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10511 - 10520 of 52809 results
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — February 24, 2021, 41 (8) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Feb 24, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Right Temporoparietal Junction Underlies Avoidance of Moral Transgression in Autism Spectrum Disorder | Journal of Neuroscience
    Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is characterized by a core difference in theory-of-mind (ToM) ability, which extends to alterations in moral judgment and decision-making. Although the function of the right temporoparietal junction (rTPJ), a key neural marker of ToM and morality, is known to be atypical in autistic individuals, the neurocomputational mechanisms underlying its specific changes in moral decision-making remain unclear. Here, we addressed this question by using a novel fMRI task together with computational modeling and representational similarity analysis (RSA). ASD participants and healthy control subjects (HCs) decided in public or private whether to incur a personal cost for funding a morally good cause (Good Context) or receive a personal gain for benefiting a morally bad cause (Bad Context). Compared with HC, individuals with ASD were much more likely to reject the opportunity to earn ill gotten money by supporting a bad cause than were HCs. Computational modeling revealed that this resulte...
    Feb 24, 2021 Yang Hu
  • Journal Article
    Promisomics and the Short-Circuiting of Mind | eNeuro
    Significance Statement: Grand neuroscience projects, such as connectomics, have a recurrent tendency to overpromise and underdeliver. Here I critically assess what is done in contrast with what is claimed about such endeavors, especially when the results are “horizontal” and the conclusions “vertical”, namely, when maps of one level (synaptic connections) are conflated with mappings between levels (neural function, animal behavior, cognitive processes). I argue that to suggest that connectomics will give us the mind of a mouse, a human or even a fly is theoretically flawed at many levels. Even if we, neuroscientists, do not take our metaphors literally, we should take them seriously.
    Feb 24, 2021 Alex Gomez-Marin
  • Journal Article
    Frontotemporal Regulation of Subjective Value to Suppress Impulsivity in Intertemporal Choices | Journal of Neuroscience
    Impulsive decisions arise from preferring smaller but sooner rewards compared with larger but later rewards. How neural activity and attention to choice alternatives contribute to reward decisions during temporal discounting is not clear. Here we probed (1) attention to and (2) neural representation of delay and reward information in humans (both sexes) engaged in choices. We studied behavioral and frequency-specific dynamics supporting impulsive decisions on a fine-grained temporal scale using eye tracking and MEG recordings. In one condition, participants had to decide for themselves but pretended to decide for their best friend in a second prosocial condition, which required perspective taking. Hence, conditions varied in the value for themselves versus that pretending to choose for another person. Stronger impulsivity was reliably found across three independent groups for prosocial decisions. Eye tracking revealed a systematic shift of attention from the delay to the reward information and differences ...
    Feb 24, 2021 Stefan Dürschmid
  • Journal Article
    α3* Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors in the Habenula-Interpeduncular Nucleus Circuit Regulate Nicotine Intake | Journal of Neuroscience
    Allelic variation in CHRNA3 , the gene encoding the α3 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) subunit, increases vulnerability to tobacco dependence and smoking-related diseases, but little is known about the role for α3-containing (α3*) nAChRs in regulating the addiction-related behavioral or physiological actions of nicotine. α3* nAChRs are densely expressed by medial habenula (mHb) neurons, which project almost exclusively to the interpeduncular nucleus (IPn) and are known to regulate nicotine avoidance behaviors. We found that Chrna3tm1.1Hwrt hypomorphic mice, which express constitutively low levels of α3* nAChRs, self-administer greater quantities of nicotine (0.4 mg kg−1 per infusion) than their wild-type littermates. Microinfusion of a lentivirus vector to express a short-hairpin RNA into the mHb or IPn to knock-down Chrna3 transcripts markedly increased nicotine self-administration behavior in rats (0.01–0.18 mg kg−1 per infusion). Using whole-cell recordings, we found that the α3β4* nAChR-select...
    Feb 24, 2021 Karim S. Elayouby
  • Journal Article
    This Week in The Journal | Journal of Neuroscience
    Pamela J. Urrutia, Felipe Bodaleo, Daniel A. Bórquez, Yuta Homma, Victoria Rozes-Salvador, et al. (see pages [1636–1649][1]) Most cells have distinct subdomains with specialized functions. Epithelial cells, for example, have an apical domain, which typically faces a lumen, and a basolateral
    Feb 24, 2021
  • Journal Article
    An Auditory Phantom Percept That Does Not Impair External Sound Perception | Journal of Neuroscience
    To accurately represent the world, the brain must distinguish between internally generated activity and activity evoked by external stimuli. When internal brain dynamics mimic stimulus-evoked activity patterns, phantom perception may occur ([Kenet et al., 2003][1]). One common form of phantom
    Feb 24, 2021 Kameron K. Clayton
  • Journal Article
    Phase-Locking Requires Efficient Ca2+ Extrusion at the Auditory Hair Cell Ribbon Synapse | Journal of Neuroscience
    Proper perception of sounds in the environment requires auditory signals to be encoded with extraordinary temporal precision up to tens of microseconds, but how it originates from the hearing organs in the periphery is poorly understood. In particular, sound-evoked spikes in auditory afferent fibers in vivo are phase-locked to sound frequencies up to 5 kHz, but it is not clear how hair cells can handle intracellular Ca2+ changes with such high speed and efficiency. In this study, we combined patch-clamp recording and two-photon Ca2+ imaging to examine Ca2+ dynamics in hair cell ribbon synapses in the bullfrog amphibian papilla of both sexes. We found that Ca2+ clearance from single synaptic ribbons followed a double exponential function, and the weight of the fast component, but not the two time constants, was significantly reduced for prolonged stimulation, and during inhibition of the plasma membrane Ca2+ ATPase (PMCA), the mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake (MCU), or the sarcolemma/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATP...
    Feb 24, 2021 Adolfo E. Cuadra
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Sela et al., “Sleep Differentially Affects Early and Late Neuronal Responses to Sounds in Auditory and Perirhinal Cortices” | Journal of Neuroscience
    In the article “Sleep Differentially Affects Early and Late Neuronal Responses to Sounds in Auditory and Perirhinal Cortices,” by Yaniv Sela, Aaron Joseph Krom, Lottem Bergman, Noa Regev, and Yuval Nir, which appeared on pages [2895–2905][1] of the April 1, 2020 issue, there was a labeling
    Feb 24, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Covert Attention Increases the Gain of Stimulus-Evoked Population Codes | Journal of Neuroscience
    Covert spatial attention has a variety of effects on the responses of individual neurons. However, relatively little is known about the net effect of these changes on sensory population codes, even though perception ultimately depends on population activity. Here, we measured the EEG in human observers (male and female), and isolated stimulus-evoked activity that was phase-locked to the onset of attended and ignored visual stimuli. Using an encoding model, we reconstructed spatially selective population tuning functions from the pattern of stimulus-evoked activity across the scalp. Our EEG-based approach allowed us to measure very early visually evoked responses occurring ∼100 ms after stimulus onset. In Experiment 1, we found that covert attention increased the amplitude of spatially tuned population responses at this early stage of sensory processing. In Experiment 2, we parametrically varied stimulus contrast to test how this effect scaled with stimulus contrast. We found that the effect of attention on...
    Feb 24, 2021 Joshua J. Foster
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