Skip Navigation

Log In
  • Scientific Research
  • Training
  • Professional Development
  • Community
  • Advocacy and Outreach
  • Career Paths
  • Image of three blue squares stacked vertically to look like pages. Collections
  • Careers in Neuroscience
  • Community Discussion
  • image of an open book Read
  • image of a play button: a triangle inside a circle Watch
  • an image of a calendar with a check mark signifying events to attend Attend
  • image of a blue microphone Listen
  • Image of two overlapping dialogue bubbles. Discuss
  • About Neuronline
  • SfN Events Calendar
  • Community Leaders Program
  • Community Guidelines
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
Neuronline logo
SfN's home for learning and discussion
  • image of an open bookRead
  • image of a play button: a triangle inside a circleWatch
  • an image of a calendar with a check mark signifying events to attendAttend
  • image of a blue microphone Listen
  • Image of two overlapping dialogue bubbles.Discuss
Log In
  • Scientific Research
  • Training
  • Professional Development
  • Community
  • Advocacy and Outreach
  • Career Paths
  • COLLECTIONS

Filter

  • (118)
    • (26)
  • (4)
  • (152)
    • (32)
    • (8)
    • (17)
    • (14)
    • (14)
    • (6)
    • (20)
  • (55)
    • (12)
    • (20)
  • (85)
    • (36)
    • (32)
  • (107)
    • (39)
    • (15)
  • (517)
    • (8)
    • (28)
    • (105)
    • (10)
    • (17)
    • (31)
    • (14)
    • (51)
    • (7)
    • (47)
    • (6)
    • (13)
    • (19)
    • (27)
    • (34)
  • (604)
    • (11)
    • (26)
    • (29)
    • (14)
    • (15)
    • (43)
  • (200)
    • (24)
    • (45)
    • (59)
  • (133)
  • (735)
  • (4)
  • (1)
  • (47863)
  • (93)
  • (25)
  • (14)
  • (434)
  • (7)
  • (186)
  • (8)
  • (33)
  • (17)
  • (7)
  • (10)
  • (9)
  • (5)
  • (21)
  • (8)
  • (12)
  • (9)
  • (3)
  • (10)
  • (10)
  • (56)
  • (46)
  • (12)
  • (3)
  • (7)
  • (6)
  • (5)
  • (8)
  • (7)
  • (11)
  • (58)
  • (13)
  • (31)
  • (8)
  • (5)
  • (10)
  • (5)
  • (16)
  • (4)
Filter
9681 - 9690 of 52804 results
  • Journal Article
    Interlimb Transfer of Reach Adaptation Does Not Require an Intact Corpus Callosum: Evidence from Patients with Callosal Lesions and Agenesis | eNeuro
    Generalization of sensorimotor adaptation across limbs, known as interlimb transfer, is a well-demonstrated phenomenon in humans, yet the underlying neural mechanisms remain unclear. Theoretical models suggest that interlimb transfer is mediated by interhemispheric transfer of information via the corpus callosum. We thus hypothesized that lesions of the corpus callosum, especially to its midbody connecting motor, supplementary motor, and premotor areas of the two cerebral hemispheres, would impair interlimb transfer of sensorimotor adaptation. To test this hypothesis, we recruited three patients: two rare stroke patients with recent, extensive callosal lesions including the midbody and one patient with complete agenesis. A prismatic adaptation paradigm involving unconstrained arm reaching movements was designed to assess interlimb transfer from the prism-exposed dominant arm (DA) to the unexposed non-dominant arm (NDA) for each participant. Baseline results showed that spatial performance of each patient d...
    Jul 1, 2021 Penelope A. Tilsley
  • Journal Article
    Loss of miR-183/96 alters synaptic strength via pre- and postsynaptic mechanisms at a central synapse | Journal of Neuroscience
    A point mutation in miR-96 causes non-syndromic progressive peripheral hearing loss and alters structure and physiology of the central auditory system. To gain further insight into the functions of miRNAs within the central auditory system, we investigated constitutive Mir-183/96dko mice of both sexes. In this mouse model, the genomically clustered miRs-183 and -96 are constitutively deleted. It shows significantly and specifically reduced volumes of auditory hindbrain nuclei, due to decreases in cell number and soma size. Electrophysiological analysis of the calyx of Held synapse in the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB) demonstrated strongly altered synaptic transmission in young-adult mice. We observed an increase in quantal content and readily releasable vesicle pool size in the presynapse while the overall morphology of the calyx was unchanged. Detailed analysis of the active zones revealed differences in its molecular composition and synaptic vesicle distribution. Postsynaptically, altered c...
