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

  • (117)
    • (26)
  • (4)
  • (151)
    • (32)
    • (8)
    • (17)
    • (14)
    • (14)
    • (6)
    • (20)
  • (55)
    • (12)
    • (20)
  • (85)
    • (36)
    • (32)
  • (107)
    • (39)
    • (15)
  • (514)
    • (8)
    • (28)
    • (105)
    • (10)
    • (17)
    • (31)
    • (14)
    • (51)
    • (7)
    • (47)
    • (6)
    • (13)
    • (19)
    • (27)
    • (34)
  • (601)
    • (11)
    • (26)
    • (29)
    • (14)
    • (15)
    • (43)
  • (200)
    • (24)
    • (45)
    • (59)
  • (133)
  • (733)
  • (4)
  • (1)
  • (47833)
  • (91)
  • (25)
  • (14)
  • (433)
  • (7)
  • (182)
  • (8)
  • (33)
  • (17)
  • (7)
  • (9)
  • (9)
  • (5)
  • (21)
  • (8)
  • (12)
  • (9)
  • (3)
  • (10)
  • (10)
  • (56)
  • (45)
  • (12)
  • (3)
  • (7)
  • (6)
  • (5)
  • (8)
  • (7)
  • (11)
  • (58)
  • (13)
  • (30)
  • (8)
  • (5)
  • (10)
  • (5)
  • (15)
  • (4)
Filter
2351 - 2360 of 52756 results
  • Journal Article
    Loss of Midbrain Dopamine Neurons Does Not Alter GABAergic Inhibition Mediated by Parvalbumin-Expressing Interneurons in Mouse Primary Motor Cortex | eNeuro
    The primary motor cortex (M1) integrates sensory and cognitive inputs to generate voluntary movement. Its functional impairments have been implicated in the pathophysiology of motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease (PD). Specifically, dopaminergic degeneration and basal ganglia dysfunction entrain M1 neurons into the abnormally synchronized bursting pattern of activity throughout the cortico-basal ganglia-thalamocortical network. However, how degeneration of the midbrain dopaminergic neurons affects the anatomy, microcircuit connectivity, and function of the M1 network remains poorly understood. The present study examined whether and how the loss of dopamine (DA) affects the morphology, cellular excitability, and synaptic physiology of Layer 5 parvalbumin-expressing (PV+) cells in the M1 of mice of both sexes. Here, we reported that loss of midbrain dopaminergic neurons does not alter the number, morphology, and physiology of Layer 5 PV+ cells in M1. Moreover, we demonstrated that the number of perisomatic ...
    May 1, 2024 Suraj Cherian
  • Journal Article
    Optogenetic Inhibition of the Orbitofrontal Cortex Disrupts Inhibitory Control during Stop-Change Performance in Male Rats | eNeuro
    Historically, the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) has been implicated in a variety of behaviors ranging from reversal learning and inhibitory control to more complex representations of reward value and task space. While modern interpretations of the OFC's function have focused on a role in outcome evaluation, these cognitive processes often require an organism to inhibit a maladaptive response or strategy. Single-unit recordings from the OFC in rats performing a stop-change task show that the OFC responds strongly to STOP trials. To investigate the role that the OFC plays in stop-change performance, we expressed halorhodopsin (eNpHR3.0) in excitatory neurons in the OFC and tested rats on the stop-change task. Previous work suggests that the OFC differentiates between STOP trials based on trial sequence (i.e., gS trials: STOP trials preceded by a GO vs sS trials: STOP trials preceded by a STOP). We found that yellow light activation of the eNpHR3.0-expressing neurons significantly decreased accuracy only on STOP...
    May 1, 2024 Adam T. Brockett
  • Journal Article
    Dissecting Mismatch Negativity: Early and Late Subcomponents for Detecting Deviants in Local and Global Sequence Regularities | eNeuro
    Mismatch negativity (MMN) is commonly recognized as a neural signal of prediction error evoked by deviants from the expected patterns of sensory input. Studies show that MMN diminishes when sequence patterns become more predictable over a longer timescale. This implies that MMN is composed of multiple subcomponents, each responding to different levels of temporal regularities. To probe the hypothesized subcomponents in MMN, we record human electroencephalography during an auditory local–global oddball paradigm where the tone-to-tone transition probability (local regularity) and the overall sequence probability (global regularity) are manipulated to control temporal predictabilities at two hierarchical levels. We find that the size of MMN is correlated with both probabilities and the spatiotemporal structure of MMN can be decomposed into two distinct subcomponents. Both subcomponents appear as negative waveforms, with one peaking early in the central-frontal area and the other late in a more frontal area. W...
    May 1, 2024 Yiyuan Teresa Huang
  • Journal Article
    Basal Forebrain Cholinergic Neurons Have Specific Characteristics during the Perinatal Period | eNeuro
    Cholinergic neurons of the basal forebrain represent the main source of cholinergic innervation of large parts of the neocortex and are involved in adults in the modulation of attention, memory, and arousal. During the first postnatal days, they play a crucial role in the development of cortical neurons and cortical cytoarchitecture. However, their characteristics, during this period have not been studied. To understand how they can fulfill this role, we investigated the morphological and electrophysiological maturation of cholinergic neurons of the substantia innominata–nucleus basalis of Meynert (SI/NBM) complex in the perinatal period in mice. We show that cholinergic neurons, whether or not they express gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) as a cotransmitter, are already functional at Embryonic Day 18. Until the end of the first postnatal week, they constitute a single population of neurons with a well developed dendritic tree, a spontaneous activity including bursting periods, and a short-latency response t...
