120 resultados para outdoor cats
em University of Queensland eSpace - Australia
Resumo:
As seen from upper level of house.
Resumo:
Looking towards pool deck, Hanging Basket top right.
Resumo:
As seen from upper level of house.
Resumo:
Looking towards Iwan from within outdoor room.
Resumo:
View from front of property through main entrance to double-height outdoor room. Existing house on right.
Resumo:
Looking towards section of original house from outdoor room area. Hand-made spotted gum columns on edge of outdoor room on right.
Resumo:
Timber battened concave roof and supporting structure over outdoor room area.
Resumo:
Dining setting, sculptures, timber columns and curved roof in outdoor room
Resumo:
As seen from mezzanine.
Resumo:
As seen from back of bedroom pavilion, looking towards main pavilion. Day bed alcove to bedroom in foreground.
Resumo:
Restricted cochlear lesions in adult animals result in plastic changes in the representation of the lesioned cochlea, and thus in the frequency map, in the contralateral auditory cortex and thalamus. To examine the contribution of subthalamic changes to this reorganization, the effects of unilateral mechanical cochlear lesions on the frequency organization of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC) were examined in adult cats. Lesions typically resulted in a broad high-frequency hearing loss extending from a frequency in the range 15-22 kHz. After recovery periods of 2.5-18 months, the frequency organization of ICC contralateral to the lesioned cochlea was determined separately for the onset and late components of multiunit responses to tone-burst stimuli. For the late response component in all but one penetration through the ICC, and for the onset response component in more than half of the penetrations, changes in frequency organization in the lesion projection zone were explicable as the residue of prelesion responses. In half of the penetrations exhibiting nonresidue type changes in onset-response frequency organization, the changes appeared to reflect the unmasking of normally inhibited inputs. In the other half it was unclear whether the changes reflected unmasking or a dynamic process of reorganization. Thus, most of the observed changes were explicable as passive consequences of the lesion, and there was limited evidence for plasticity in the ICC. The implications of the data with respect to the primary locus of the changes and to the manner in which they contribute to thalamocortical reorganization are considered. (C) 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.