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)
  • (516)
    • (8)
    • (28)
    • (105)
    • (10)
    • (17)
    • (31)
    • (14)
    • (51)
    • (7)
    • (47)
    • (6)
    • (13)
    • (19)
    • (27)
    • (34)
  • (602)
    • (11)
    • (26)
    • (29)
    • (14)
    • (15)
    • (43)
  • (200)
    • (24)
    • (45)
    • (59)
  • (133)
  • (733)
  • (4)
  • (1)
  • (47845)
  • (92)
  • (25)
  • (14)
  • (435)
  • (7)
  • (184)
  • (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)
  • (31)
  • (8)
  • (5)
  • (10)
  • (5)
  • (16)
  • (4)
Filter
4661 - 4670 of 52774 results
  • Journal Article
    Adaptive mossy cell circuit plasticity after status epilepticus | Journal of Neuroscience
    Hilar mossy cells regulate network function in the hippocampus through both direct excitation and di-synaptic inhibition of dentate granule cells (DGCs). Substantial mossy cell loss accompanies hippocampal circuit changes in epilepsy. We examined the contribution of surviving mossy cells to network activity in the reorganized dentate gyrus after pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus. To examine functional circuit changes, we optogenetically stimulated mossy cells in acute hippocampal slices from male mice. In control mice, activation of mossy cells produced monosynaptic excitatory and di-synaptic GABAergic currents in DGCs. In pilocarpine-treated mice, mossy cell density and excitation of DGCs were reduced in parallel, with only a minimal reduction in feedforward inhibition, enhancing the inhibition:excitation ratio. Surprisingly, mossy cell-driven excitation of parvalbumin-positive basket cells, primary mediators of feed-forward inhibition, was maintained. Our results suggest that mossy cell outputs reor...
    Feb 18, 2022 Corwin R. Butler
  • Journal Article
    Disinhibitory circuitry gates associative synaptic plasticity in olfactory cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Inhibitory microcircuits play an essential role in regulating cortical responses to sensory stimuli. Interneurons that inhibit dendritic or somatic integration act as gatekeepers for neural activity, synaptic plasticity and the formation of sensory representations. Conversely, interneurons that selectively inhibit other interneurons can open gates through disinhibition. In the anterior piriform cortex (APC), relief of inhibition permits associative long-term potentiation (LTP) of excitatory synapses between pyramidal neurons. However, the interneurons and circuits mediating disinhibition have not been elucidated. In this study, we use an optogenetic approach in mice of both sexes to identify the inhibitory interneurons and disinhibitory circuits that regulate LTP. We focused on three prominent interneuron classes- somatostatin (SST), parvalbumin (PV), and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) interneurons. We find that LTP is gated by the inactivation SST or PV interneurons and by the activation of VIP i...
    Feb 18, 2022 Martha Canto-Bustos
  • Journal Article
    Individualized Assays of Temporal Coding in the Ascending Human Auditory System | eNeuro
    Neural phase-locking to temporal fluctuations is a fundamental and unique mechanism by which acoustic information is encoded by the auditory system. The perceptual role of this metabolically expensive mechanism, the neural phase-locking to temporal fine structure (TFS) in particular, is debated. Although hypothesized, it is unclear if auditory perceptual deficits in certain clinical populations are attributable to deficits in TFS coding. Efforts to uncover the role of TFS have been impeded by the fact that there are no established assays for quantifying the fidelity of TFS coding at the individual level. While many candidates have been proposed, for an assay to be useful, it should not only intrinsically depend on TFS coding, but should also have the property that individual differences in the assay reflect TFS coding per se over and beyond other sources of variance. Here, we evaluate a range of behavioral and electroencephalogram (EEG)-based measures as candidate individualized measures of TFS sensitivity...
    Feb 18, 2022 Agudemu Borjigin
  • Journal Article
    Time course of activity-dependent changes in auditory nerve synapses reveals multiple underlying cellular mechanisms | Journal of Neuroscience
    Abnormal levels of acoustic activity can result in hearing problems such as tinnitus and language processing disorders, but the underlying cellular and synaptic changes triggered by abnormal activity are not well understood. To address this issue, we studied the time course of activity-dependent changes that occur at auditory nerve synapses in mice of both sexes after noise exposure and conductive hearing loss. We found that EPSC amplitude and synaptic depression decreased within two days of noise exposure, through a decrease in the probability of vesicle release ( P r). This was followed by a gradual increase in EPSC amplitude, through a larger pool of releasable vesicles ( N ). Occlusion of the ear canal led to a rapid decrease in EPSC amplitude, through a decrease in N , which was followed by an increase in EPSC amplitude and synaptic depression through an increase in P r. After returning to normal sound levels, synaptic depression recovered to control levels within 1 to 2 d. However, repeated exposure ...
    Feb 18, 2022 Nicole F. Wong
  • Journal Article
    Distinct Factors Drive the Spatiotemporal Progression of Tau Pathology in Older Adults | Journal of Neuroscience
    Mechanisms underlying the initial accumulation of tau pathology across the human brain are largely unknown. We examined whether baseline factors including age, amyloid-β (Aβ), and neural activity predicted longitudinal tau accumulation in temporal lobe regions that reflect distinct stages of tau pathogenesis. Seventy cognitively normal human older adults (77 ± 6 years, 59% female) received two or more 18F-flortaucipir (FTP) and 11C-Pittsburgh Compound B (PiB) PET scans (mean follow-up, 2.5 ± 1.1 years) to quantify tau and (Aβ). Linear mixed-effects models were used to calculate the slopes of FTP change in entorhinal cortex (EC), parahippocampal cortex (PHC), and inferior temporal gyrus (IT), and slopes of global PiB change. Thirty-seven participants underwent functional MRI to measure baseline activation. Older age predicted EC tau accumulation, and baseline EC tau levels predicted subsequent tau accumulation in EC and PHC. In IT, however, baseline EC tau interacted with Aβ to predict IT tau accumulation. ...
