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1 hium-ion batteries are resistant to catching fire.
2 often observed in modern conifers following fire.
3 robes and invertebrates, was not affected by fire.
4 izing and responding to the critical role of fire.
5 ns some of the most vulnerable ecosystems to fires.
6 creasing from the summation of these neurons firing.
7 s increases basolateral amygdala (BLA) spike firing.
8 without a reduction in the number of origins firing.
9 and jitter during high frequency repetitive firing.
10 asma membrane, thereby depressing NAcSh MSNs firing.
11 iety-like behaviors and basolateral amygdala firing.
12 sequent behavior via an interaction with MTL firing.
13 awake, freely licking rats show lick-related firing.
14 to synaptic integration and action potential firing.
15 firing whereas others decrease their rate of firing.
16 eracting MOR-mediated inhibition of neuronal firing.
17 on fork restart while suppressing new origin firing.
18 epending on a transient suppression of spike firing.
19 ese transients summated rapidly during burst firing.
22 There is a growing interest in Amazonian fires, accompanied by a substantial increase in research
23 lateral ventral neurons (LNvs) need I(h) to fire action potentials in a high-frequency bursting mode
24 ore hyperpolarized VP with longer latency to fire action potentials on depolarization compared with b
26 netic downregulation of VTA-mPFC DA neurons' firing activity abolished the antidepressive-like effect
27 ve freely between a home and defeat chamber, firing activity emerged that predicted the animal's posi
29 rienced conditions favoring the evolution of fire-adapted traits for more than 200 million years.
34 teractions among multiple drivers to explain fire and ecosystem responses in grasslands, and how thes
35 missions from peat subjected to low-severity fire and predict lower cumulative CO(2) emissions from b
44 esults constrain mechanisms for modular grid firing and provide evidence for inter-animal phenotypic
45 nal provides an indirect measure of neuronal firing and reflects slow-evolving hemodynamic activity t
48 contribution to the ictal decrease in total firing and the ictal increase of T-type calcium channel-
50 pland harvest, forest clearcut and thinning, fire, and LUCC were 436.8, 117.9, 10.5, and 10.4 TgC/yea
51 of seed flight, protective measures against fire, and release mechanisms of explosive dispersers.
52 ips, back-propagation-activated Ca(2+) spike firing, and a shift in the critical frequency by blockin
53 synchronous GABA release, synchronous spike firing, and evoked-gamma power increase with lowered bas
54 weaken synaptic efficacy and reduce neuronal firing, and over a longer timeframe, driving calcium ove
55 psin alkaloids extracted from two species of fire ants against the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cru
58 and ecosystem 9 months after an experimental fire at the Jasper Ridge Global Change Experiment site i
59 se-locked to delta and spindles in mPFC, and fired at consistent lags with other thalamic units withi
60 ry significant information in their phase-of-firing at a 10-25 Hz band-limited beta frequency at whic
62 In the absence of Hox5 genes, phrenic MN firing becomes asynchronous and erratic due to loss of p
63 te-and-transition simulation model tied to a fire behavior model to simulate the spread of buffelgras
66 ater-bent); and a hybridized method based on fire bending and toasting followed by a 12 h fill with w
67 three bending/toasting protocols, including fire bent and fire toasted (fire-bent); water bent and f
69 ocols, including fire bent and fire toasted (fire-bent); water bent and fire toasted (water-bent); an
70 rats are less likely to orthogonalize their firing between directions of travel on a linear track an
71 Here, however, we show reciprocal correlated firing between heterotypic ganglion cells in multielectr
73 e HIPM and DIPM gene families with a role in fire blight susceptibility (S genes) can help achieve su
74 ple (Malus domestica) cultivars resistant to fire blight, a devastating bacterial disease caused by E
76 ive and versatile chemical synthesis using a fired brick to control oxidative radical polymerization
77 de decomposition method to satellite-derived fire burned area, we investigated the spatio-temporal ev
78 species distribution models, we found these fires burnt ~97,000 km(2) of vegetation across southern
80 idual interneurons did not display sustained firing but instead transiently enhanced their activity,
81 e of pyramidal neurons might determine burst-firing by setting the relative amount of distal excitato
83 ive benefits of synchronized flowering after fire can alleviate mate-finding Allee effects, promote p
86 ion forks are not stabilized, and new origin firing cannot be prevented, leading to the accumulation
87 ed animals also exhibited reduced persistent firing capacity, which may contribute to aging-related l
89 We tested for fire-induced (5-6 years post-fire) changes in the structure and functioning of the so
90 ophysical model demonstrates that well-known firing characteristics of mammalian muscle spindle Ia af
94 of HCN and SK activities mimicked changes in firing, confirming that these channels are responsible f
96 ecome increasingly predictable over multiple fire cycles, as boundaries are progressively sharpened u
99 rges of dopamine neurons (tonic or pacemaker firing) determine the motivation to respond to such cues
101 the nuanced relationships between landscape, fire disturbance, human agency, and climate is key to un
105 s the hydrology of PSFs are affected after a fire, during which the ecosystem can act as a C source f
106 nt of a colony, more neurons adopt transient firing dynamics, which can facilitate neural coding of s
108 e proteinaceous paint layers were exposed to fire effluents and high temperatures, while in the CH te
110 st of carbon capture from the US natural gas-fired electricity generating fleet comparing two technol
111 However, on typical air pollution events, fire emissions contributed as high as 50-75% (80-120 mug
112 ed to a change in the temporal pattern of AP firing, emphasizing the role of temporal code in conveyi
113 arthworms were also collected in situ from a fire-equipment testing site at a major Canadian airport.
