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321 - 330 of 52751 results
  • Video Professional Development
    How to Make and Present a Poster for Neuroscience 2023
    In this one-hour long webinar, we will discuss key points of poster preparation and presentation, including where to start, how to visualize your ideas using text and figures, how to present to different audiences, how to handle questions and discussions at your poster, and how to follow up with your audience.
    Sep 18, 2023
  • Video Scientific Research
    Reactivation of Early-Life Stress-Sensitive Neuronal Ensembles Contributes to Lifelong Stress Hypersensitivity
    Join this interactive session as Julie-Anne Balouek and Catherine Jensen Peña discuss their paper, “Reactivation of early-life stress-sensitive neuronal ensembles contributes to lifelong stress hypersensitivity”, with JNeurosci Reviewing Editor . Mary Kay Lobo. Attendees can submit questions at registration and live during the webinar.
    Sep 12, 2023
  • Video Scientific Research
    Studying the Activity of Large Populations of Neurons: Less is More?
    Neuronline is a benefit of SfN membership. Renew your membership now to make sure you don’t lose access.
    Sep 6, 2023
  • Journal Article
    Motor protein disruption critically alters organelle trafficking and excitation contraction coupling | eNeuro
    Trafficking of intracellular cargoes along the neuronal axon microtubule tracks is a motor-protein-dependent process. Here we use a targeted genetic approach to knockdown candidate kinesin genes involved in trafficking organelles in male and female Drosophila melanogaster . Live-imaging experiments revealed intracellular trafficking changes, and kinesins 1 and 3 were identified as critical regulators. Disruptions in either gene product reduce rates of axonal trafficking in motor neurons, and lead to the formation of large intracellular aggregates. Kinesin disruptions led to significant changes in neuropeptide abundance at boutons, and changes in synaptic morphology. Confocal imaging revealed fewer neuropeptides trafficking through, or getting captured by synapses in kinesin knockdown experiments, and a dramatic reduction in neuropeptide release at motor neuron terminals. A profound reduction in neuromuscular transduction, and excitation-contraction coupling in kinesin 1 knockdowns, but not for kinesin 3 wa...
    Apr 2, 2026 Hardik Bansal
  • Journal Article
    Age-related decline in myelin markers and oligodendrocyte density in rhesus macaque prefrontal cortex | eNeuro
    Age-related alterations in myelin are a prominent feature of brain aging, yet how myelin-associated markers and oligodendrocyte lineage cell populations change across the primate lifespan remains incompletely characterized. Here, we provide a multimodal, cross-sectional analysis of myelin-related imaging and cellular markers in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) of age-matched both male and female rhesus macaques across postnatal development and aging using a multimodal approach combining magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), histological analysis, immunohistochemistry, and RNAscope in situ hybridization. We quantified regional gray and white matter volumes and myelin water fraction measures in prefrontal cortex (PFC) subregions BA9 and BA46 across four age groups: 5, 10, 15, and 30 years. Myelin water fraction and regional brain volumes exhibited age-dependent increases from childhood through adolescence, peaking at 15 years, followed by a decline in aged animals. Histological analyses revealed age-associated change...
    Apr 2, 2026 Ying Zhang
  • Video Professional Development
    Illustrating Scientific Discoveries With Adobe Illustrator, Part 1 and 2
    In this webinar, we will briefly discuss the advantages and limitations of various graphics editing software.
    Aug 30, 2023
  • Journal Article
    Spike generation in electroreceptor afferents introduces additional spectral response components by weakly nonlinear interactions | eNeuro
    Spiking thresholds in neurons or rectification at synapses are essential for neuronal computations rendering neuronal processing inherently nonlinear. Nevertheless, linear response theory has been instrumental for understanding, for example, the impact of noise or neuronal synchrony on signal transmission, or the emergence of oscillatory activity, but is valid only at low stimulus amplitudes or large levels of intrinsic noise. At higher signal-to-noise ratios, however, nonlinear response components become relevant. Theoretical results for leaky integrate-and-fire neurons in the weakly nonlinear regime suggest strong responses at the sum of two input frequencies if one of these frequencies or their sum match the neuron’s baseline firing rate. We here analyze nonlinear responses in two types of primary electroreceptor afferents, the P-units of the active and the ampullary cells of the passive electrosensory system of the wave-type electric fish Apteronotus leptorhynchus of either sex. In our combined experim...
    Apr 1, 2026 Alexandra Barayeu
  • Journal Article
    A Multi-Network Approach Identifies Proteins Related to Dendritic Spines in Alzheimer’s Disease | eNeuro
    Proteomic studies have generated robust assessments of protein abundance changes in Alzheimer's disease (AD); however, identifying how the protein abundance changes affect specific biological processes remains a challenge. To address these hurdles, we used a multi-network computational analysis approach that integrated dendritic spine morphometry data with mass spectrometry-based proteomics from the same individuals. The samples exhibited a range of AD neuropathology and were categorized into three groups: controls, asymptomatic AD, and AD cases. Multiplex tandem mass tag mass spectrometry proteomic data ( N  = 8,212 proteins) was generated on Brodmann area 46 (BA46) dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) human samples ( N  = 41, 23 males and 18 females), from which dendritic spine morphometry analysis existed. To integrate the multi-scale data types, two computational network analysis methods were performed, including weighted coexpression network analysis (WGCNA) and SpeakEasy2 (SE2). Both WGCNA and SE2 ...
    Apr 1, 2026 Emma L. Hobby
  • Journal Article
    Exogenously Driven Neural Reactivation of Spatially Matching Visual Working-Memory Contents | eNeuro
    Selective attention is often divided into voluntary (goal-directed) and involuntary (stimulus-driven) forms, a distinction extensively studied for attention to external sensory input. In contrast, internal selective attention—directed toward representations held in working memory (WM)—has been considered primarily for voluntary influences. Recent behavioral evidence suggests that task-irrelevant external stimuli can also influence internal selection of feature-matching WM representations involuntarily, yet the neural mechanisms underlying these effects remain unclear. Here, we tested whether an uninformative exogenous spatial retro-cue presented during a WM delay can act as a selective “ping” and reactivate spatially matching WM content at the level of its representational category. Male and female human participants memorized complex contents presented at distinct locations, followed by unpredictive and task-irrelevant spatial retro-cues that conveyed no category information. Using temporally resolved mul...
    Apr 1, 2026 Águeda Fuentes-Guerra
  • Journal Article
    Deficits in Forelimb Reach Learning in a Mouse Model of Fragile X Syndrome | eNeuro
    Fragile X syndrome is a leading cause of intellectual disability and autism spectrum disorder, for which therapies are limited. A mouse model of fragile X syndrome, the Fmr1 knock-out (KO) mouse, has been particularly valuable for interrogating the molecular, cellular, and circuit mechanisms that underlie the neurological deficits seen in this syndrome. Key deficits in fragile X syndrome include impairments in social behaviors, cognition, and motor learning. Given the difficulties in extrapolating complex human behaviors to mouse models, motor behaviors are a particularly tractable form of learning to study in the mouse. We investigated a form of forelimb reach learning in both male and female Fmr1 KO mice, quantifying different parameters of the task using both manual analysis and DeepLabCut-based tracking of reach trajectories. While Fmr1 KO mice show impaired learning overall, our results showed that the presence or absence of a cue that signals reward alleviated some of the deficits. In addition to a s...
    Apr 1, 2026 Leanne F. Young
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