论 Chapter 1 Introduction association neuron 联络神经元 astrocyte 星形胶质细胞 axon 轴突 bipolar neuron 双极神经元 central nervous system 中枢神经系统 chemical synapse 化学突触 cortex 皮质 dendrite

发表于:2018-12-05 / 阅读(328) / 评论(0) 分类 医学英语

内脏神经系统 Visceral Nervous System abdominal aortic plexus 腹主动脉丛 aorticorenal ganglion 主动脉肾神经节 autonomic nervous system 自主神经系统 cardiac plexus 心丛 celiac ganglia 腹腔神经节 celiac plexus 腹腔丛 cervicothoracic ganglion 颈胸神经节

发表于:2018-12-05 / 阅读(371) / 评论(0) 分类 医学英语

Todd: Tennessee! 田纳西! Tenn: Yes! 我在! Todd: We're gonna talk about sports. 我们来谈谈运动。 Tenn: OK. I'm not big on sports, but. 好的。但是我并不热衷运动。 Todd: OK, well, that's OK. So you, you don't like sports. 没

发表于:2018-12-18 / 阅读(137) / 评论(0) 分类 实战口语情景对话

Not many scientific studies begin like this: Many hours of watching YouTube clips. Trying to find as many yawns as possible. But for Andrew Gallup, an evolutionary psychologist who studies yawning at the State University of New York, it was all in a

发表于:2018-12-24 / 阅读(160) / 评论(0) 分类 2016年Scientific American(十)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Karen Hopkin. This will just take a minute. You probably remember exactly what you were doing when you first heard the news on 9/11. Thats because the brain has ways to file information so that thi

发表于:2018-12-24 / 阅读(168) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(一)月

第三章 神经系统的传导通路 Chapter 3 Neural Pathways acoustic radiation 听辐射 adrenergic pathway 肾上腺能通路 aminergic pathway 胺能通路 auditory pathway 听觉传导通路 central radiation of thalamus 丘脑中央辐射 chemical pathways 化学通路 cholinergic

发表于:2018-12-30 / 阅读(384) / 评论(0) 分类 医学英语

Mike: Wow you guys must find this civil ore stuff pretty interesting to stay 5mins late. Mr. Tenneco: I believe I just did an involuntary fandangle. Mike: Yea Mr. Tenneco how can I help you. Mr. Tenneco: Actually I wanted to speak to your father. Mik

发表于:2018-12-31 / 阅读(321) / 评论(0) 分类 成长的烦恼第七季

What Happens When You Lose Neurons? When you were born, almost all of the one trillion neurons, or nerve cells, in your brain had already formed. But those neurons still had a lot of growing to do. As kids grow, neurons in the brain branch out and ma

发表于:2018-12-31 / 阅读(126) / 评论(0) 分类 英语听力文摘 English Digest

Todd: Alright, Tennessee, you were talking about how you like movies. Tenn: Yes, I'm a big movie buff. Todd: OK. What kind of movies do you like? Tenn: I kind of like, I kind of like most genres of movies, it's just, what I look for is a good story a

发表于:2019-01-02 / 阅读(168) / 评论(0) 分类 英语访谈对话

Todd: Tennessee! Tenn: Yes! Todd: We're gonna talk about sports. Tenn: OK. I'm not big on sports, but. Todd: OK, well, that's OK. So you, you don't like sports. Tenn: Well, I like sports but I'm just not an avid sports watcher. You know I would usual

发表于:2019-01-02 / 阅读(161) / 评论(0) 分类 英语访谈对话

The big dream for neuroscientists is to be able to watch our brain cells in action, in real time. Well, new research has maybe found the most promising tool yeta technique to watch individual neurons light up in response to a stimulus, like flipping

发表于:2019-01-02 / 阅读(257) / 评论(0) 分类 60秒科学

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Adam Hinterthuer. Got a minute? Senior citizens across the world love keeping their brains busy with crossword puzzles, sudoku or word jumbles. These brain-teasers actually help keep neurons firing

