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COOL IMAGES
Anatomy of Memory
As you read this, chemical signals are zipping through your
brain via structures like this snippet of a dendrite, spindly fingers
that branch off from neurons and receive signals from other neurons
at contact points called synapses (red and blue). The dendrites' thorny
protrusions come in all shapes and sizes, and neuroscientists are
busy trying to figure out what role these play in memory and learning.
Researchers at Boston University created these dendrite reconstructions
(about 9 micrometers long) by slicing rat hippocampus into thin sections,
imaging them with an electron microscope, then reassembling the sections
on computers. Their Synapse Web* site offers software for researchers also
wishing to make reconstructions,
along with a brain anatomy tutorial that zooms
from micrographs of tissue slices and cells to virtual reality models
of dendrites.
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