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4231 - 4240 of 52770 results
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Massa et al., “Perceptual Fading of a Stabilized Cortical Image: Replication in the Undergraduate Classroom” | eNeuro
    In the article, “Perceptual Fading of a Stabilized Cortical Image: Replication in the Undergraduate Classroom,” by Nicole B. Massa, Jacob H. Deck, and Michael A. Grubb, which published …
    May 1, 2022
  • Journal Article
    Visual Uncertainty Unveils the Distinct Role of Haptic Cues in Multisensory Grasping | eNeuro
    Human multisensory grasping movements (i.e., seeing and feeling a handheld object while grasping it with the contralateral hand) are superior to movements guided by each separate modality. This multisensory advantage might be driven by the integration of vision with either the haptic position only or with both position and size cues. To contrast these two hypotheses, we manipulated visual uncertainty (central vs peripheral vision) and the availability of haptic cues during multisensory grasping. We showed a multisensory benefit regardless of the degree of visual uncertainty suggesting that the integration process involved in multisensory grasping can be flexibly modulated by the contribution of each modality. Increasing visual uncertainty revealed the role of the distinct haptic cues. The haptic position cue was sufficient to promote multisensory benefits evidenced by faster actions with smaller grip apertures, whereas the haptic size was fundamental in fine-tuning the grip aperture scaling. These results ...
    May 1, 2022 Ivan Camponogara
  • Journal Article
    Why Wait? Neuroscience Is for Everyone! | eNeuro
    Neuroscience is not just for neuroscientists. It is for everyone, but it is absent from our high schools. High schools have a huge investment in STEM but do not include neuroscience, although neuroscience is more interesting and relevant to a person’s daily life than most other sciences. However, neuroscience opportunities are increasing for teenagers outside the standard curriculum.
    May 1, 2022 Norbert Myslinski
  • Journal Article
    Neurotechnologies under the Eye of Bioethics | eNeuro
    Neurosciences and digital technologies combine into the booming field of “neurotechnologies” (NT). Prospects for medical applications are very promising. If the GAFAM invest millions of dollars in NT, this is not only to develop brain-machine interfaces to overcome disabilities and mental pathologies. There are also commercial issues aimed at the public, via the exploitation of brain data for personal uses and for supervision of individual behaviors. The capacity of NT to “manipulate the brains” calls for vigilance in two particular areas: respect of mental autonomy and protection of brain data. A major issue is to assess whether existing laws on the protection of human rights are sufficient to protect mental privacy or whether new rights - NeuroRights- must be established specifically. The present era is characterized by major advances in neurosciences and in digital technologies. Both combine into a booming field of investigation called “neurotechnologies” (NTs) that result from research into brain path...
    May 1, 2022 Catherine Vidal
  • Journal Article
    Impact of α-Synuclein Fibrillar Strains and β-Amyloid Assemblies on Mouse Cortical Neurons Endo-Lysosomal Logistics | eNeuro
    Endosomal transport and positioning cooperate in the establishment of neuronal compartment architecture, dynamics, and function, contributing to neuronal intracellular logistics. Furthermore, dysfunction of endo-lysosomal has been identified as a common mechanism in neurodegenerative diseases. Here, we analyzed endo-lysosomal transport when α-synuclein (α-syn) fibrillar polymorphs, β-amyloid (Aβ) fibrils, and oligomers were externally applied on primary cultures of mouse cortical neurons. To measure this transport, we used a simple readout based on the spontaneous endocytosis in cultured neurons of fluorescent nanodiamonds (FNDs), a perfectly stable nano-emitter, and the subsequent automatic extraction and quantification of their directed motions at high-throughput. α-Syn fibrillar polymorphs, Aβ fibrils, and oligomers induce a 2-fold decrease of the fraction of nanodiamonds transported along microtubules, while only slightly reducing their interaction with cortical neurons. This important decrease in movi...
    May 1, 2022 Qiao-Ling Chou
  • Journal Article
    Inhibition of Crmp1 Phosphorylation at Ser522 Ameliorates Motor Function and Neuronal Pathology in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Model Mice | eNeuro
    Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a rapidly progressive and fatal neurodegenerative disorder that affects upper and lower motor neurons; however, its pathomechanism has not been fully elucidated. Using a comprehensive phosphoproteomic approach, we have identified elevated phosphorylation of Collapsin response mediator protein 1 (Crmp1) at serine 522 in the lumbar spinal cord of ALS model mice overexpressing a human superoxide dismutase mutant (SOD1G93A). We investigated the effects of Crmp1 phosphorylation and depletion in SOD1G93A mice using Crmp1S522A (Ser522→Ala) knock-in ( Crmp1k i /ki ) mice in which the S522 phosphorylation site was abolished and Crmp1 knock-out ( Crmp1 −/−) mice, respectively. Crmp1ki / ki / SOD1G93A mice showed longer latency to fall in a rotarod test while Crmp1 −/−/ SOD1G93A mice showed shorter latency compared with SOD1G93A mice. Survival was prolonged in Crmp1ki / ki / SOD1G93A mice but not in Crmp1 −/−/ SOD1G93A mice. In agreement with these phenotypic findings, residual ...
