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8461 - 8470 of 52807 results
  • Journal Article
    D1/D5 Dopamine Receptors and mGluR5 Jointly Enable Non-Hebbian Long-Term Potentiation at Sensory Synapses onto Lamina I Spinoparabrachial Neurons | Journal of Neuroscience
    Highly correlated firing of primary afferent inputs and lamina I projection neurons evokes synaptic long-term potentiation (LTP), a mechanism by which ascending nociceptive transmission can be amplified at the level of the spinal dorsal horn. However, the degree to which neuromodulatory signaling shapes the temporal window governing spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) at sensory synapses onto projection neurons remains unclear. The present study demonstrates that activation of spinal D1/D5 dopamine receptors (D1/D5Rs) creates a highly permissive environment for the production of LTP in male and female adult mouse spinoparabrachial neurons by promoting non-Hebbian plasticity. Bath application of the mixed D1/D5R agonist SKF82958 unmasked LTP at STDP pairing intervals that normally fail to alter synaptic efficacy. Furthermore, during D1/D5R signaling, action potential discharge in projection neurons became dispensable for LTP generation, and primary afferent stimulation alone was sufficient to induce st...
    Jan 19, 2022 Jie Li
  • Journal Article
    Neurocomputational Underpinnings of Expected Surprise | Journal of Neuroscience
    Predictive coding accounts of brain functions profoundly influence current approaches to perceptual synthesis. However, a fundamental paradox has emerged, that may be very relevant for understanding hallucinations, psychosis, or cognitive inflexibility: in some situations, surprise or prediction error-related responses can decrease when predicted, and yet, they can increase when we know they are predictable. This paradox is resolved by recognizing that brain responses reflect precision-weighted prediction error. This presses us to disambiguate the contributions of precision and prediction error in electrophysiology. To meet this challenge for the first time, we appeal to a methodology that couples an original experimental paradigm with fine dynamic modeling. We examined brain responses in healthy human participants ( N = 20; 10 female) to unexpected and expected surprising sounds, assuming that the latter yield a smaller prediction error but much more amplified by a larger precision weight. Importantly, ad...
    Jan 19, 2022 Françoise Lecaignard
  • Journal Article
    Increased Connectivity among Sensory and Motor Regions during Visual and Audiovisual Speech Perception | Journal of Neuroscience
    In everyday conversation, we usually process the talker's face as well as the sound of the talker's voice. Access to visual speech information is particularly useful when the auditory signal is degraded. Here, we used fMRI to monitor brain activity while adult humans ( n = 60) were presented with visual-only, auditory-only, and audiovisual words. The audiovisual words were presented in quiet and in several signal-to-noise ratios. As expected, audiovisual speech perception recruited both auditory and visual cortex, with some evidence for increased recruitment of premotor cortex in some conditions (including in substantial background noise). We then investigated neural connectivity using psychophysiological interaction analysis with seed regions in both primary auditory cortex and primary visual cortex. Connectivity between auditory and visual cortices was stronger in audiovisual conditions than in unimodal conditions, including a wide network of regions in posterior temporal cortex and prefrontal cortex. In...
    Jan 19, 2022 Jonathan E. Peelle
  • Journal Article
    Distinct Representations of Tonotopy and Pitch in Human Auditory Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Frequency-to-place mapping, or tonotopy, is a fundamental organizing principle throughout the auditory system, from the earliest stages of auditory processing in the cochlea to subcortical and cortical regions. Although cortical maps are referred to as tonotopic, it is unclear whether they simply reflect a mapping of physical frequency inherited from the cochlea, a computation of pitch based on the fundamental frequency, or a mixture of these two features. We used high-resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measure BOLD responses as male and female human participants listened to pure tones that varied in frequency or complex tones that varied in either spectral content (brightness) or fundamental frequency (pitch). Our results reveal evidence for pitch tuning in bilateral regions that partially overlap with the traditional tonotopic maps of spectral content. In general, primary regions within Heschl's gyri (HGs) exhibited more tuning to spectral content, whereas areas surrounding HGs ex...
