Henning Scheich
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases
4 Papers
26 Citations
Henning Scheich is an academic researcher from German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases. The author has contributed to research in topics: Auditory cortex & Recall. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications. Previous affiliations of Henning Scheich include Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology.
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Papers
Analysis of evoked and emergent patterns of stimulus-related auditory cortical activity.
TL;DR: Compared evoked and emergent patterns in the primary auditory cortex, field AI, of the gerbil are compared by studying the differential effects of diluting spatial information about the patterns on their geometric dissimilarity by randomly removing channels from the recording data.
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The use of thallium diethyldithiocarbamate for mapping CNS potassium metabolism and neuronal activity: Tl+‐redistribution, Tl+‐kinetics and Tl+‐equilibrium distribution
Tim Wanger,Henning Scheich,Henning Scheich,Frank W. Ohl,Frank W. Ohl,Jürgen Goldschmidt,Jürgen Goldschmidt +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors showed that the patterns and kinetics of Tl(+) -redistribution in the brain are essentially the same irrespective of whether animals have been injected with TlAc or TlDDC.
8
Single-cell resolution mapping of neuronal damage in acute focal cerebral ischemia using thallium autometallography
Franziska Stöber,Kathrin Baldauf,Iryna Ziabreva,Denise Harhausen,Marietta Zille,Jenni Neubert,Klaus G. Reymann,Henning Scheich,Ulrich Dirnagl,Ulrich H. Schröder,Andreas Wunder,Jürgen Goldschmidt +11 more
TL;DR: It is shown, in rodent models of middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO), that neuronal damage in acute focal cerebral ischemia can be mapped with single-cell resolution using thallium autometallography (TlAMG), a histochemical technique for the detection of the K+-probe thalium (TL+) in the brain.
7
Dopamine modulates memory consolidation of discrimination learning in the auditory cortex
Horst Schicknick,Nicole Reichenbach,Karl-Heinz Smalla,Henning Scheich,Henning Scheich,Eckart D. Gundelfinger,Wolfgang Tischmeyer +6 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that auditory‐cortical dopamine activity after acquisition of a discrimination of complex sounds and after retrieval of weak frequency‐modulated tone discrimination memory further improves memory consolidation, i.e. the correct association of two sounds with their respective GO/NO‐GO meaning, in support of future memory recall.