    Jun 30, 2021 Constanze Krohs
  • Journal Article
    REM Sleep Microstates in the Human Anterior Thalamus | Journal of Neuroscience
    Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep is an elusive neural state that is associated with a variety of functions from physiological regulatory mechanisms to complex cognitive processing. REM periods consist of the alternation of phasic and tonic REM microstates that differ in spontaneous and evoked neural activity. Although previous studies indicate, that cortical and thalamocortical activity differs across phasic and tonic microstates, the characterization of neural activity, particularly in subcortical structures that are critical in the initiation and maintenance of REM sleep is still limited in humans. Here, we examined electric activity patterns of the anterior nuclei of the thalamus as well as their functional connectivity with scalp EEG recordings during REM microstates and wakefulness in a group of epilepsy patients ( N = 12, 7 females). Anterothalamic local field potentials (LFPs) showed increased high-α and β frequency power in tonic compared with phasic REM, emerging as an intermediate state between pha...
    Jun 30, 2021 Péter Simor
  • Journal Article
    Aversive Conditioning of Spatial Position Sharpens Neural Population-Level Tuning in Visual Cortex and Selectively Alters Alpha-Band Activity | Journal of Neuroscience
    Processing capabilities for many low-level visual features are experientially malleable, aiding sighted organisms in adapting to dynamic environments. Explicit instructions to attend a specific visual field location influence retinotopic visuocortical activity, amplifying responses to stimuli appearing at cued spatial positions. It remains undetermined both how such prioritization affects surrounding nonprioritized locations, and if a given retinotopic spatial position can attain enhanced cortical representation through experience rather than instruction. The current report examined visuocortical response changes as human observers ( N = 51, 19 male) learned, through differential classical conditioning, to associate specific screen locations with aversive outcomes. Using dense-array EEG and pupillometry, we tested the preregistered hypotheses of either sharpening or generalization around an aversively associated location following a single conditioning session. Competing hypotheses tested whether mean resp...
    Jun 30, 2021 Wendel M. Friedl
  • Journal Article
    Heightened Hippocampal β-Adrenergic Receptor Function Drives Synaptic Potentiation and Supports Learning and Memory in the TgF344-AD Rat Model during Prodromal Alzheimer's Disease | Journal of Neuroscience
    The central noradrenergic (NA) system is critical for the maintenance of attention, behavioral flexibility, spatial navigation, and learning and memory, those cognitive functions lost first in early Alzheimer's disease (AD). In fact, the locus coeruleus (LC), the sole source of norepinephrine (NE) for >90% of the brain, is the first site of pathologic tau accumulation in human AD with axon loss throughout forebrain, including hippocampus. The dentate gyrus is heavily innervated by LC–NA axons, where released NE acts on β-adrenergic receptors (ARs) at excitatory synapses from entorhinal cortex to facilitate long-term synaptic plasticity and memory formation. These synapses experience dysfunction in early AD before cognitive impairment. In the TgF344-AD rat model of AD, degeneration of LC–NA axons in hippocampus recapitulates human AD, providing a preclinical model to investigate synaptic and behavioral consequences. Using immunohistochemistry, Western blot analysis, and brain slice electrophysiology in 6- t...
    Jun 30, 2021 Anthoni M. Goodman
  • Journal Article
    Encoding of Partially Occluded and Occluding Objects in Primate Inferior Temporal Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Object segmentation—the process of parsing visual scenes—is essential for object recognition and scene understanding. We investigated how responses of neurons in macaque inferior temporal (IT) cortex contribute to object segmentation under partial occlusion. Specifically, we asked whether IT responses to occluding and occluded objects are bound together as in the visual image or linearly separable reflecting their segmentation. We recorded the activity of 121 IT neurons while two male animals performed a shape discrimination task under partial occlusion. We found that for a majority (60%) of neurons, responses were enhanced by partial occlusion, but they were only weakly shape selective for the discriminanda at all levels of occlusion. Enhancement of IT responses in these neurons depended largely on the area of occlusion but only minimally on the color and shape of the occluding dots. In contrast to the above group of neurons, a sizable minority responded best to the unoccluded stimulus and showed strong s...
