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3251 - 3260 of 52756 results
  • Journal Article
    Musical meter induces inter-brain synchronization during inter-personal coordination | eNeuro
    Music induces people to coordinate with one another. Here, we conduct two experiments to examine the underlying mechanism of the inter-brain synchronization (IBS) that is induced by inter-personal coordination when people are exposed to musical beat and meter. In Experiment 1, brain signals at the frontal cortex were recorded simultaneously from two participants of a dyad by using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) hyperscanning, while each tapped their fingers to aural feedback from their partner (coordination task) or from themselves (independence task) with and without the musical meter. The results showed enhanced IBS at the left-middle frontal cortex in case of the coordination task with musical beat and meter. The IBS was significantly correlated with the participants performance in terms of coordination. In Experiment 2, we further examined the IBS while the participants coordinated their behaviors in various metrical contexts, such as strong and weak meters (i.e., high/low loudness of ac...
    Oct 24, 2022 Yinying Hu
  • Journal Article
    Updating contextual sensory expectations for adaptive behaviour | Journal of Neuroscience
    The brain has the extraordinary capacity to construct predictive models of the environment by internalizing statistical regularities in the sensory inputs. The resulting sensory expectations shape how we perceive and react to the world; at the neural level, this relates to decreased neural responses to expected than unexpected stimuli (‘expectation suppression’). Crucially, expectations may need revision as context changes. However, existing research has often neglected this issue. Further, it is unclear whether contextual revisions apply selectively to expectations relevant to the task at hand, hence serving adaptive behaviour. The present fMRI study examined how contextual visual expectations spread throughout the cortical hierarchy as we update our beliefs. We created a volatile environment: two alternating contexts contained different sequences of object images, hence producing context-dependent expectations that needed revision when the context changed. Human participants of both sexes attended a trai...
    Oct 24, 2022 Ambra Ferrari
  • Journal Article
    A role for thalamic projection GABAergic neurons in circadian responses to light | Journal of Neuroscience
    The thalamus is an important hub for sensory information and participates in sensory perception, regulation of attention, arousal and sleep. These functions are executed primarily by glutamatergic thalamocortical neurons that extend axons to the cortex and initiate cortico-thalamocortical connectional loops. However, the thalamus also contains projection GABAergic neurons that do not engage in direct communication with the cortex. Here, we have harnessed recent insight into the development of the intergeniculate (IGL) and the ventrolateral geniculate (LGv) to specifically target and manipulate thalamic projection GABAergic neurons in female and male mice. Our results show that thalamic GABAergic neurons of the IGL and LGv receive retinal input from diverse classes of ipRGCs, but not from the M1 ipRGC type. We describe the synergistic role of the photoreceptor melanopsin and the thalamic neurons of the IGL/LGv in circadian entrainment to dim light. We identify a requirement for the thalamic IGL/LGv in the r...
    Oct 24, 2022 O. Brock
  • Journal Article
    A common neural account for social and non-social decisions | Journal of Neuroscience
    To date, social and non-social decisions have been studied largely in isolation. Consequently, the extent to which social and non-social forms of decision uncertainty are integrated using shared neurocomputational resources remains elusive. Here, we address this question using simultaneous EEG-fMRI in healthy human participants (young adults of both sexes) and a task in which decision evidence in social and non-social contexts varies along comparable scales. First, we identify time-resolved build-up of activity in the EEG, akin to a process of evidence accumulation, across both contexts. We then use the endogenous trial-by-trial variability in the slopes of these accumulating signals to construct parametric fMRI predictors. We show that a region of the posterior-medial frontal cortex (pMFC) uniquely explains trial-wise variability in the process of evidence accumulation in both social and non-social contexts. We further demonstrate a task-dependent coupling between the pMFC and regions of the human valuati...
    Oct 24, 2022 Desislava H. Arabadzhiyska
  • Journal Article
    The absence of Parkin does not promote dopamine or mitochondrial dysfunction in PolgAD257A/D257A mitochondrial mutator mice | Journal of Neuroscience
    Parkinson’s disease (PD) is characterized by the progressive loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta. In this study, we generated a transgenic model by crossing germline Parkin-/- mice with PolgAD257A mice, an established model of premature aging and mitochondrial stress. We hypothesized that loss of Parkin-/- in PolgAD257A/D257A mice would exacerbate mitochondrial dysfunction, leading to loss of dopamine neurons and nigral-striatal specific neurobehavioral motor dysfunction. We found that aged Parkin-/-/PolgAD257A/D257A male and female mice exhibited severe behavioral deficits, nonspecific to the nigral-striatal pathway, with neither dopaminergic neurodegeneration nor reductions in striatal dopamine. We saw no difference in expression levels of nuclear-encoded subunits of mitochondrial markers and mitochondrial complex I and IV activities, though we did observe substantial reductions in mitochondrial-encoded COX41I, indicating mitochondrial dysfunction as a result of PolgAD257A/...