114 of pyrolysed waxes and lipids, increase post-fire erosion and can lead to long-term productivity loss
115 y and social development: how to improve the fire escape and rescue capacity remains a huge challenge
116 ass invasion including size and frequency of fire events and displacement of saguaro cacti and other
117 2-SPN activity, (3) autonomous PV GPe neuron firing ex vivo was upregulated, presumably through homeo
120 tical neurons are capable of elevating their firing for long durations in the absence of a stimulus.
122 ype channels are required for normal daytime firing frequency in SCN neurons and circuit rhythms.
123 lease from basket cells (BCs) attenuates the firing frequency of Purkinje neurons (PNs) in the cerebe
124 OXTRs in the CeL increased action potential firing frequency recorded from neurons in this region vi
125 ains glutamatergic projection cells at their firing frequency, whereas GABAergic neurons are only inh
127 tion, nitrogen deposition, climate, wildland fire, harvest, and land use/land cover change (LUCC) wer
128 t spatial scales (hundreds of meters) due to fires, harvest, and climate-induced growth that are not
130 estimated colony abundance before and after fire in burned and unburned areas using a genetic mark-r
133 nvestigated the spatio-temporal evolution of fires in Africa over 2001-2016 and identified the potent
135 erexpression (1) increased cortically-evoked firing in a subpopulation of identified striatonigral MS
139 halamocortical relay neurons; however, burst firing in thalamocortical relay neurons remains essentia
140 g effects wear off, accompanied by increased firing in the lateral habenula (LHb) that contributes to
142 oscillations in spontaneous action potential firing in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) translate ti
144 otentially mediated by normalizing excessive firing in the ventral hippocampus without affecting anxi
145 results suggest that the indirect effects of fire, in addition to the direct emissions, is an overloo
146 al changes that may have opposing impacts on fire, including higher basin-wide precipitation and incr
150 The research offered us an insight into the fire-induced effects on selected paints for the first ti
152 flowering, to determine the extent to which fire influences the potential for sexual reproduction.
157 mouse cerebellar glia and granule cells and fired large calcium currents, measured with the genetica
164 As we used an ensemble of state-of-the-art fire models, including effects of land use and the ensem
166 ion observed in a population of periodically firing neurons and reversible conduction block that occu
167 in vivo pGABA neurons were found to be fast-firing neurons with the capacity to burst when depolariz
170 ate and dramatic increase in the spontaneous firing of BLA neurons that persisted (and in some units,
172 ion via decreased NMDAR currents and reduced firing of dendrite-targeting somatostatin-expressing (SS
174 e extent of the modulation of the individual firing of hippocampal neurons by an IED predicted the ex
176 n a consistent mechanism to elicit correlate firing of neurons that will process similar frequencies
177 (CNO) activation of interneurons suppressed firing of pyramidal cells, unexpectedly the majority of
178 ase of T-type calcium channel-mediated burst firing of thalamocortical neurons, though the latter is
182 since wildfire) we quantified the effects of fire on quantity and composition of dissolved organic ma
184 s work, we studied the longer-term impact of fires on C cycling in tropical PSFs, hence we quantified
185 oach achieves skillful prediction of African fire one month in advance and can be generalized to prov
186 nels does not promote Cacna1g-mediated burst firing or T-type calcium current (IT) in the thalamocort
188 adoxical brain state displaying asynchronous firing pattern and high EMG activity was found unexpecte
191 oidal boundary geometry distorts the regular firing patterns of entorhinal grid cells, proposedly pro
192 not considered evoking long-term changes in firing patterns of in-vitro networks by introducing trai
194 Moment-to-moment tracking of neural ensemble firing patterns revealed that the prelimbic network acti
195 ring patterns, monitor the transition of the firing patterns, and identify neural synchronization sta
196 tem is successfully used to recognize neural firing patterns, monitor the transition of the firing pa
198 bushy cells exhibit hyperacusis-like neural firing patterns, which are comprised of enhanced sound-d
199 iven fuel changes resulted in high-magnitude fire peaks close to GI/GS boundaries, even exacerbated b
200 cells, many of which displayed two preferred firing phases in theta oscillations and preferentially p
202 The present work evaluates the role of coal-fired power plant wet flue gas desulfurization (FGD)-ass
203 tive model of trace element behavior at coal-fired power plants (CFPPs) to estimate the trace element
204 O(2)) from the flue emissions of natural gas-fired power plants could reduce their carbon intensity.
205 phase-locked to cortical theta activity and fired precisely timed bursts after reward and punishment
206 f high-dose lithium in CMS mice restored the firing properties of mPFC-projecting DA neurons, and als
209 neurons regulate firing around a stable mean firing rate (FR) that can differ by orders of magnitude
211 neurons encode information by varying their firing rate and patterns precisely fine-tuned through GA
212 based largely on models those consider only firing rate as the mechanism of information transfer.
