;Sherrington's Second Law : The law of reciprocal innervation.
2.
The converse would occur in the other eye, both eyes demonstrating the law of reciprocal innervation.
3.
This reciprocal innervation occurs so that the contraction of a muscle results in the simultaneous relaxation of its corresponding antagonist.
4.
However, there " is " an inhibitory interneuron used to relax the antagonistic hamstring muscle ( Reciprocal innervation ).
5.
Relatively simple neuronal ensembles operate in the spinal cord where they control basic automatisms such as monosynaptic tendon reflex and reciprocal innervation of muscles.
6.
Beritashvili studied the problem of reciprocal innervation of skeletal musculature in frogs showing that local strychninization of the dorsal horn did not disrupt the coordination of the wiping reflex.
7.
The LGN is not just a simple relay station but it is also a center for processing; it receives reciprocal input from the cortical and subcortical layers and reciprocal innervation from the visual cortex.
8.
Speaking of the excitation-inhibition relationship, Sherrington said " desistence from action may be as truly active as is the taking of action . " Sherrington continued his work on reciprocal innervation during his years at Liverpool.
9.
The significance of Descartes Law of Reciprocal Innervation has been additionally highlighted by recent research and applications of bioengineering concepts, such as optimal control and quantitative models of the motor impulses sent by the brain to control eye motion.
10.
Ren?Descartes ( 1596 1650 ) was one of the first to conceive a model of "'reciprocal innervation "'( in 1626 ) as the principle that provides for the control of flex the lower arm inward.