    Oct 24, 2022 Laura Scott
  • Journal Article
    Nociceptive stimuli activate the hypothalamus-habenula circuit to inhibit the mesolimbic reward system and cocaine seeking-behaviors | Journal of Neuroscience
    Nociceptive signals interact with various regions of the brain, including those involved in physical sensation, reward, cognition, and emotion. Emerging evidence points to a role of nociception in the modulation of the mesolimbic reward system. The mechanism by which nociception affects dopamine (DA) signaling and reward is unclear. The lateral hypothalamus (LH) and the lateral habenula (LHb) receive somatosensory inputs and are structurally connected with the mesolimbic DA system. Here we show that the LH-LHb pathway is necessary for nociceptive modulation of this system using male Sprague-Dawley rats. Our extracellular single-unit recordings and head-mounted microendoscopic calcium imaging revealed that nociceptive stimulation by tail-pinch excited LHb and LH neurons, which was inhibited by chemical lesion of the LH. Tail-pinch increased activity of GABA neurons in ventral tegmental area (VTA), decreased extracellular DA level in the nucleus accumbens ventrolateral shell in intact rats and reduced cocain...
    Oct 24, 2022 Soo Min Lee
  • Journal Article
    Seeing social: A neural signature for conscious perception of social interactions | Journal of Neuroscience
    Social information is some of the most ambiguous content we encounter in our daily lives, yet in experimental contexts, percepts of social interactions—i.e., whether an interaction is present and if so, the nature of that interaction—are often dichotomized as correct or incorrect based on experimenter-assigned labels. Here, we investigated the behavioral and neural correlates of subjective (or “conscious”) social perception using data from the Human Connectome Project in which participants ( n = 1049; 486 men, 562 women) viewed animations of geometric shapes during fMRI and indicated whether they perceived a social interaction or random motion. Critically, rather than experimenter-assigned labels, we used observers’ own reports of “Social” or “Non-social” to classify percepts and characterize brain activity, including leveraging a particularly ambiguous animation perceived as “Social” by some but “Non-social” by others to control for visual input. Behaviorally, observers were biased toward perceiving infor...
    Oct 24, 2022 Rekha S. Varrier
  • Journal Article
    Corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) co-expression in GABAergic, glutamatergic and GABA/glutamatergic subpopulations in the central extended amygdala and ventral pallidum of young male primates | Journal of Neuroscience
    The central extended amygdala (CEA) and ventral pallidum (VP) are involved in diverse motivated behaviors based on rodent models. These structures are conserved, but expanded, in higher primates including human. Corticotropin releasing factor (CRF), a canonical ‘stress molecule’ associated with the CEA and VP circuitry across species, is dynamically regulated by stress and drugs of abuse and misuse. CRF's effects on circuits critically depend on its colocation with primary 'fast' transmitters, making this crucial for understanding circuit effects. We surveyed the distribution and colocalization of CRF-, VGluT2- (vesicular glutamate transporter 2) and VGAT- (vesicular GABA transporter) mRNA in specific subregions of the CEA and VP in young male monkeys. Although CRF-containing neurons were clustered in the lateral central bed nucleus (BSTLcn), the majority were broadly dispersed throughout other CEA subregions, and the VP. CRF/VGAT-only neurons were highest in the BSTLcn, lateral central amygdala nucleus (C...
    Oct 24, 2022 JL Fudge
  • Journal Article
    The RNA-binding protein HuR is integral to the function of nociceptors in mice and humans | Journal of Neuroscience
    HuR is an RNA-binding protein implicated in RNA processing, stability, and translation. Previously, we examined protein synthesis in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons treated with inflammatory mediators using ribosome profiling. We found that the HuR consensus binding element was enriched in transcripts with elevated translation. HuR is expressed in the soma of nociceptors and their axons. Pharmacologic inhibition of HuR with the small molecule CMLD-2 reduced the activity of mouse and human sensory neurons. Peripheral administration of CMLD-2 in the paw or genetic elimination of HuR from sensory neurons diminished behavioral responses associated with NGF and IL-6 induced allodynia in male and female mice. Genetic disruption of HuR altered the proximity of mRNA decay factors near a key neurotrophic factor (TrkA). Collectively, the data suggest that HuR is required for local control of mRNA stability and reveals a new biological function for a broadly conserved post-transcriptional regulatory factor. SIGNI...
    Oct 21, 2022 Nikesh Kunder
  • Journal Article
    Transcription factor Hb9 is expressed in glial cell lineages in the developing mouse spinal cord | eNeuro
    Hb9 ( Mnx1 ) is a transcription factor described as a spinal cord motor neuron (MN)-specific marker critical factor for the postmitotic specification of these cells. To date, expression of Hb9 in other cell types has not previously been reported. We performed a fate-mapping approach to examine distributions of Hb9-expressing cells and their progeny (‘Hb9-lineage cells’) within the embryonic and adult spinal cord of Hb9cre;Ai14 mice. We found that Hb9-lineage cells are distributed in a gradient of increasing abundance throughout the rostrocaudal spinal cord axis during embryonic and postnatal stages. Furthermore, although the majority of Hb9-lineage cells at cervical spinal cord levels are MNs, at more caudal levels, Hb9-lineage cells include small-diameter dorsal horn neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes. In the peripheral nervous system, we observed a similar phenomenon with more abundant Hb9-lineage Schwann cells in muscles of the lower body versus upper body muscles. We cultured spinal cord progeni...
    Oct 20, 2022 Sunjay Letchuman
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