Facundo Valverde
Spanish National Research Council
52 Papers
856 Citations
Facundo Valverde is an academic researcher from Spanish National Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Olfactory system & Olfactory bulb. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 52 publications.
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Papers
Tangential migration in neocortical development
TL;DR: A three-dimensional reconstruction is generated to study the morphological formation of the two ganglionic eminences and the interganglionic sulcus and describes the spatiotemporal sequence of GABA, Calbindin, and Calretinin expression, suggesting that the cells migrating tangentially form a heterogeneous population.
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Neuroglial arrangements in the olfactory glomeruli of the hedgehog
TL;DR: TheOlfactory glomeruli represent morphological and functional units in which olfactory information is processed in specialized synaptic arrangements established between the central processes of sensory neurons and the terminal portions of the dendrites of periglomerular, tufted, and mitral cells.
124
Transitory population of cells in the temporal cortex of kittens.
TL;DR: A correlated study, using conventional electron microscopy and the Golgi method in the subplate layer and lower part of layer VI, in the developing temporal cortex of kittens has been made, finding a transitory population of early-generated subplate cells might be involved in the organization of cortical afferents before the final targets have completed their migrations.
114
The organization of area 18 in the monkey. A Golgi study.
TL;DR: Three-dimensional aspects of cells were analyzed by means of a computer program which permits neurons to be displayed as perspective views from various positions and several neuronal parameters pertaining to the length of axons and dendrites were calculated.
98
Persistence of early-generated neurons in the rodent subplate: assessment of cell death in neocortex during the early postnatal period
TL;DR: The amount of cell death in layer Vlb is neither particularly prominent nor significantly different from that which occurs in the remaining neocortical layers, apart from layer II and in the white matter of the corpus callosum, which concludes that neuronal death does not play any significant role in the rodent subplate.
91