    Feb 16, 2022 Jenna N. Adams
  • Journal Article
    Striatal Cholinergic Interneurons Are Required for Contending Strategy Selection While Solving Spatial Navigation Problems | Journal of Neuroscience
    How do animals adopt a given behavioral strategy to solve a recurrent problem when several effective strategies are available to reach the goal? Here we provide evidence that striatal cholinergic interneurons (SCINs) modulate their activity when mice must select between different strategies with similar goal-reaching effectiveness. Using a cell type-specific transgenic murine system, we show that adult SCIN ablation impairs strategy selection in navigational tasks where a goal can be independently achieved by adopting an allocentric or egocentric strategy. SCIN-depleted mice learn to achieve the goal in these tasks, regardless of their appetitive or aversive nature, in a similar way as controls. However, they cannot shift away from their initially adopted strategies, as control mice do, as training progresses. Our results indicate that SCINs are required for shaping the probability function used for strategy selection as experience accumulates throughout training. Thus, SCINs may be critical for the resolu...
    Feb 16, 2022 Juan P. Beccaria
  • Journal Article
    Direct Cochlear Recordings in Humans Show a Theta Rhythmic Modulation of Auditory Nerve Activity by Selective Attention | Journal of Neuroscience
    The architecture of the efferent auditory system enables prioritization of strongly overlapping spatiotemporal cochlear activation patterns elicited by relevant and irrelevant inputs. So far, attempts at finding such attentional modulations of cochlear activity delivered indirect insights in humans or required direct recordings in animals. The extent to which spiral ganglion cells forming the human auditory nerve are sensitive to selective attention remains largely unknown. We investigated this question by testing the effects of attending to either the auditory or visual modality in human cochlear implant (CI) users (3 female, 13 male). Auditory nerve activity was directly recorded with standard CIs during a silent (anticipatory) cue-target interval. When attending the upcoming auditory input, ongoing auditory nerve activity within the theta range (5-8 Hz) was enhanced. Crucially, using the broadband signal (4-25 Hz), a classifier was even able to decode the attended modality from single-trial data. Follow...
    Feb 16, 2022 Quirin Gehmacher
  • Journal Article
    Saturating Nonlinearities of Contrast Response in Human Visual Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Response nonlinearities are ubiquitous throughout the brain, especially within sensory cortices where changes in stimulus intensity typically produce compressed responses. Although this relationship is well established in electrophysiological measurements, it remains controversial whether the same nonlinearities hold for population-based measurements obtained with human fMRI. We propose that these purported disparities are not contingent on measurement type and are instead largely dependent on the visual system state at the time of interrogation. We show that deploying a contrast adaptation paradigm permits reliable measurements of saturating sigmoidal contrast response functions (10 participants, 7 female). When not controlling the adaptation state, our results coincide with previous fMRI studies, yielding nonsaturating, largely linear contrast responses. These findings highlight the important role of adaptation in manifesting measurable nonlinear responses within human visual cortex, reconciling discrepa...
    Feb 16, 2022 Louis N. Vinke
  • Journal Article
    Predicting and Manipulating Cone Responses to Naturalistic Inputs | Journal of Neuroscience
    Primates explore their visual environment by making frequent saccades, discrete and ballistic eye movements that direct the fovea to specific regions of interest. Saccades produce large and rapid changes in input. The magnitude of these changes and the limited signaling range of visual neurons mean that effective encoding requires rapid adaptation. Here, we explore how macaque cone photoreceptors maintain sensitivity under these conditions. Adaptation makes cone responses to naturalistic stimuli highly nonlinear and dependent on stimulus history. Such responses cannot be explained by linear or linear-nonlinear models but are well explained by a biophysical model of phototransduction based on well-established biochemical interactions. The resulting model can predict cone responses to a broad range of stimuli and enables the design of stimuli that elicit specific (e.g., linear) cone photocurrents. These advances will provide a foundation for investigating the contributions of cone phototransduction and post-...
    Feb 16, 2022 Juan M. Angueyra
  • Journal Article
    The Uniform and Nonuniform Nature of Slow and Rapid Scaling in Embryonic Motoneurons | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neurons regulate the strength of their synapses in response to a perturbation to stabilize neuronal signaling through a form of homeostatic plasticity known as synaptic scaling. The process of scaling has the potential to alter all of a cell's miniature postsynaptic current (mPSC) amplitudes by a single multiplicative factor (uniform scaling), and in doing so could change action potential-dependent or evoked synaptic strength by that factor. However, recent studies suggest that individual synapses scale with different scaling factors (nonuniform). This could complicate the simple multiplicative transform from mPSC scaling to the evoked response. We have previously identified a slow AMPAergic and GABAergic synaptic scaling in chick embryo motoneurons following 2 d in vivo perturbations inhibiting neuronal activity or GABAAR function, and now show a rapid form of scaling following NMDAR blockade in vitro . Slow GABAergic scaling appeared to be of a classical uniform pattern. Alternatively, other forms of rap...
    Feb 16, 2022 Dobromila Pekala
  • Previous
  • 465
  • 466
  • 467
  • 468
  • 469
  • 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