This is a Wikipediauser page. This is not an encyclopedia article or the talk page for an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user whom this page is about may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia. The original page is located at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Fuzzform.
If you're here to leave a question/comment, please use the talk page.
Note: I can provide 2D molecular images (in svg format) and full-text versions of many research articles. If you need either of these, please ask me via the talk page, and I'll try to get back to you in a timely manner.
Neural tract - relationship to Neural pathway? Biological tracts in general? (Proposed titles for a more general article were "Tract (biology)", "Tract (anatomy)")
Presynaptic specialization & Postsynaptic specialization - not even Purves' Neuroscience clearly explains this term: "Typically, the presynaptic terminal is immediately adjacent to a postsynaptic specialization of the target cell." (7). That's all it says about it.
Charles Bradley, a child psychiatrist who conducted the earliest experiments on the use of amphetamine as drug therapy, providing the precursor for the subsequent development of theories about ADD and ADHD. (see pg. 61 and onward of Barondes' "Better Than Prozac")
Retrograde tracing - technique used to trace neural connections from their termination to their source.
Lesion study - "The use of structure to infer function was adopted for experimentation, and much of neuroscience rests upon observations made by purposefully damaging a distinct brain region, nerve or tract in an experimental animal and observing and documenting the subsequent loss of function." (Purves 16)
Gravity (beer) - Get better image of hydrometer, Link to/from other homebrewing articles, explain that the term is used in relation to all alcoholic beverages although consumers only see it in relation to beer
Hyperandrogenism redirects to polycystic ovary syndrome. Hyperandrogenism (elevated levels of androgens) is a symptom, not a syndrome or a disease in and of itself. There are presumably other disorders characterized by elevated levels of androgens.
AM1172 ?
Definity - drug "used in cardiac imaging, cardiopulmonary reactions" [1]. Currently, the article is about a digital imager.