214 -poor environments and preferentially used a firing rate code driven by intra-hippocampal inputs.
216 ponse window that still contains presynaptic firing rate information before the synapse is depressed.
218 ed astrocytes in wild-type mice enhanced the firing rate of cortical neurons and gamma oscillations,
219 und that, in dopamine-depleted mice, (1) the firing rate of D2-SPNs was elevated, especially during c
220 FC-DRN neural circuit, in vivo recordings of firing rate of DRN 5-HT neurons, cerebral 5-HT depletion
223 r extent in both sexes (P < 0.05), whilst MU firing rate progressively decreased with age in females
224 ensity of VGLUT2(+) puncta and Purkinje cell firing rate respectively, in contrast to the increased s
225 er footshock caused smaller increases in BLA firing rate, but this could be augmented by chemogenetic
226 used to determine discharge characteristics (firing rate, variability) and biomarkers of peripheral M
230 that deep layer neurons show higher baseline firing rates (FRs) in GC with deep-layer inhibitory neur
231 xceeds information that can be obtained from firing rates alone and is evident for inter-areal connec
232 diction errors, and outcome history in their firing rates also carry significant information in their
233 ntained in adaptive conductances that reduce firing rates and can be accessed directly without cued r
234 ucleus output neurons, bushy cells show high firing rates as well as lower and less variable first-sp
236 x that is recruited to the seizure, neuronal firing rates increase and waveforms become longer in dur
238 most of which invoke changes in spontaneous firing rates of central auditory neurons resulting from
240 behavior in Treasure Hunt, we found that the firing rates of many MTL neurons during navigation signi
243 e groups (MU-modes) with parallel scaling of firing rates with changes in the muscle force, and (ii)
244 ke-encoded information is evident in average firing rates, but finer temporal coding might allow mult
245 ynaptic strength, membrane excitability, and firing rates, its role at the neural circuit and network
246 erent parameters through minor variations in firing rates, LA cells coded fewer task features with st
247 which are comprised of enhanced sound-driven firing rates, reduced first-spike latencies and wideband
251 itions by humans and lightning are breaching fire refugia; hence, the survival Tasmanian Gondwanan sp
255 ed or unanesthetized mice, the pGABA neurons fired repetitively at relatively fast rates (~40 Hz) dur
256 ENG may have great potential applications in fire rescue and wearable sensors as well as smart home d
264 nset, showing large deviations from baseline firing shortly after image onset but relaxing back to ba
265 tion, supported by satellite observations of fires, shows that biomass-burning emissions over the nor
268 (fastigial) cerebellar nuclei (mCbN), which fire spontaneously with wide dynamic ranges, send glutam
269 In brain slice recordings, many NPY neurons fired spontaneously, suggesting that NPY neurons may dri
272 ples from 184 homes in North Carolina and 49 fire stations across the United States and Canada were c
273 diPAP were significantly higher in dust from fire stations than from homes, and 8:2 FTOH was signific
277 ties, similar to the North American prairie, fire suppression contributes to local plant extinctions.
278 Here we investigate if decades of aggressive fire suppression in the boreal biome of Canada has reduc
279 Bursting cholinergic neurons (Burst-BFCNs) fired synchronously, phase-locked to cortical theta acti
281 ulation and a longer duration of GnRH neuron firing than KP54 (115 vs. 55 minutes; P = 0.0012).CONCLU
283 the white matter (inner-zone GCs) had higher firing thresholds and could sustain firing with larger c
284 /toasting protocols, including fire bent and fire toasted (fire-bent); water bent and fire toasted (w
285 and fire toasted (fire-bent); water bent and fire toasted (water-bent); and a hybridized method based
286 postcombustion capture for small natural gas-fired units with low utilization, such as gas turbines,
288 mental drivers and predictability of African fire using the analytical framework of Stepwise Generali
289 lamus (VMH), leptin-induced action potential firing was enhanced, whereas nuclear pSTAT3 was reduced
290 functional intercellular RNA exchange (CROSS-FIRE) we uncover various genes involved in EV subtype bi
292 al stands varied as a function of stand age, fire weather conditions, ecozone, and soil moisture clas
293 l morphology and wood anatomy to drought and fire were similar to those of some modern trees and supp
296 rane potential allows to generate persistent firing when clusters of cooperative channels are present
297 rons in visual cortex increase their rate of firing whereas others decrease their rate of firing.
298 or is coincident with rhythmic Purkinje cell firing, which alters the activity of their target cerebe
299 ilure coincided with reduced dopamine neuron firing, which was not observed during antipsychotic effi
300 placed at a site scheduled for a prescribed fire while the rest were assigned to a neighboring site
301 Managing the carbon debt with prescribed fire will help reduce the risk of additional mortality f
302 We overlaid the location of current and past fires with ecosystem types, land use, and conservation v
303 d higher firing thresholds and could sustain firing with larger current inputs than GCs closer to the