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Neeraj Jain

Researcher at National Brain Research Centre

Publications -  53
Citations -  2440

Neeraj Jain is an academic researcher from National Brain Research Centre. The author has contributed to research in topics: Somatosensory system & Cortex (anatomy). The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 51 publications receiving 2271 citations. Previous affiliations of Neeraj Jain include Indian Institute of Technology, Jodhpur & University of Maryland, Baltimore.

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Deactivation and reactivation of somatosensory cortex after dorsal spinal cord injury

TL;DR: Sensory stimuli to the body are conveyed by the spinal cord to the primary somatosensory cortex, which is highly dependent on dorsal spinal column inputs, and other spinal pathways do not substitute for the dorsal columns even after injury.
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Growth of new brainstem connections in adult monkeys with massive sensory loss.

TL;DR: The face afferents from the trigeminal nucleus of the brainstem sprout and grow into the cuneate nucleus in adult monkeys after lesions of the dorsal columns of the spinal cord or therapeutic amputation of an arm, which may underlie the large-scale expansion of the face representation into the hand region of somatosensory cortex that follows such deafferentations.
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Large-Scale Reorganization in the Somatosensory Cortex and Thalamus after Sensory Loss in Macaque Monkeys

TL;DR: A comparison of the extents of deafferentation across the monkeys shows that even if the dorsal column lesion is partial, preserving most of the hand representation, it is sufficient to induce an expansion of the face representation.
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Anatomic correlates of the face and oral cavity representations in the somatosensory cortical area 3b of monkeys.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the representations of the face and mouth are highly similar across individuals of the same species, and there are extensive overall similarities across these two species of New World monkeys.
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Subcortical Contributions to Massive Cortical Reorganizations

TL;DR: Evidence from noninvasive is capable of extensive reorganization came from a reimaging of evoked activity in the brains of humans with port of a single raccoon that had lost a forearm at some arm amputations that cortex formerly devoted to the unknown time prior to its capture.