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3911 - 3920 of 52762 results
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Patel et al., “Improved Speech Hearing in Noise with Invasive Electrical Brain Stimulation” | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jun 24, 2022
  • Journal Article
    Contextual expectations shape cortical reinstatement of sensory representations | Journal of Neuroscience
    When making a turn at a familiar intersection, we know what items and landmarks will come into view. These perceptual expectations, or predictions, come from our knowledge of the context, however it’s unclear how memory and perceptual systems interact to support the prediction and reactivation of sensory details in cortex. To address this, human participants learned the spatial layout of animals positioned in a cross maze. During fMRI, participants of both sexes navigated between animals to reach a target, and in the process saw a predictable sequence of five animal images. Critically, to isolate activity patterns related to item predictions, rather than bottom-up inputs, one quarter of trials ended early, with a blank screen presented instead. Using multivariate pattern similarity analysis, we reveal that activity patterns in early visual cortex, posterior medial regions, and the posterior hippocampus showed greater similarity when seeing the same item compared to different items. Further, item effects in...
    Jun 24, 2022 Alex Clarke
  • Journal Article
    Pallidal activity related to posture and movement during reaching in the cat | Journal of Neuroscience
    We tested the hypothesis that the pallidum contributes to the control of both posture and movement. We recorded neuronal activity from the pallidum in a task in which male cats reached forward from a standing posture to depress a lever. In agreement with previous studies, we found that a majority of pallidal cells (91/116 78%), including neurons in both the entopeduncular nucleus and the globus pallidus, showed significant modulations of their activity during reaching with the contralateral limb. Mostly different populations of cells were active during the transport (flexion) and lever press (extension) phase of the task. Most cells showed dynamic patterns of activity related to the movement. However, a modest proportion of modulated cells (18/91, 20%) showed properties consistent with a contribution to the control of anticipatory postural responses while a further 10% showed activity consistent with a contribution to postural support during the movement. While some cells that showed modified activity only...
    Jun 22, 2022 Yannick Mullié
  • Journal Article
    Exploring information flow from posteromedial cortex during visuospatial working memory – a magnetoencephalography study | Journal of Neuroscience
    The posteromedial cortex (PMC) is a major hub of the brain’s default mode network, and is implicated in a broad range of internally driven cognitions, including visuospatial working memory. However, its precise contribution to these cognitive processes remains unclear. Using magnetoencephalography (MEG), we measured PMC activity in healthy human participants (young adults of both sexes) while they performed a visuospatial working memory task. Multivariate pattern classification analyses revealed stimulus-related information during encoding and retrieval in a set of a priori defined cortical regions of interest, including prefrontal, occipital and ventrotemporal cortices, in addition to PMC. We measured the extent to which this stimulus information was exchanged between areas in an information flow analysis, measuring Granger-causal relationships between areas over time. Consistent with the visual nature of the task, information from occipital cortex shaped other regions across most epochs. However, the PMC...
    Jun 22, 2022 Erin Goddard
  • Journal Article
    Corticotropin releasing factor mediates KCa3.1 inhibition, hyperexcitability and seizures in acquired epilepsy | Journal of Neuroscience
    Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), the most common focal seizure disorder in adults, can be instigated in experimental animals by convulsant-induced status epilepticus (SE). Principal hippocampal neurons from SE-experienced epileptic male rats (post-SE neurons) display markedly augmented spike output compared to neurons from nonepileptic animals (non-SE neurons). This enhanced firing results from a c-AMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA)-mediated inhibition of KCa3.1, a subclass of Ca2+-gated K+ channels generating the slow afterhyperpolarizing Ca2+-gated K+ current ( I sAHP). The inhibition of KCa3.1 in post-SE neurons leads to a marked reduction in amplitude of the I sAHP that evolves during repetitive firing, as well as in amplitude of the associated Ca2+-dependent component of the slow afterhyperpolarization potential (KCa-sAHP). Here we show that KCa3.1 inhibition in post-SE neurons, is induced by corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) through its type 1 receptor (CRF1R). Acute application of CRF1R antagonist...
