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3591 - 3600 of 52760 results
  • Journal Article
    Robust effects of working memory demand during naturalistic language comprehension in language-selective cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    To understand language, we must infer structured meanings from real-time auditory or visual signals. Researchers have long focused on word-by-word structure building in working memory as a mechanism that might enable this feat. However, some have argued that language processing does not typically involve rich word-by-word structure building, and/or that apparent working memory effects are underlyingly driven by surprisal (how predictable a word is in context). Consistent with this alternative, some recent behavioral studies of naturalistic language processing that control for surprisal have not shown clear working memory effects. In this fMRI study, we investigate a range of theory-driven predictors of word-by-word working memory demand during naturalistic language comprehension in humans of both sexes under rigorous surprisal controls. In addition, we address a related debate about whether the working memory mechanisms involved in language comprehension are language-specialized or domain-general. To do so...
    Aug 24, 2022 Cory Shain
  • Journal Article
    Contingent Amygdala Inputs Trigger Heterosynaptic LTP at Hippocampus-To-Accumbens Synapses | Journal of Neuroscience
    The nucleus accumbens shell (NAcSh) is a key brain region where environmental cues acquire incentive salience to reinforce motivated behaviors. Principal medium spiny neurons (MSNs) in the NAcSh receive extensive glutamatergic projections from limbic regions, among which, the ventral hippocampus (vH) transmits information enriched in contextual cues, and the basolateral amygdala (BLA) encodes real-time arousing states. The vH and BLA project convergently to NAcSh MSNs, both activated in a time-locked manner on a cue-conditioned motivational action. In brain slices prepared from male and female mice, we show that co-activation of the two projections induces long-term potentiation (LTP) at vH-to-NAcSh synapses without affecting BLA-to-NAcSh synapses, revealing a heterosynaptic mechanism through which BLA signals persistently increase the temporally contingent vH-to-NAcSh transmission. Furthermore, this LTP is more prominent in dopamine D1 receptor-expressing (D1) MSNs than D2 MSNs and can be prevented by inh...
    Aug 24, 2022 Jun Yu
  • Journal Article
    Multiple Calcium Channel Types with Unique Expression Patterns Mediate Retinal Signaling at Bipolar Cell Ribbon Synapses | Journal of Neuroscience
    Retinal bipolar cells (BCs) compose the canonical vertical excitatory pathway that conveys photoreceptor output to inner retinal neurons. Although synaptic transmission from BC terminals is thought to rely almost exclusively on Ca2+ influx through voltage-gated Ca2+ (CaV) channels mediating L-type currents, the molecular identity of CaV channels in BCs is uncertain. Therefore, we combined molecular and functional analyses to determine the expression profiles of CaV α1, β, and α2δ subunits in mouse rod bipolar (RB) cells, BCs from which the dynamics of synaptic transmission are relatively well-characterized. We found significant heterogeneity in CaV subunit expression within the RB population from mice of either sex, and significantly, we discovered that transmission from RB synapses was mediated by Ca2+ influx through P/Q-type (CaV2.1) and N-type (CaV2.2) conductances as well as the previously-described L-type (CaV1) and T-type (CaV3) conductances. Furthermore, we found both CaV1.3 and CaV1.4 proteins loca...
    Aug 24, 2022 Gong Zhang
  • Journal Article
    JUN Regulation of Injury-Induced Enhancers in Schwann Cells | Journal of Neuroscience
    Schwann cells play a critical role after peripheral nerve injury by clearing myelin debris, forming axon-guiding bands of Büngner, and remyelinating regenerating axons. Schwann cells undergo epigenomic remodeling to differentiate into a repair state that expresses unique genes, some of which are not expressed at other stages of Schwann cell development. We previously identified a set of enhancers that are activated in Schwann cells after nerve injury, and we determined whether these enhancers are preprogrammed into the Schwann cell epigenome as poised enhancers before injury. Poised enhancers share many attributes of active enhancers, such as open chromatin, but are marked by repressive histone H3 lysine 27 (H3K27) trimethylation rather than H3K27 acetylation. We find that most injury-induced enhancers are not marked as poised enhancers before injury indicating that injury-induced enhancers are not preprogrammed in the Schwann cell epigenome. Injury-induced enhancers are enriched with AP-1 binding motifs, ...