    Jan 19, 2022 Emily J. Allen
  • Journal Article
    This Week in The Journal | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jie Li, Theodore J. Price, and Mark L. Baccei (see pages [350–361][1]) Like other neural circuits, those transmitting nociceptive information to the brain undergo use-dependent synaptic plasticity. Thus, strong activation of nociceptive pathways can produce long-term potentiation (LTP) that
    Jan 19, 2022
  • Journal Article
    Anterior–Posterior Hippocampal Dynamics Support Working Memory Processing | Journal of Neuroscience
    The hippocampus is a locus of working memory (WM) with anterior and posterior subregions that differ in their transcriptional and external connectivity patterns. However, the involvement and functional connections between these subregions in WM processing are poorly understood. To address these issues, we recorded intracranial EEG from the anterior and the posterior hippocampi in humans (seven females and seven males) who maintained a set of letters in their WM. We found that WM maintenance was accompanied by elevated low-frequency activity in both the anterior and posterior hippocampus and by increased theta/alpha band (3–12 Hz) phase synchronization between anterior and posterior subregions. Cross-frequency and Granger prediction analyses consistently showed that the correct WM trials were associated with theta/alpha band-coordinated unidirectional influence from the posterior to the anterior hippocampus. In contrast, WM errors were associated with bidirectional interactions between the anterior and post...
    Jan 19, 2022 Jin Li
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — January 19, 2022, 42 (3) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jan 19, 2022
  • Journal Article
    Rhythmicity of Prefrontal Local Field Potentials after Nucleus Basalis Stimulation | eNeuro
    The action of acetylcholine in the cortex is critical for cognitive functions and cholinergic drugs can improve functions such as attention and working memory. An alternative means of enhancing cholinergic neuromodulation in primates is the intermittent electrical stimulation of the cortical source of acetylcholine, the Nucleus Basalis (NB) of Meynert. NB stimulation generally increases firing rate of neurons in the prefrontal cortex, however its effects on single neurons are diverse and complex. We sought to understand how NB stimulation affects global measures of neural activity by recording and analyzing local field potentials (LFPs) in monkeys as they performed working memory tasks. NB stimulation primarily decreased power in the alpha frequency range during the delay interval of working memory tasks. The effect was consistent across variants of the task. No consistent modulation in the delay interval of the task was observed in the gamma frequency range, which has previously been implicated in the mai...
    Jan 18, 2022 Balbir Singh
  • Journal Article
    MRI stereoscope: a miniature stereoscope for human neuroimaging | eNeuro
    Stereoscopic vision enables the perception of depth. To study the brain mechanisms behind stereoscopic vision using non-invasive brain imaging (‘MRI’), scientists need to reproduce the independent views of the left and right eyes in the brain scanner using ‘dichoptic’ displays. However, high quality dichoptic displays are technically challenging and costly to implement in the MRI scanner. The novel miniature stereoscope system (‘MRI stereoscope’) is an affordable and open-source tool that displays high-quality dichoptic images inside the MRI scanner. The MRI stereoscope takes advantage of commonly used display equipment, the MRI head coil, and a display screen. To validate the MRI stereoscope, binocular disparity stimuli were presented in a 3T MRI scanner while neural activation was recorded using functional MRI in six human participants. The comparison of large binocular disparities compared to disparities close to zero evoked strong responses across dorsal and ventral extra-striate visual cortex. In cont...
    Jan 18, 2022 I. Betina Ip
  • Journal Article
    Closed-loop, cervical, epidural stimulation elicits respiratory neuroplasticity after spinal cord injury in freely behaving rats | eNeuro
    Over half of all spinal cord injuries are cervical, which can lead to paralysis and respiratory compromise, causing significant morbidity and mortality. Effective treatments to restore breathing after severe upper cervical injury are lacking; thus, it is imperative to develop therapies to address this. Epidural stimulation has successfully restored motor function after spinal cord injury for stepping, standing, reaching, grasping, and postural control. We hypothesized that closed-loop stimulation triggered via healthy hemidiaphragm EMG activity has the potential to elicit functional neuroplasticity in spinal respiratory pathways after cervical spinal cord injury. To test this, we delivered closed-loop, electrical, epidural stimulation (CLES) at the level of the phrenic motor nucleus (C4) for three days after C2 hemisection (C2HS) in freely behaving rats. A 2x2 Latin Square experimental design incorporated two treatments, C2HS injury and CLES therapy resulting in four groups of adult, female Sprague-Dawley ...
    Jan 18, 2022 Ian G. Malone
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