    May 1, 2022 Tetsuya Asano
  • Journal Article
    Slow Inactivation of Sodium Channels Contributes to Short-Term Adaptation in Vomeronasal Sensory Neurons | eNeuro
    Adaptation plays an important role in sensory systems as it dynamically modifies sensitivity to allow the detection of stimulus changes. The vomeronasal system controls many social behaviors in most mammals by detecting pheromones released by conspecifics. Stimuli activate a transduction cascade in vomeronasal neurons that leads to spiking activity. Whether and how these neurons adapt to stimuli is still debated and largely unknown. Here, we measured short-term adaptation performing current-clamp whole-cell recordings by using diluted urine as a stimulus, as it contains many pheromones. We measured spike frequency adaptation in response to repeated identical stimuli of 2–10 s duration that was dependent on the time interval between stimuli. Responses to paired current steps, bypassing the signal transduction cascade, also showed spike frequency adaptation. We found that voltage-gated Na+ channels in VSNs undergo slow inactivation processes. Furthermore, recovery from slow inactivation of voltage-gated Na+ ...
    May 1, 2022 Nicole Sarno
  • Journal Article
    Functional Gradient of the Fusiform Cortex for Chinese Character Recognition | eNeuro
    Visual word recognition has been proposed to have a functional and spatial organization corresponding to hierarchical language-like word forms in the left fusiform gyrus (FG) during visual word recognition in alphabetic languages. However, it is still unclear whether the similar functional gradients of word-like representation exist during Chinese character recognition. In this study, we adopted univariate activation analysis and representational similarity analysis (RSA) methods to investigate the functional organization in the FG for Chinese character recognition using task fMRI data. Native Chinese readers were visually presented with four types of character-like stimuli (i.e., real characters, pseudo-characters, false characters, and stroke combinations). After analysis, we observed a posterior-to-anterior functional gradient in the left FG corresponding to the degree of likeness of stimuli to character. Additionally, distinct subregions of the left FG harbor different orthographic codes. The middle pa...
    May 1, 2022 Wanwan Guo
  • Journal Article
    Slow inactivation of sodium channels contributes to short-term adaptation in vomeronasal sensory neurons | eNeuro
    Adaptation plays an important role in sensory systems as it dynamically modifies sensitivity to allow the detection of stimulus changes. The vomeronasal system controls many social behaviors in most mammals by detecting pheromones released by conspecifics. Stimuli activate a transduction cascade in vomeronasal neurons that leads to spiking activity. Whether and how these neurons adapt to stimuli is still debated and largely unknown. Here, we measured short-term adaptation performing current-clamp whole-cell recordings by using diluted urine as a stimulus, as it contains many pheromones. We measured spike-frequency adaptation in response to repeated identical stimuli from 2 to 10 s duration that was dependent on the time interval between stimuli. Responses to paired current steps, bypassing signal transduction cascade, also showed spike-frequency adaptation. We found that voltage-gated Na+ channels in VSNs undergo slow inactivation processes. Furthermore, recovery from slow inactivation of voltage-gated Na+...
    Apr 29, 2022 Nicole Sarno
  • Journal Article
    A neurodevelopmental shift in reward circuitry from mother’s to nonfamilial voices in adolescence | Journal of Neuroscience
    The social world of young children primarily revolves around parents and caregivers, who play a key role in guiding children’s social and cognitive development. However, a hallmark of adolescence is a shift in orientation towards nonfamilial social targets, an adaptive process that prepares adolescents for their independence. Little is known regarding neurobiological signatures underlying changes in adolescents’ social orientation. Using functional brain imaging of human voice processing in children and adolescents (ages 7-16), we demonstrate distinct neural signatures for mother’s voice and nonfamilial voices across child and adolescent development in reward and social valuation systems, instantiated in nucleus accumbens and ventromedial prefrontal cortex. While younger children showed increased activity in these brain systems for mother’s voice compared to nonfamilial voices, older adolescents showed the opposite effect with increased activity for nonfamilial compared to mother’s voice. Findings uncover ...
    Apr 28, 2022 Daniel A. Abrams
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