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9451 - 9460 of 52804 results
  • Journal Article
    Stimulus reliability automatically biases temporal integration of discrete perceptual targets in the human brain | Journal of Neuroscience
    Many decisions, from crossing a busy street to choosing a profession, require integration of discrete sensory events. Previous studies have shown that integrative decision-making favours more reliable stimuli, mimicking statistically optimal integration. It remains unclear, however, whether reliability biases operate even when they lead to suboptimal performance. To address this issue, we asked human observers to reproduce the average motion direction of two suprathreshold coherent motion signals presented successively and with varying levels of reliability, while simultaneously recording whole-brain activity using electroencephalography. By definition, the averaging task should engender equal weighting of the two component motion signals, but instead we found robust behavioural biases in participants’ average decisions that favoured the more reliable stimulus. Using population-tuning modelling of brain activity we characterised tuning to the average motion direction. In keeping with the behavioural biases...
    Jul 29, 2021 Dragan Rangelov
  • Journal Article
    Linear integration of sensory evidence over space and time underlies face categorization | Journal of Neuroscience
    Visual object recognition relies on elaborate sensory processes that transform retinal inputs to object representations, but it also requires decision-making processes that read out object representations and function over prolonged time scales. The computational properties of these decision-making processes remain underexplored for object recognition. Here, we study these computations by developing a stochastic multi-feature face categorization task. Using quantitative models and tight control of spatiotemporal visual information, we demonstrate that human subjects (5 males, 8 females) categorize faces through an integration process that first linearly adds the evidence conferred by task-relevant features over space to create aggregated momentary evidence, and then linearly integrates it over time with minimum information loss. Discrimination of stimuli along different category boundaries (e.g., identity or expression of a face) is implemented by adjusting feature weights of spatial integration. This line...
    Jul 29, 2021 Gouki Okazawa
  • Journal Article
    From receptive to perceptive fields: Size-dependent asymmetries in both negative afterimages and subcortical ON and OFF post-stimulus responses | Journal of Neuroscience
    Negative afterimages are perceptual phenomena that occur after physical stimuli disappear from sight. Their origin is linked to transient post-stimulus responses of visual neurons. The receptive fields (RFs) of these subcortical ON- and OFF-center neurons exhibit antagonistic interactions between central and surrounding visual space, resulting in selectivity for stimulus polarity and size. These two features are closely intertwined, yet their relationship to negative afterimage perception remain unknown. Here we tested if size differentially affects the perception of bright and dark negative afterimages in humans of both sexes, and how this correlates with neural mechanisms in subcortical ON- and OFF-cells. Psychophysically we found a size-dependent asymmetry whereby dark disks produce stronger and longer-lasting negative afterimages than bright disks of equal contrast at sizes above 0.8°. Neurophysiological recordings from retinal and relay cells in female cat dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) show...
    Jul 29, 2021 Xu Liu
  • Journal Article
    Expression of Concern: Palazuelos et al., “TGFβ Signaling Regulates the Timing of CNS Myelination by Modulating Oligodendrocyte Progenitor Cell Cycle Exit through SMAD3/4/FoxO1/Sp1” | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jul 29, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Expression of Concern: Palazuelos et al., “Oligodendrocyte Regeneration and CNS Remyelination Require TACE/ADAM17” | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jul 29, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Connectivity and Neuronal Synchrony During Seizures | Journal of Neuroscience
    There is uncertainty regarding when and which groups of neurons fire synchronously during seizures. While several studies found heterogeneous firing during seizures, others suggested synchronous neuronal firing in the seizure core. We tested whether neuronal activity during seizures is orderly in the direction of the excitatory neuronal connections in the circuit. There are strong excitatory connections laterally within the septo-temporally organized lamella and inhibitory trans-lamellar connections in the hippocampus, which allow testing of the connectivity hypothesis. We further tested whether epileptogenesis enhances synchrony and antiseizure drug administration disrupts it. We recorded local field potentials from CA1 pyramidal neurons using a small microelectrode array and kindled rats by a rapid, recurrent hippocampal stimulation protocol. We compared cross-correlation, theta phase synchronization, entropy, and event synchronization. These analyses revealed that the firing pattern was correlated alo...
