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4621 - 4630 of 52776 results
  • Journal Article
    White-Matter Integrity and Working Memory: Links to Aging and Dopamine-Related Genes | eNeuro
    Working memory, a core function underlying many higher-level cognitive processes, requires cooperation of multiple brain regions. White matter refers to myelinated axons, which are critical to interregional brain communication. Past studies on the association between white-matter integrity and working memory have yielded mixed findings. Using voxelwise tract-based spatial statistics analysis, we investigated this relationship in a sample of 328 healthy adults from 25 to 80 years of age. Given the important role of dopamine (DA) in working-memory functioning and white matter, we also analyzed the effects of dopamine-related genes on them. There were associations between white-matter integrity and working memory in multiple tracts, indicating that working-memory functioning relies on global connections between different brain areas across the adult life span. Moreover, a mediation analysis suggested that white-matter integrity contributes to age-related differences in working memory. Finally, there was an ef...
    Mar 1, 2022 Xin Li
  • Journal Article
    V3 Interneurons Are Active and Recruit Spinal Motor Neurons during In Vivo Fictive Swimming in Larval Zebrafish | eNeuro
    Survival for vertebrate animals is dependent on the ability to successfully find food, locate a mate, and avoid predation. Each of these behaviors requires motor control, which is set by a combination of kinematic properties. For example, the frequency and amplitude of motor output combine in a multiplicative manner to determine features of locomotion such as distance traveled, speed, force (thrust), and vigor. Although there is a good understanding of how different populations of excitatory spinal interneurons establish locomotor frequency, there is a less thorough mechanistic understanding for how locomotor amplitude is established. Recent evidence indicates that locomotor amplitude is regulated in part by a subset of functionally and morphologically distinct V2a excitatory spinal interneurons (Type II, nonbursting) in larval and adult zebrafish. Here, we provide direct evidence that most V3 interneurons (V3-INs), which are a developmentally and genetically defined population of ventromedial glutamatergi...
    Mar 1, 2022 Timothy D. Wiggin
  • Journal Article
    Sex Differences in Behavioral Responding and Dopamine Release during Pavlovian Learning | eNeuro
    Learning associations between cues and rewards require the mesolimbic dopamine system. The dopamine response to cues signals differences in reward value in well trained animals. However, these value-related dopamine responses are absent during early training sessions when cues signal differences in the reward rate. These findings suggest cue-evoked dopamine release conveys differences between outcomes only after extensive training, though it is unclear whether this is unique to when cues signal differences in reward rate, or whether this is also evident when cues signal differences in other value-related parameters such as reward size. To address this, we used a Pavlovian conditioning task in which one audio cue was associated with a small reward (one pellet) and another audio cue was associated with a large reward (three pellets). We performed fast-scan cyclic voltammetry to record changes in dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens of male and female rats throughout learning. While female rats exhibited...
    Mar 1, 2022 Merridee J. Lefner
  • Journal Article
    Cooperative Behavior Evokes Interbrain Synchrony in the Prefrontal and Temporoparietal Cortex: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of fNIRS Hyperscanning Studies | eNeuro
    Single-brain neuroimaging studies have shown that human cooperation is associated with neural activity in frontal and temporoparietal regions. However, it remains unclear whether single-brain studies are informative about cooperation in real life, where people interact dynamically. Such dynamic interactions have become the focus of interbrain studies. An advantageous technique in this regard is functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) because it is less susceptible to movement artifacts than more conventional techniques like electroencephalography (EEG) or functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We conducted a systematic review and the first quantitative meta-analysis of fNIRS hyperscanning of cooperation, based on thirteen studies with 890 human participants. Overall, the meta-analysis revealed evidence of statistically significant interbrain synchrony while people were cooperating, with large overall effect sizes in both frontal and temporoparietal areas. All thirteen studies observed signific...
    Mar 1, 2022 Artur Czeszumski
  • Journal Article
    Doing Socially Responsible Science in the Age of Selfies and Immediacy | eNeuro
    Responsible science has three components: doing science, the validity of the discoveries themselves, and the consequences of these discoveries. These three components are nondissociable, because science does not exist by and for itself: it exists within a societal context. Society and Science always interact with each other. Doing science has direct societal consequences, which can be positive, including novel therapeutic solutions and general advancement of knowledge, and negative, including using planet resources, producing waste, and contributing to global warming (with travel, for example). I shall not develop the latter components here; I shall develop the validity of the discoveries and their consequences in the present context of the immediacy of information and “selfie” science. An idealistic and naive depiction of a scientist is someone concerned only with the internal content of their scientific work and not with their external repercussions. A scientist is but one part of the complex organism t...
