共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
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Chicurel M 《Science (New York, N.Y.)》2002,295(5562):1995-1997
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Robinson PJ 《Science (New York, N.Y.)》2007,316(5824):551-553
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Miller G 《Science (New York, N.Y.)》2004,304(5667):34-36
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Gitler AD 《Science (New York, N.Y.)》2011,334(6056):606-607
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Galizia CG 《Science (New York, N.Y.)》2007,317(5836):326-327
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Dubnau J 《Science (New York, N.Y.)》2012,335(6069):664-665
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Brown K 《Science (New York, N.Y.)》2003,301(5630):160-161
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Strome S 《Science (New York, N.Y.)》2011,331(6015):292-293
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Helmuth L 《Science (New York, N.Y.)》2001,293(5536):1746-1747
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Helmuth L 《Science (New York, N.Y.)》2000,289(5483):1273b
How do you make yourself heard if you are standing far from the fray? If you are a synapse, like a human, you shout. So says new research published in the September issue of Nature Neuroscience, answering a question that has perplexed neuroscientists for decades: namely, how a message delivered at a synapse far from the cell body--which must fade as it travels through the cell--can make itself heard above the din of messages picked up by close-in synapses. 相似文献