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Summation

About: Summation is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 954 publications have been published within this topic receiving 45593 citations. The topic is also known as: summation & sum of a sequence.


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Journal ArticleDOI
Raymon M. Glantz1
TL;DR: The spatial summing characteristics of the crustacean sustaining fiber were examined with concentric stimuli and observed to be highly dependent upon the stimulus intensity, consistent with a lateral inhibitory mechanism operating within the excitatory field.

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Age-related alteration in visual sensitivity may be attributed to sensitivity (amplitude) losses but not to changes in temporal characteristics of the visual system.
Abstract: Purpose. This study examined the temporal summation properties of the aging visual system under a wide range of background luminances. Methods. Contrast thresholds for 0.5 cpd gratings for 12 younger (mean age 20.6 years) and 12 older (mean age 71.6 years) observers in good ocular health were measured for 6 stimulus durations (from 10 to 1000 ms) under 4 background luminances (from 0.44 to 249.50 cd/m 2 . Two-alternative forced-choice staircase method was used. Results. We found significant main effects of age, background luminance, and stimulus duration on the contrast threshold. There were no age-related differences in the shape of the threshold-duration functions under all background luminances, although the shape changed significantly with background luminance. Age-related differences in contrast threshold were significant under the two lowest, but not under the two highest, background luminances. Conclusions. Age-related alteration in visual sensitivity may be attributed to sensitivity (amplitude) losses but not to changes in temporal characteristics of the visual system

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The increased latency fluctuation of the single motor unit H‐reflex in patients with MND may reflect changes in the motoneuron pool excitability that may be secondary to altered intrinsic electrophysiological properties of motoneurons, or to an abnormal temporal and spatial summation of synaptic inputs on mot oneurons.
Abstract: The latency fluctuation of single motor unit potentials (MUPH) in the H-reflex is greater than the latency fluctuation of MUPs in the direct (MUPM) and recurrent (MUPF) responses. This has been attributed to the variability in the impulse generation at the site of nerve stimulation, and to the variation in the synaptic delay at the anterior horn cell. We studied the latency fluctuation of single motor unit H-reflex in patients with motor neuron disorders (MND) in comparison with normal subjects. The mean jitter of the H-reflex was 264.3 +/- 17.8 microseconds (mean +/- SEM) in 30 MUPH recorded from 10 patients with ALS, 302.7 +/- 25.2 microseconds in 16 MUPH from 6 patients with chronic motor neuron diseases, as compared with 137.4 +/- 7.3 microseconds in 34 MUPH recorded from 10 normal subjects. This difference, which persisted even after the correction for the latency variation of MUPM, cannot be explained on the basis of an enhanced reciprocal inhibition. Thus, the increased latency fluctuation of the single motor unit H-reflex in patients with MND may reflect changes in the motoneuron pool excitability that may be secondary to altered intrinsic electrophysiological properties of motoneurons, or to an abnormal temporal and spatial summation of synaptic inputs on motoneurons.

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was shown that the threshold was determined by the target visibility rather than the orientation acuity, and if two halves of a line were presented successively at variable time intervals a minimum time interval existed, of the order of 30–50 msec, during which temporal integration is complete.

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In single neurones recorded from the striate cortex of cats anaesthetized with N2O/O2/halothane, receptive field dimensions, length specificity and areal extent of drive were assessed for different classes of visual stimuli.
Abstract: In single neurones recorded from the striate cortex of cats anaesthetized with N2O/O2/halothane, receptive field dimensions, length specificity and areal extent of drive were assessed for different classes of visual stimuli. Receptive fields were mapped as rectangular minimum response fields (MRFs). Spatial summation along the axis of preferred orientation was assessed: for moving bars whose length was varied (length summation); and for height variation of a square-wave grating patch against a uniform grey background, or a patch of moving texture against a stationary background of similar texture. In complementary tests a moving square-wave grating background was progressively occluded by a uniform grey foreground mask of variable height; or a mask of stationary texture of variable height progressively occluded a background of moving texture. In parallel measurements, the width of grating or textured patches or masks was varied whilst maintaining height constant. Broadly speaking, the areal influence of each class of stimulus was comparable, and distinct from extra-receptive field phenomena in evoking responses from within the receptive field, but not from surrounding areas. The masking paradigm provided the most sensitive measure of receptive field height and width. However, in some neurones length summation, the degree of endstopping, and the directional bias depended critically on the stimulus configuration used. Length summation tended to be more dramatic for short bars than for gratings. Length summation for texture was significantly more pronounced than for an oriented bar in special and in intermediate complex neurones. By contrast, endstopping was typically less intense for gratings than for bars, and least pronounced for texture. Because of stimulus specificity, complex neurones assigned to particular functional subgroups on the basis of their response to oriented bars may exhibit quite different patterns of behaviour for other classes of stimuli.

11 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202323
202234
202118
20204
201911
201812