    Mar 1, 2022 Christophe Bernard
  • Journal Article
    Differential electrographic signatures generated by mechanistically-diverse seizurogenic compounds in the larval zebrafish brain | eNeuro
    We assessed similarities and differences in the electrographic signatures of local field potentials evoked by different pharmacological agents in zebrafish larvae. We then compared and contrasted these characteristics with what is known from electrophysiological studies of seizures and epilepsy in mammals, including humans. Ultimately, our aim was to phenotype neurophysiological features of drug-induced seizures in larval zebrafish for expanding knowledge on the translational potential of this valuable alternative to mammalian models. Local field potentials were recorded from the midbrain of 4-day old zebrafish larvae exposed to a pharmacologically diverse panel of seizurogenic compounds, and the outputs of these recordings were assessed using frequency domain analysis. This included analysis of changes occurring within various spectral frequency bands of relevance to mammalian CNS circuit pathophysiology. From these analyses, there were clear differences in the frequency spectra of drug-exposed local fiel...
    Feb 28, 2022 Joseph Pinion
  • Journal Article
    Nonuniformity of whole-cerebral neural resource allocation; A neuromarker of the broad-task attention | eNeuro
    The neural basis of attention is thought to involve the allocation of limited neural resources. However, the quantitative validation of this hypothesis remains challenging. Here, we provide quantitative evidence that the nonuniform allocation of neural resources across the whole cerebral gray matter reflects the broad-task process of sustained attention. We propose a neural measure for the nonuniformity of whole-cerebral allocation using functional magnetic resonance imaging. We found that this measure was significantly correlated with conventional indicators of attention level, such as task difficulty and pupil dilation. We further found that the broad-task neural correlates of the measure belong to fronto-parietal and dorsal attention networks. Finally, we found that patients with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder showed abnormal decreases in the level of the proposed measure reflecting the executive dysfunction. This study proposes a neuromarker suggesting that the nonuniform allocation of neural...
    Feb 28, 2022 Jinyong Chung
  • Journal Article
    FASTMAP: Open-Source Flexible Atlas Segmentation Tool for Multi-Area Processing of Biological Images | eNeuro
    To better understand complex systems, such as the brain, studying the interactions between multiple brain regions is imperative. Such experiments often require delineation of multiple brain regions on microscopic images based on pre-existing brain atlases. Experiments examining the relationships of multiple regions across the brain have traditionally relied on manual plotting of regions. This process is very intensive and becomes untenable with a large number of regions of interest. To reduce the amount of time required to process multi-region datasets, several tools for atlas registration have been developed; however, these tools are often inflexible to tissue type, only supportive of a limited number of atlases and orientation, require considerable computational expertise, or are only compatible with certain types of microscopy. To address the need for a simple yet extensible atlas registration tool we have developed FASTMAP, a flexible atlas segmentation tool for multi-area processing. We demonstrate it...
    Feb 28, 2022 Dylan J. Terstege
  • Journal Article
    Stimulus generalization in mice during Pavlovian eyeblink conditioning | eNeuro
    Here we investigate stimulus generalization in a cerebellar learning paradigm, called eyeblink conditioning. Mice were conditioned to close their eyes in response to a 10 kHz tone by repeatedly pairing this tone with an air puff to the eye 250 ms after tone onset. After ten consecutive days of training, when mice showed reliable conditioned eyelid responses to the 10 kHz tone, we started to expose them to tones with other frequencies, ranging from 2 to 20 kHz. We found that mice had a strong generalization gradient, whereby the probability and amplitude of conditioned eyelid responses gradually decreases depending on the dissimilarity with the 10 kHz tone. Tones with frequencies closest to 10kHz evoked the most and largest conditioned eyelid responses and each step away from the 10 kHz tone resulted in fewer and smaller conditioned responses. In addition, we found that tones with lower frequencies resulted in conditioned responses that peaked earlier after tone onset compared to those to tones with higher ...
    Feb 28, 2022 F.R. Fiocchi
  • Journal Article
    Minimizing the ex vivo confounds of cell-isolation techniques on transcriptomic and translatomic profiles of purified microglia | eNeuro
    Modern molecular and biochemical neuroscience studies require analysis of specific cellular populations derived from brain tissue samples to disambiguate cell type-specific events. This is particularly true in the analysis of minority glial populations in the brain, such as microglia, which may be obscured in whole tissue analyses. Microglia have central functions in development, aging, and neurodegeneration and are a current focus of neuroscience research. A long-standing concern for glial biologists using in vivo models is whether cell isolation from CNS tissue could introduce ex vivo artifacts in microglia, which respond quickly to changes in the environment. Mouse microglia were purified by magnetic-activated cell sorting (MACS), as well as cytometer- and cartridge-based fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) approaches to compare and contrast performance. The Cx3cr1-NuTRAP mouse model was used to provide an endogenous fluorescent microglial marker and a microglial-specific translatome profile as a...
    Feb 28, 2022 Sarah R. Ocañas
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