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2051 - 2060 of 52756 results
  • Article Professional Development
    Tips for Planning Your Postdoc Abroad
    Studying internationally is one thing, and navigating the complex process from when you accept to when you arrive is another.
    May 15, 2015
  • Training
    Easing the Transition Away From the Bench: What Programs Can Do
    Students may decide to leave the bench for different reasons, including tight funding in academia and interest in opportunities in industry and other related careers.
    May 15, 2015
  • Journal Article
    Brain encoding of naturalistic, continuous, and unpredictable tactile events | eNeuro
    Studies employing EEG to measure somatosensory responses have been typically optimized to compute event-related potentials in response to discrete events (ERPs). However, tactile interactions involve continuous processing of non-stationary inputs that change in location, duration, and intensity. To fill this gap, this study aims to demonstrate the possibility of measuring the neural tracking of continuous and unpredictable tactile information. Twenty-seven young adults (females = 15) were continuously and passively stimulated with a random series of gentle brushes on single fingers of each hand, which were covered from view. Thus, tactile stimulations were unique for each participant, and stimulated fingers. An encoding model measured the degree of synchronization between brain activity and continuous tactile input, generating a temporal response function (TRF). Brain topographies associated with the encoding of each finger stimulation showed a contralateral response at central sensors starting at 50 ms an...
    Sep 12, 2024 Nicolò Castellani
  • Journal Article
    Molecular and functional alterations in the cerebral microvasculature in an optimized mouse model of sepsis-associated cognitive dysfunction. | eNeuro
    Systemic inflammation has been implicated in the development and progression of neurodegenerative conditions such as cognitive impairment and dementia. Recent clinical studies indicate an association between sepsis, endothelial dysfunction, and cognitive decline. However, the investigations of the role and therapeutic potential of the cerebral microvasculature in sepsis-induced cognitive dysfunction have been limited by the lack of standardized experimental models for evaluating the alterations in the cerebral microvasculature and cognition induced by the systemic inflammatory response. Herein, we validated a mouse model of endotoxemia that recapitulates key pathophysiology related to sepsis-induced cognitive dysfunction, including the induction of an acute systemic hyperinflammatory response, blood-brain barrier (BBB) leakage, neurovascular inflammation, and memory impairment after recovery from the systemic inflammation. In the acute phase, we identified novel molecular (e.g. upregulation of plasmalemma ...
    Sep 12, 2024 Paulo Ávila-Gómez
  • Journal Article
    MeCP2 deficiency alters the response selectivity of prefrontal cortical neurons to different social stimuli | eNeuro
    Rett syndrome (RTT), a severe neurodevelopmental disorder caused by mutations in the MeCP2 gene, is characterized by cognitive and social deficits. Previous studies have noted hypoactivity in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) pyramidal neurons of MeCP2-deficient mice (RTT mice) in response to both social and nonsocial stimuli. To further understand the neural mechanisms behind the social deficits of RTT mice, we monitored excitatory pyramidal neurons in the prelimbic region of the mPFC during social interactions in mice. These neurons' activity was closely linked to social preference, especially in wild-type mice. However, RTT mice showed reduced social interest and corresponding hypoactivity in these neurons, indicating that impaired mPFC activity contributes to their social deficits. We identified six mPFC neural ensembles selectively tuned to various stimuli, with RTT mice recruiting fewer neurons to ensembles responsive to social interactions and consistently showing lower stimulus-ON ensemble transi...
    Sep 12, 2024 Natalie Boyle
  • Journal Article
    NeuroART: Real-time analysis and targeting of neuronal population activity during calcium imaging for informed closed loop experiments. | eNeuro
    Two-photon calcium imaging allows for the activity readout of large populations of neurons at single cell resolution in living organisms, yielding new insights into how the brain processes information. Holographic optogenetics allows us to trigger activity of this population directly, raising the possibility of injecting information into a living brain. Optogenetic triggering of activity that mimics “natural” information, however, requires identification of stimulation targets based on real-time analysis of the functional network. We have developed NeuroART ( Neuro nal A nalysis in R eal T ime), software that provides real-time readout of neuronal activity integrated with downstream analysis of correlations and synchrony, and of sensory metadata. On the example of auditory stimuli, we demonstrate real-time inference of the contribution of each neuron in the field of view to sensory information processing. To avoid the limitations of microscope hardware and enable collaboration of multiple research groups, ...
    Sep 12, 2024 Zac Bowen
  • Article Professional Development
    What Makes a Good NIH Grant Application
    Writing good NIH grant applications can be tricky. To help new and established applicants submit better applications, NIH’s Center for Scientific Review (CSR) has shared insights of six former study section chairs explaining common elements of impactful applications they’ve seen.
    May 8, 2015
  • Video Diversity
    How Challenges Can Bring Change
    Diversity — or lack thereof — can make or break neuroscience discovery. With departments still struggling to retain women and underrepresented minorities, it’s clear that change is needed.
    May 8, 2015
  • Video Diversity
    Diversity: Why It's Important and How to Achieve It
    One program’s progress in increasing diversity could hold important takeaways for you. Hear how Rae Nishi has led the University of Vermont’s neuroscience graduate program to prioritize and increase diversity, and what it means for the students and future of neuroscience.
    May 8, 2015
  • Video Career Paths
    Why Work in Pharma? Two Words: Collaboration Opportunities
    Pharmaceutical research allows scientists to work as a team on projects that develop cures for different neurological problems. Bill Martin discusses why working in industry aligned so well with his career goals and allows him to work on many aspects of each of the projects he contributes to.
    May 8, 2015
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