    Jun 22, 2022 Manindra Nath Tiwari
  • Journal Article
    Spontaneous Alpha-Band Oscillations Bias Subjective Contrast Perception | Journal of Neuroscience
    Perceptual decisions depend both on the features of the incoming stimulus and on the ongoing brain activity at the moment the stimulus is received. Specifically, trial-to-trial fluctuations in cortical excitability have been linked to fluctuations in the amplitude of prestimulus α oscillations (∼8-13 Hz), which are in turn are associated with fluctuations in subjects' tendency to report the detection of a stimulus. It is currently unknown whether α oscillations bias postperceptual decision-making, or even bias subjective perception itself. To answer this question, we used a contrast discrimination task in which both male and female human subjects reported which of two gratings (one in each hemifield) was perceived as having a stronger contrast. Our EEG analysis showed that subjective contrast was reduced for the stimulus in the hemifield represented in the hemisphere with relatively stronger prestimulus α amplitude, reflecting reduced cortical excitability. Furthermore, the strength of this spontaneous hem...
    Jun 22, 2022 Elio Balestrieri
  • Journal Article
    Learned Motor Patterns Are Replayed in Human Motor Cortex during Sleep | Journal of Neuroscience
    Consolidation of memory is believed to involve offline replay of neural activity. While amply demonstrated in rodents, evidence for replay in humans, particularly regarding motor memory, is less compelling. To determine whether replay occurs after motor learning, we sought to record from motor cortex during a novel motor task and subsequent overnight sleep. A 36-year-old man with tetraplegia secondary to cervical spinal cord injury enrolled in the ongoing BrainGate brain–computer interface pilot clinical trial had two 96-channel intracortical microelectrode arrays placed chronically into left precentral gyrus. Single- and multi-unit activity was recorded while he played a color/sound sequence matching memory game. Intended movements were decoded from motor cortical neuronal activity by a real-time steady-state Kalman filter that allowed the participant to control a neurally driven cursor on the screen. Intracortical neural activity from precentral gyrus and 2-lead scalp EEG were recorded overnight as he sl...
    Jun 22, 2022 Daniel B. Rubin
  • Journal Article
    Disruption of Endosomal Sorting in Schwann Cells Leads to Defective Myelination and Endosomal Abnormalities Observed in Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease | Journal of Neuroscience
    Endosomal sorting plays a fundamental role in directing neural development. By altering the temporal and spatial distribution of membrane receptors, endosomes regulate signaling pathways that control the differentiation and function of neural cells. Several genes linked to inherited demyelinating peripheral neuropathies, known as Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease, encode proteins that directly interact with components of the endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT). Our previous studies demonstrated that a point mutation in the ESCRT component hepatocyte growth-factor-regulated tyrosine kinase substrate (HGS), an endosomal scaffolding protein that identifies internalized cargo to be sorted by the endosome, causes a peripheral neuropathy in the neurodevelopmentally impaired teetering mice. Here, we constructed a Schwann cell-specific deletion of Hgs to determine the role of endosomal sorting during myelination. Inactivation of HGS in Schwann cells resulted in motor and sensory deficits, slow...
    Jun 22, 2022 John W. McLean
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — June 22, 2022, 42 (25) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jun 22, 2022
  • Journal Article
    A Computational Probe into the Behavioral and Neural Markers of Atypical Facial Emotion Processing in Autism | Journal of Neuroscience
    Despite ample behavioral evidence of atypical facial emotion processing in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), the neural underpinnings of such behavioral heterogeneities remain unclear. Here, I have used brain-tissue mapped artificial neural network (ANN) models of primate vision to probe candidate neural and behavior markers of atypical facial emotion recognition in ASD at an image-by-image level. Interestingly, the image-level behavioral patterns of the ANNs better matched the neurotypical subjects 'behavior than those measured in ASD. This behavioral mismatch was most remarkable when the ANN behavior was decoded from units that correspond to the primate inferior temporal (IT) cortex. ANN-IT responses also explained a significant fraction of the image-level behavioral predictivity associated with neural activity in the human amygdala (from epileptic patients without ASD), strongly suggesting that the previously reported facial emotion intensity encodes in the human amygdala could be primari...
    Jun 22, 2022 Kohitij Kar
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