    Jun 30, 2021 Tomoyuki Namima
  • Journal Article
    This Week in The Journal | Journal of Neuroscience
    Zhanmin Lin, Bin Wu, Maarten W. Paul, Ka Wan Li, Yao Yao, et al. (see pages [5579–5594][1]) Synaptic strength is regulated partly by kinases and phosphatases that determine the phosphorylation state of various synaptic proteins. In the cerebellum, for example, protein kinase C and CaMKII
    Jun 30, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Neural Substrates of Muscle Co-contraction during Dynamic Motor Adaptation | Journal of Neuroscience
    As we learn to perform a motor task with novel dynamics, the central nervous system must adapt motor commands and modify sensorimotor transformations. The objective of the current research is to identify the neural mechanisms underlying the adaptive process. It has been shown previously that an increase in muscle co-contraction is frequently associated with the initial phase of adaptation and that co-contraction is gradually reduced as performance improves. Our investigation focused on the neural substrates of muscle co-contraction during the course of motor adaptation using a resting-state fMRI approach in healthy human subjects of both genders. We analyzed the functional connectivity in resting-state networks during three phases of adaptation, corresponding to different muscle co-contraction levels and found that change in the strength of functional connectivity in one brain network was correlated with a metric of co-contraction, and in another with a metric of motor learning. We identified the cerebellu...
    Jun 30, 2021 Saeed Babadi
  • Journal Article
    Getting to Know You: Emerging Neural Representations during Face Familiarization | Journal of Neuroscience
    The successful recognition of familiar persons is critical for social interactions. Despite extensive research on the neural representations of familiar faces, we know little about how such representations unfold as someone becomes familiar. In three EEG experiments on human participants of both sexes, we elucidated how representations of face familiarity and identity emerge from different qualities of familiarization: brief perceptual exposure (Experiment 1), extensive media familiarization (Experiment 2), and real-life personal familiarization (Experiment 3). Time-resolved representational similarity analysis revealed that familiarization quality has a profound impact on representations of face familiarity: they were strongly visible after personal familiarization, weaker after media familiarization, and absent after perceptual familiarization. Across all experiments, we found no enhancement of face identity representation, suggesting that familiarity and identity representations emerge independently dur...
    Jun 30, 2021 Géza Gergely Ambrus
  • Journal Article
    Accounting for Biases in the Estimation of Neuronal Signal Correlation | Journal of Neuroscience
    Signal correlation ( r s) is commonly defined as the correlation between the tuning curves of two neurons and is widely used as a metric of tuning similarity. It is fundamental to how populations of neurons represent stimuli and has been central to many studies of neural coding. Yet the classic estimate, Pearson's correlation coefficient, <mml:math xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="inline"><mml:mrow><mml:msub><mml:mover accent="true"><mml:mi>r</mml:mi><mml:mo>̂</mml:mo></mml:mover><mml:mi mathvariant="normal">s</mml:mi></mml:msub></mml:mrow></mml:math>, between the average responses of two neurons to a set of stimuli suffers from confounding biases. The estimate <mml:math xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="inline"><mml:mrow><mml:msub><mml:mover accent="true"><mml:mi>r</mml:mi><mml:mo>̂</mml:mo></mml:mover><mml:mi mathvariant="normal">s</mml:mi></mml:msub></mml:mrow></mml:math> can be downwardly biased by trial-to-trial variability and also upwardly biased by trial...
    Jun 30, 2021 Dean A. Pospisil
  • Previous
  • 967
  • 968
  • 969
  • 970
  • 971
  • Next
Neuronline footer 10 year anniversary logo
  • About Neuronline
  • SfN Events Calendar
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
  • Accessibility Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Notice
SfN logo with "SfN" in a blue box next to Society for Neuroscience in red text and the SfN tag line that reads "Advancing the understanding of the brain and nervous system"
Follow SfN
  • BlueSky logo
  • Threads logo
  • X Logo
  • image of linkedin logo
  • Image of the Facebook logo
  • Image of the instagram logo
  • image of youtube logo
  • RSS symbol
1121 14th Street NW, Suite 1010, Washington, DC 20005 (202) 962-4000 | 1-888-985-9246

Copyright © Society for Neuroscience