Neues Online-Buch: The Mouse Nervous System

mns

The Mouse Nervous System

Charles Watson, George Paxinos, Luis Puelles (Herausgeber)
ISBN: 978-0-12-369497-3, Elsevier 2012

„The Mouse Nervous System“ provides a comprehensive account of the central nervous system of the mouse. The book is aimed at molecular biologists who need a book that introduces them to the anatomy of the mouse brain and spinal cord, but also takes them into the relevant details of development and organization of the area they have chosen to study. „The Mouse Nervous System“ offers a wealth of new information for experienced anatomists who work on mice. The book serves as a valuable resource for researchers and graduate students in neuroscience. Its visualization of brain white matter anatomy via 3D diffusion tensor imaging contrasts enhances relationship of anatomy to function. Its systematic consideration of the anatomy and connections of all regions of brain and spinal cord by the authors of the most cited rodent brain atlases. It covers a major section (12 chapters) on functional systems related to motor control, sensation, and behavioral and emotional states, it includes full segmentation of 170120+ brain regions more clearly defines structure boundaries than previous point-and-annotate anatomical labeling, and connectivity is mapped in a way not provided by traditional atlases. It is a detailed analysis of gene expression during development of the forebrain by Luis Puelles, the leading researcher in this area. It features full coverage of the role of gene expression during development, and the new field of genetic neuroantomy using site-specific recombinases. It contains examples of the use of mouse models in the study of neurological illness. [Amazon’s review]


Das obige Buch gehört zu den gut 1.000 dauerhaft von der ZB Med gekauften Online-Büchern des Elsevier-Verlags der Jahre 1995-2008, 2009, die in den folgenden Sachgebieten erschienen sind: Forensics; Immunology and Microbiology; Medicine and Dentistry; Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science; Psychology (1995-2009); Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (1995-2010); Neuroscience (1995-2009, 2011).