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9581 - 9590 of 52809 results
  • Journal Article
    Strategic distractor suppression improves selective control in human vision | Journal of Neuroscience
    Our visual environment is complicated and our cognitive capacity is limited. As a result, we must strategically ignore some stimuli in order to prioritize others. Common-sense suggests that foreknowledge of distractor characteristics, like location or color, might help us ignore these objects. But empirical studies have provided mixed evidence, often showing that knowing about a distractor before it appears counter-intuitively leads to its attentional selection. What has looked like strategic distractor suppression in the past is now commonly explained as a product of prior experience and implicit statistical learning, and the long-standing notion that distractor suppression is reflected in alpha-band oscillatory brain activity has been challenged by results appearing to link alpha to target resolution. Can we strategically, proactively suppress distractors? And, if so, does this involve alpha? Here, we use concurrent recording of human EEG and eye movements in optimized experimental designs to identify be...
    Jul 8, 2021 Wieske van Zoest
  • Journal Article
    Disengagement of motor cortex during long-term learning tracks the performance level of learned movements | Journal of Neuroscience
    Not all movements require the motor cortex for execution. Intriguingly, dependence on motor cortex of a given movement is not fixed, but instead can dynamically change over the course of long-term learning. For instance, rodent forelimb movements that initially require motor cortex can become independent of the motor cortex after an extended period of training. However, it remains unclear whether long-term neural changes rendering the motor cortex dispensable are a simple function of the training length. To address this issue, we trained mice (both male and female) to perform two distinct forelimb movements, forward versus downward reaches with a joystick, concomitantly over several weeks and then, compared the involvement of the motor cortex between the two movements. Most mice achieved different levels of motor performance between the two movements after long-term training. Of the two movements, the one that achieved higher trial-to-trial consistency (i.e., consistent-direction movement) was significantl...
    Jul 8, 2021 Eun Jung Hwang
  • Journal Article
    Sparse Coding in Temporal Association Cortex Improves Complex Sound discriminability | Journal of Neuroscience
    The mouse auditory cortex is comprised of several auditory fields spanning the dorso-ventral axis of the temporal lobe. The ventral most auditory field is the temporal association cortex (TeA), which remains largely unstudied. Using Neuropixels probes, we simultaneously recorded from primary auditory cortex (AUDp), secondary auditory cortex (AUDv) and TeA, characterizing neuronal responses to pure tones and frequency modulated (FM) sweeps in awake head-restrained female mice. As compared to primary and secondary auditory cortices, single unit responses to pure tones in TeA were sparser, delayed and prolonged. Responses to FMs were also sparser. Population analysis showed that the sparser responses in TeA render it less sensitive to pure tones, yet more sensitive to FMs. When characterizing responses to pure tones under anesthesia, the distinct signature of TeA was changed considerably as compared to that in awake mice, implying that responses in TeA are strongly modulated by non-feedforward connections. To...
    Jul 8, 2021 L Feigin
  • Journal Article
    This Week in The Journal | Journal of Neuroscience
    Gabrielle Devienne, Sandrine Picaud, Ivan Cohen, Juliette Piquet, Ludovic Tricoire, et al. (see pages [5779–5790][1]) Critical periods of heightened plasticity are a common feature of cortical development. For example, blocking input from one eye during a short window after eye opening greatly
    Jul 7, 2021
  • Journal Article
    A Search for a Cortical Map of Auditory Space | Journal of Neuroscience
    This is the story of a search for a cortical map of auditory space. The search began with a study that was reported in the first issue of The Journal of Neuroscience ([Middlebrooks and Pettigrew, 1981][1]). That paper described some unexpected features of spatial sensitivity in the auditory cortex while failing to demonstrate the expected map. In the ensuing 40 years, we have encountered the following: panoramic spatial coding by single neurons; a rich variety of response patterns that are unmasked in the absence of general anesthesia; sharpening of spatial sensitivity when an animal is engaged in a listening task; and reorganization of spatial sensitivity in the presence of competing sounds. We have not encountered a map, but not through lack of trying. On the basis of years of negative results by our group and others, and positive results that are inconsistent with static point-to-point topography, we are confident in concluding that there just ain't no map. Instead, we have come to appreciate the highly...
