Each neural state is represented by a specific neural activation pattern.
Multilingual individuals consistently demonstrate similar activation patterns in the brain when using either one of the two or more languages they fluently know.
The glomerular activation patterns within the olfactory bulb are thought to represent the quality of the odor being detected.
Letter processing in the visual system: different activation patterns for single letters and strings.
This finding indicates that different cortical activation patterns emerge from long-term motor practice.
These findings imply that there is no specific regional activation pattern unique to AP.
This activation pattern represents abnormal recruitment of the cortical areas involved in motor control.
The brain will then essentially put the pieces of the activation pattern back together in order to identify and perceive the odorant.
This is important because it allows the possibility to predict the neural activation pattern from an odorant and vice versa.
A program is divided into a set of tasks (i.e., processes or threads), which has a periodic activation pattern.