    Jul 29, 2021 Xin Ren
  • Journal Article
    Acetaldehyde excitation of lateral habenular neurons via multiple cellular mechanisms | Journal of Neuroscience
    Acetaldehyde, the first metabolite of ethanol, is implicated in several of ethanol’s actions, including the reinforcing and aversive effects. The neuronal mechanisms underlying acetaldehyde’s aversive effect, however, are poorly understood. The lateral habenula (LHb), a regulator of midbrain monoaminergic centers, is activated by negative valence events. Although the LHb has been linked to the aversive responses of several abused drugs, including ethanol, little is known about acetaldehyde. We, therefore, assessed acetaldehyde’s action on LHb neurons in rats. The results showed that intraperitoneal injection of acetaldehyde increased cFos protein expression within the LHb and that intra-LHb infusion of acetaldehyde induced conditioned place aversion in male rats. Furthermore, electrophysiological recording in brain slices of male and female rats showed that bath application of acetaldehyde facilitated spontaneous firing and glutamatergic transmission. This effect of acetaldehyde was potentiated by an aldeh...
    Jul 29, 2021 Weiyuan Huang
  • Journal Article
    Vigor encoding in the ventral pallidum | eNeuro
    The ventral pallidum (VP) is the major downstream nucleus of the nucleus accumbens (NAc). Both VP and NAc neurons are responsive to reward-predictive stimuli and are critical drivers of reward-seeking behavior. The cue-evoked excitations and inhibitions of NAc neurons predict the vigor (latency and speed) of the cue-elicited locomotor approach response and encode the animal’s proximity to the movement target, but do not encode more specific movement features such as turn direction. VP neurons also encode certain vigor parameters, but it remains unknown whether they also encode more specific movement features, and whether such encoding could account for vigor encoding. To address these questions, we recorded the firing of neurons in the VP of freely moving male rats performing a discriminative stimulus task. Similar to NAc neurons, VP neurons’ cue-evoked excitations were correlated with the speed of the upcoming approach movement and the animal’s proximity to the movement target at cue onset. Unlike NAc neu...
    Jul 29, 2021 James Lederman
  • Journal Article
    Cre recombinase driver mice reveal lineage-dependent and -independent expression of Brs3 in the mouse brain | eNeuro
    Bombesin receptor subtype-3 (BRS3) is an orphan receptor that regulates energy homeostasis. We compared Brs3 driver mice with constitutive or inducible Cre recombinase activity. The constitutive BRS3-Cre mice show reporter signal (Cre-dependent tdTomato) in the adult brain due to lineage tracing in the dentate gyrus, striatal patches, and indusium griseum, in addition to sites previously identified in the inducible BRS3-Cre mice (including hypothalamic and amygdala subregions, and parabrachial nucleus). We detected Brs3 reporter expression in the dentate gyrus at day 23 but not at postnatal day one or five months of age. Hypothalamic sites expressed reporter at all three time points, and striatal patches expressed Brs3 reporter at one day but not five months. Parabrachial nucleus Brs3 neurons project to the preoptic area, hypothalamus, amygdala, and thalamus. Both Cre recombinase insertions reduced Brs3 mRNA levels and BRS3 function, causing obesity phenotypes of different severity. These results demonstra...
    Jul 29, 2021 Allison S. Mogul
  • Journal Article
    Disentangling Semantic Composition and Semantic Association in the Left Temporal Lobe | Journal of Neuroscience
    Although composing two words into a complex representation (e.g., “coffee cake”) is conceptually different from forming associations between a pair of words (e.g., “coffee, cake”), the brain regions supporting semantic composition have also been implicated for associative encoding. Here, we adopted a two-word magnetoencephalography (MEG) paradigm which varies compositionality (“French/Korean cheese” vs “France/Korea cheese”) and strength of association (“France/French cheese” vs “Korea/Korean cheese”) between the two words. We collected MEG data while 42 English speakers (24 females) viewed the two words successively in the scanner, and we applied both univariate regression analyses and multivariate pattern classification to the source estimates of the two words. We show that the left anterior temporal lobe (LATL) and left middle temporal lobe (LMTL) are distinctively modulated by semantic composition and semantic association. Specifically, the LATL is mostly sensitive to high-association compositional phr...
    Jul 28, 2021 Jixing Li
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