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(211) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(十)月

A friends four year old daughter recently complained to me about how badly her mosquito bite itched. She was about to burst into tears. The fact that an uncomfortable itchy sensation can drive many of us to distraction led many scientists to believe

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(179) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(八)月

The big dream for neuroscientists is to be able to watch our brain cells in action, in real time. Well, new research has maybe found the most promising tool yeta technique to watch individual neurons light up in response to a stimulus, like flipping

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(174) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(五)月

Todd: Alright, Tennessee, you were talking about how you like movies. Tenn: Yes, I'm a big movie buff. Todd: OK. What kind of movies do you like? Tenn: I kind of like, I kind of like most genres of movies, it's just, what I look for is a good story a

发表于:2019-01-11 / 阅读(141) / 评论(0) 分类 原版英语对话1000个

Todd: Alright, Tennessee, you were talking about how you like movies. 好的,田纳西你要讲讲你对电影的喜爱。 Tenn: Yes, I'm a big movie buff. 好的,我是个电影迷。 Todd: OK. What kind of movies do you like? 你喜欢什么类型

发表于:2019-01-15 / 阅读(197) / 评论(0) 分类 实战口语情景对话

DAVID GREENE, HOST: Scientists have taken one more small step toward understanding what makes the human brain unique. As NPR's Jon Hamilton reports, they've identified a type of brain cell that exists in people but not in rodents. JON HAMILTON, BYLIN

发表于:2019-01-17 / 阅读(196) / 评论(0) 分类 2018年NPR美国国家公共电台8月

Todd: Alright, Tennessee, you were talking about how you like movies. Tenn: Yes, I'm a big movie buff. Todd: OK. What kind of movies do you like? Tenn: I kind of like, I kind of like most genres of movies, it's just, what I look for is a good story a

发表于:2019-01-20 / 阅读(144) / 评论(0) 分类 原版英语对话1000个

Todd: Tennessee! Tenn: Yes! Todd: We're gonna talk about sports. Tenn: OK. I'm not big on sports, but. Todd: OK, well, that's OK. So you, you don't like sports. Tenn: Well, I like sports but I'm just not an avid sports watcher. You know I would usual

发表于:2019-01-20 / 阅读(153) / 评论(0) 分类 原版英语对话1000个
学英语单词
ACC (accident)
access point mapping
acute renal insufficiency
adeniken
alternating-current (AC)
amphiphilicity
antifix
as brisk as a bee
birth cannon
blasius formula
break ones neck
cementum lamina
colon editing
columella cochleae
come and go upon
Commerce City
compensatory polycythemia
contemperations
Czerny's anemia
dedifferentiating
demonstratorships
deoxyglucose method
Dicarhine
diesel crawler crane
diphenylpropanetrione
electric insulation strength
emping
endo-endothelial layer
entrepreneurial earnings
European plaice
extensive pasture
fair hearing
fleeringly
flying cutoff device
furriered
gelonin
glozing
growth vigour
haematolysis
heavy primary ray
heebs
hieraciums
hood face
icatibant
in some cases kill the seedlings
Job Messaging Format
juges
let me be the judge of that
light fire brick
living rock
magnesium copper alloy
make a mountain out of a molehill
make two ends meet
mean time of no failure operation
message link
night lighting system
nightfax
no-side-draft position
ojai
Olivenstein
orsborn
over-achiever
packing washer
paramagnetic salt thermometer
pedunculated follicular hamartoma
pentoses
Phenobenzorphan
photochemical ozonization
photoinitiated polymerization
pioneering experimental study
Pisticci
potanthus pava
protuberantial
punks
Qihu
realist cinema
reinoculate
rolled compact
safehouses
sandpaintings
sector interleave
secure base
sedge warblers
sensor input
shaksperes
slurry packing technique
sock-away
software copyright protection
stagemanage
starveing
staticorgan
strike sb all of a heap
subsonic area
sucrates
the ways of the world
Tichodroma
unsugary
uralenol
wagrams
warning panel
with warmth