    May 1, 2024 Natalia Lozovaya
  • Journal Article
    Altered Hippocampal Activation in Seizure-Prone CACNA2D2 Knock-out Mice | eNeuro
    The voltage-gated calcium channel subunit α2δ-2 controls calcium-dependent signaling in neurons, and loss of this subunit causes epilepsy in both mice and humans. To determine whether mice without α2δ-2 demonstrate hippocampal activation or histopathological changes associated with seizure activity, we measured expression of the activity-dependent gene c -fos and various histopathological correlates of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) in hippocampal tissue from wild-type (WT) and α2δ-2 knock-out ( CACNA2D2 KO) mice using immunohistochemical staining and confocal microscopy. Both genotypes demonstrated similarly sparse c- fos and ΔFosB expressions within the hippocampal dentate granule cell layer (GCL) at baseline, consistent with no difference in basal activity of granule cells between genotypes. Surprisingly, when mice were assayed 1 h after handling-associated convulsions, KO mice had fewer c- fos -positive cells but dramatically increased ΔFosB expression in the dentate gyrus compared with WT mice. After ad...
    May 1, 2024 Alyssa B. Danis
  • Journal Article
    Paradoxical Boosting of Weak and Strong Spatial Memories by Hippocampal Dopamine Uncaging | eNeuro
    The ability to remember changes in the surroundings is fundamental for daily life. It has been proposed that novel events producing dopamine release in the hippocampal CA1 region could modulate spatial memory formation. However, the role of hippocampal dopamine increase on weak or strong spatial memories remains unclear. We show that male mice exploring two objects located in a familiar environment for 5 min created a short-term memory (weak) that cannot be retrieved 1 d later, whereas 10 min exploration created a long-term memory (strong) that can be retrieved 1 d later. Remarkably, hippocampal dopamine elevation during the encoding of weak object location memories (OLMs) allowed their retrieval 1 d later but dopamine elevation during the encoding of strong OLMs promoted the preference for a familiar object location over a novel object location after 24 h. Moreover, dopamine uncaging after the encoding of OLMs did not have effect on weak memories whereas on strong memories diminished the exploration of th...
    May 1, 2024 Cintia Velazquez-Delgado
  • Journal Article
    Phase Delays between Mouse Globus Pallidus Neurons Entrained by Common Oscillatory Drive Arise from Their Intrinsic Properties, Not Their Coupling | eNeuro
    A hallmark of Parkinson's disease is the appearance of correlated oscillatory discharge throughout the cortico-basal ganglia (BG) circuits. In the primate globus pallidus (GP), where the discharge of GP neurons is normally uncorrelated, pairs of GP neurons exhibit oscillatory spike correlations with a broad distribution of pairwise phase delays in experimental parkinsonism. The transition to oscillatory correlations is thought to indicate the collapse of the normally segregated information channels traversing the BG. The large phase delays are thought to reflect pathological changes in synaptic connectivity in the BG. Here we study the structure and phase delays of spike correlations measured from neurons in the mouse external GP (GPe) subjected to identical 1–100 Hz sinusoidal drive but recorded in separate experiments. First, we found that spectral modes of a GPe neuron's empirical instantaneous phase response curve (iPRC) elucidate at what phases of the oscillatory drive the GPe neuron locks when it is ...
    May 1, 2024 Erick Olivares
  • Journal Article
    Differential Effects of Aging on Regional Corpus Callosum Microstructure and the Modifying Influence of Pulse Pressure | eNeuro
    The corpus callosum is composed of several subregions, distinct in cellular and functional organization. This organization scheme may render these subregions differentially vulnerable to the aging process. Callosal integrity may be further compromised by cardiovascular risk factors, which negatively influence white matter health. Here, we test for heterochronicity of aging, hypothesizing an anteroposterior gradient of vulnerability to aging that may be altered by the effects of cardiovascular health. In 174 healthy adults across the adult lifespan (mean age = 53.56 ± 18.90; range, 20–94 years old, 58.62% women), pulse pressure (calculated as participant's systolic minus diastolic blood pressure) was assessed to determine cardiovascular risk. A deterministic tractography approach via diffusion-weighted imaging was utilized to extract fractional anisotropy (FA), radial diffusivity (RD), and axial diffusivity (AD) from each of five callosal subregions, serving as estimates of microstructural health. General l...
    May 1, 2024 Jessica N. Kraft
  • Journal Article
    Conditioning Conformity: A Neuroscientific Funding and Publishing Paradox | eNeuro
    Why does groundbreaking progress in our understanding of the brain seem scarce (at least to me)? The prevailing system of research funding and publication, deeply rooted in peer review and contingent upon preliminary data, tends to favor safe, conventional ideas, thereby impeding major breakthroughs. The prerequisite of preliminary data for hypothesis validation transforms grant-seeking into a cycle that prioritizes data accumulation over pioneering ideas, fostering publications that align with pre-established notions endorsed by reviewers. Are we, the scientists, becoming akin to the subjects of our experiments? Consider this: in behavioral studies, rodents are often deprived of food and water to motivate their learning of a task. Since a successful task is rewarded, animals quickly learn the task and become very efficient at it after some time. Now, envision neuroscientists in a similar plight, navigating the pursuit of funding and recognition in high-profile journals. This predicament is faced by many (...
    May 1, 2024 Christophe Bernard
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Cai et al., “Context Binding in Visual Working Memory Is Reflected in Bilateral Event-Related Potentials, But Not in Contralateral Delay Activity” | eNeuro
    In the article, “Context Binding in Visual Working Memory Is Reflected in Bilateral Event-Related Potentials, But Not in Contralateral Delay Activity,” by Ying Cai, Jacqueline M. Fulvio, Jason Samaha, …
    May 1, 2024
  • Previous
  • 234
  • 235
  • 236
  • 237
  • 238
  • 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