Neuroscience Protocols: Supplement Module 2
F.G. Wouterlood(Editor)
Elsevier (Publisher)
Published in December 1993
Loose-leaf edition
160 pages
978-0-444-81802-7 (ISBN)
Description
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Neuroscientists need to stay informed about new technological and technical developments. Such developments, when applied in the laboratory, will improve the quality of current reasearch and may also open new avenues of research and research perspectives. New and improved techniques are developed every year, and some are published in a number of different, often specialized journals and books. lt is very difficult for the neuroscientist to survey, access and collate information on available techniques and protocols. Books become outdated soon after publication and joumals are not usually available at the laboratory bench. To help you keep track of, and updated on, new techniques, and to support their rapid and accurate implementation in the laboratory, Elsevier Science has published "Neuroscience Protocols". This new laboratory manual provides protocols of new and established techniques used in neuroscience. Morphological, cellular, molecular, physiological, developmental, quantitive, behavioural and immunological methods that pertain to neuroscience are covered in different sections of "Neuroscience Protocols".
The protocols are supplied in a loose-leaf format, with a ring binder, so that you will be able to take out the protocol you require in your laboratory. The loose-leaf format rnakes it simple for you to add this newest protocols module. You are also invited to submit your own protocols to the Managing Editor, Dr Floris Wouterlood, or to any member of the Editorial Board. The submitted protocols will initially be reviewed by two independent reviewers and published, after positive review, in one of the subsequent volumes. An electronic version of Elsevier's "Neurosciences Protocols" is in preparation and will be available for both the PC (MS-DOS/ Windows 3.X) and Macintosh, early 1994.
Neuroscientists need to stay informed about new technological and technical developments. Such developments, when applied in the laboratory, will improve the quality of current reasearch and may also open new avenues of research and research perspectives. New and improved techniques are developed every year, and some are published in a number of different, often specialized journals and books. lt is very difficult for the neuroscientist to survey, access and collate information on available techniques and protocols. Books become outdated soon after publication and joumals are not usually available at the laboratory bench. To help you keep track of, and updated on, new techniques, and to support their rapid and accurate implementation in the laboratory, Elsevier Science has published "Neuroscience Protocols". This new laboratory manual provides protocols of new and established techniques used in neuroscience. Morphological, cellular, molecular, physiological, developmental, quantitive, behavioural and immunological methods that pertain to neuroscience are covered in different sections of "Neuroscience Protocols".
The protocols are supplied in a loose-leaf format, with a ring binder, so that you will be able to take out the protocol you require in your laboratory. The loose-leaf format rnakes it simple for you to add this newest protocols module. You are also invited to submit your own protocols to the Managing Editor, Dr Floris Wouterlood, or to any member of the Editorial Board. The submitted protocols will initially be reviewed by two independent reviewers and published, after positive review, in one of the subsequent volumes. An electronic version of Elsevier's "Neurosciences Protocols" is in preparation and will be available for both the PC (MS-DOS/ Windows 3.X) and Macintosh, early 1994.
The protocols are supplied in a loose-leaf format, with a ring binder, so that you will be able to take out the protocol you require in your laboratory. The loose-leaf format rnakes it simple for you to add this newest protocols module. You are also invited to submit your own protocols to the Managing Editor, Dr Floris Wouterlood, or to any member of the Editorial Board. The submitted protocols will initially be reviewed by two independent reviewers and published, after positive review, in one of the subsequent volumes. An electronic version of Elsevier's "Neurosciences Protocols" is in preparation and will be available for both the PC (MS-DOS/ Windows 3.X) and Macintosh, early 1994.
Neuroscientists need to stay informed about new technological and technical developments. Such developments, when applied in the laboratory, will improve the quality of current reasearch and may also open new avenues of research and research perspectives. New and improved techniques are developed every year, and some are published in a number of different, often specialized journals and books. lt is very difficult for the neuroscientist to survey, access and collate information on available techniques and protocols. Books become outdated soon after publication and joumals are not usually available at the laboratory bench. To help you keep track of, and updated on, new techniques, and to support their rapid and accurate implementation in the laboratory, Elsevier Science has published "Neuroscience Protocols". This new laboratory manual provides protocols of new and established techniques used in neuroscience. Morphological, cellular, molecular, physiological, developmental, quantitive, behavioural and immunological methods that pertain to neuroscience are covered in different sections of "Neuroscience Protocols".
The protocols are supplied in a loose-leaf format, with a ring binder, so that you will be able to take out the protocol you require in your laboratory. The loose-leaf format rnakes it simple for you to add this newest protocols module. You are also invited to submit your own protocols to the Managing Editor, Dr Floris Wouterlood, or to any member of the Editorial Board. The submitted protocols will initially be reviewed by two independent reviewers and published, after positive review, in one of the subsequent volumes. An electronic version of Elsevier's "Neurosciences Protocols" is in preparation and will be available for both the PC (MS-DOS/ Windows 3.X) and Macintosh, early 1994.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Elsevier Science & Technology
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 230 mm
Weight
708 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-444-81802-7 (9780444818027)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Content
MODULE 2. Section 010- behavioural neurobiology. The double Y-maze as a tool for assessing memory in rats (P.E. Mallet, R,J Beninger). Beam-walking in rats: the measuremant of motor recovery after injury to cerebral cortex (L.B. Goldstein). Delayed spetial matching-to-sample water-escape in rodents (L.W. Means). Section 020 - cellular and molecular neurobiology determination of acetylcholine in microdialysates by HPLC and electrochemical detection(B.H.C Westlink, G. Damsma). Non-radioactive in situ mRNA hybridization using synthetics oligonucleotides: principles, combination with immuncytochemistry and quantation (L. Larsson, D.M. Hougaard). Section 050 - Neuromorphology. DiL labelling ( M.G. Honing). Lucifer yellow dye labelling of living nerve cells and subsequent immunoperoxidase staining with Lucifer yellow antiserum ( S.-P. Onn, Onn, M.L. Pucak, A.A. Grace). Intracellular brain tissue (G. Einstein). Non-freezing methods for post-embedding immunoelectron microscopy (A.P. Kent, S.M. Hall). Intracellular dye-filling in vivo combined with light and electron microscopic immunocytochemistry ( P.M. Pilowski, I.J. Llewellyn-smith).