    Aug 24, 2022 Raghu Ramesh
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — August 24, 2022, 42 (34) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Aug 24, 2022
  • Journal Article
    Hippocampal Threat Reactivity Interacts with Physiological Arousal to Predict PTSD Symptoms | Journal of Neuroscience
    Hippo campal impairments are reliably associated with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD); however, little research has characterized how increased threat sensitivity may interact with arousal responses to alter hippocampal reactivity, and further how these interactions relate to the sequelae of trauma-related symptoms. In a sample of individuals recently exposed to trauma ( N = 116, 76 female), we found that PTSD symptoms at 2 weeks were associated with decreased hippocampal responses to threat as assessed with fMRI. Further, the relationship between hippocampal threat sensitivity and PTSD symptomology only emerged in individuals who showed transient, high threat-related arousal, as assayed by an independently collected measure of fear potentiated startle. Collectively, our finding suggests that development of PTSD is associated with threat-related decreases in hippocampal function because of increases in fear-potentiated arousal. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Alterations in hippocampal function linked to thr...
    Aug 24, 2022 Büşra Tanriverdi
  • Journal Article
    This Week in The Journal | Journal of Neuroscience
    Raghu Ramesh, Yanti Manurung, Ki H. Ma, Todd Blakely Jr., Seongsik Won, et al. (see pages [6506–6517][1]) After peripheral nerve injury, Schwann cells undergo dramatic phenotypic changes. They stop producing myelin and rapidly transition into repair cells that clear debris and form tracks to
    Aug 24, 2022
  • Journal Article
    Plasticity in the Olfactory Cortex Is Enabled by Disinhibition of Pyramidal Neuron Apical Dendrites | Journal of Neuroscience
    The brain encodes and stores information by creating neuronal ensembles. These ensembles can be formed through long-term potentiation (LTP) of synapses between coactivated neurons. Because inhibitory interneurons suppress the activity of other neurons, they can regulate LTP induction by limiting
    Aug 24, 2022 Reinhard Loidl
  • Journal Article
    Dopamine Modulates Adaptive Forgetting in Medial Prefrontal Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Active forgetting occurs in many species, but how behavioral control mechanisms influence which memories are forgotten remains unknown. We previously found that when rats need to retrieve a memory to guide exploration, it reduces later retention of other competing memories encoded in that environment. As with humans, this retrieval-induced forgetting relies on prefrontal control processes. Dopaminergic input to the prefrontal cortex is important for executive functions and cognitive flexibility. We found that, in a similar way, retrieval-induced forgetting of competing memories in male rats requires prefrontal dopamine signaling through D1 receptors. Blockade of medial prefrontal cortex D1 receptors as animals encountered a familiar object impaired active forgetting of competing object memories as measured on a later long-term memory test. Inactivation of the ventral tegmental area produced the same pattern of behavior, a pattern that could be reversed by concomitant activation of prefrontal D1 receptors. ...
    Aug 24, 2022 Francisco Tomás Gallo
  • Journal Article
    Temporal dynamics of neural responses in human visual cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neural responses to visual stimuli exhibit complex temporal dynamics, including sub-additive temporal summation, response reduction with repeated or sustained stimuli (adaptation), and slower dynamics at low contrast. These phenomena are often studied independently. Here, we demonstrate these phenomena within the same experiment and model the underlying neural computations with a single computational model. We extracted time-varying responses from electrocorticographic (ECoG) recordings from patients presented with stimuli that varied in contrast, duration, and inter-stimulus interval (ISI). Aggregating data across patients from both sexes yielded 98 electrodes with robust visual responses, covering both earlier (V1-V3) and higher-order (V3a/b, LO, TO, IPS) retinotopic maps. In all regions, the temporal dynamics of neural responses exhibit several non-linear features: peak response amplitude saturates with high contrast and longer stimulus durations; the response to a second stimulus is suppressed for shor...
    Aug 23, 2022 Iris I.A. Groen
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