    Jul 7, 2021 John C. Middlebrooks
  • Journal Article
    Regulation of Perineuronal Nets in the Adult Cortex by the Activity of the Cortical Network | Journal of Neuroscience
    Perineuronal net (PNN) accumulation around parvalbumin-expressing (PV) inhibitory interneurons marks the closure of critical periods of high plasticity, whereas PNN removal reinstates juvenile plasticity in the adult cortex. Using targeted chemogenetic in vivo approaches in the adult mouse visual cortex, we found that transient inhibition of PV interneurons, through metabotropic or ionotropic chemogenetic tools, induced PNN regression. EEG recordings indicated that inhibition of PV interneurons did not elicit unbalanced network excitation. Likewise, inhibition of local excitatory neurons also induced PNN regression, whereas chemogenetic excitation of either PV or excitatory neurons did not reduce the PNN. We also observed that chemogenetically inhibited PV interneurons exhibited reduced PNN compared with their untransduced neighbors, and confirmed that single PV interneurons express multiple genes enabling individual regulation of their own PNN density. Our results indicate that PNN density is regulated in...
    Jul 7, 2021 Gabrielle Devienne
  • Journal Article
    Bidirectional Influence of Limbic GIRK Channel Activation on Innate Avoidance Behavior | Journal of Neuroscience
    Systemic administration of ML297, a selective activator of G-protein-gated inwardly rectifying K+ (GIRK) channels, decreases innate avoidance behavior in male C57BL/6J mice. The cellular mechanisms mediating the ML297-induced suppression of avoidance behavior are unknown. Here, we show that systemic ML297 administration suppresses elevated plus maze (EPM)-induced neuronal activation in the ventral hippocampus (vHPC) and basolateral amygdala (BLA) and that ML297 activates GIRK1-containing GIRK channels in these limbic structures. While intracranial infusion of ML297 into the vHPC suppressed avoidance behavior in the EPM test, mirroring the effect of systemic ML297, intra-BLA administration of ML297 provoked the opposite effect. Using neuron-specific viral genetic and chemogenetic approaches, we found that the combined inhibition of excitatory neurons in CA3 and dentate gyrus (DG) subregions of the vHPC was sufficient to decrease innate avoidance behavior in the EPM, open-field, and light-dark tests in male ...
    Jul 7, 2021 Baovi N. Vo
  • Journal Article
    Transcriptional Control of Parallel-Acting Pathways That Remove Specific Presynaptic Proteins in Remodeling Neurons | Journal of Neuroscience
    Synapses are actively dismantled to mediate circuit refinement, but the developmental pathways that regulate synaptic disassembly are largely unknown. We have previously shown that the epithelial sodium channel ENaC/UNC-8 triggers an activity-dependent mechanism that drives the removal of presynaptic proteins liprin-α/SYD-2, Synaptobrevin/SNB-1, RAB-3, and Endophilin/UNC-57 in remodeling GABAergic neurons in Caenorhabditis elegans ([Miller-Fleming et al., 2016][1]). Here, we report that the conserved transcription factor Iroquois/IRX-1 regulates UNC-8 expression as well as an additional pathway, independent of UNC-8, that functions in parallel to dismantle functional presynaptic terminals. We show that the additional IRX-1-regulated pathway is selectively required for the removal of the presynaptic proteins, Munc13/UNC-13 and ELKS, which normally mediate synaptic vesicle (SV) fusion and neurotransmitter release. Our findings are notable because they highlight the key role of transcriptional regulation in s...
    Jul 7, 2021 Tyne W. Miller-Fleming
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — July 07, 2021, 41 (27) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jul 7, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Reading-Related Brain Changes in Audiovisual Processing: Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal MEG Evidence | Journal of Neuroscience
    The ability to establish associations between visual objects and speech sounds is essential for human reading. Understanding the neural adjustments required for acquisition of these arbitrary audiovisual associations can shed light on fundamental reading mechanisms and help reveal how literacy builds on pre-existing brain circuits. To address these questions, the present longitudinal and cross-sectional MEG studies characterize the temporal and spatial neural correlates of audiovisual syllable congruency in children (age range, 4–9 years; 22 males and 20 females) learning to read. Both studies showed that during the first years of reading instruction children gradually set up audiovisual correspondences between letters and speech sounds, which can be detected within the first 400 ms of a bimodal presentation and recruit the superior portions of the left temporal cortex. These findings suggest that children progressively change the way they treat audiovisual syllables as a function of their reading experien...
    Jul 7, 2021 Sendy Caffarra
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