Filter
-
(133)
-
(735)
-
(4)
-
(1)
-
(47863)
-
(93)
-
(25)
-
(14)
-
(434)
-
(7)
-
(186)
-
(8)
-
(33)
-
(17)
-
(7)
-
(10)
-
(9)
-
(5)
-
(21)
-
(8)
-
(12)
-
(9)
-
(3)
-
(10)
-
(10)
-
(56)
-
(46)
-
(12)
-
(3)
-
(7)
-
(6)
-
(5)
-
(8)
-
(7)
-
(11)
-
(58)
-
(13)
-
(31)
-
(8)
-
(5)
-
(10)
-
(5)
-
(16)
-
(4)
8631 - 8640
of 52804 results
-
Journal ArticleKelly C. Harris, Jayne B. Ahlstrom, James W. Dias, Lilyana B. Kerouac, Carolyn M. McClaskey, et al. (see pages [10293–10304][1]) Difficulty understanding conversation is a common complaint in older people. Sometimes hearing loss stems from loss of cochlear hair cells, as indicated by elevatedDec 15, 2021
-
Journal ArticleAxon regeneration after spinal cord injury (SCI) is limited by both a decreased intrinsic ability of neurons to grow axons and the growth-hindering effects of extrinsic inhibitory molecules expressed around the lesion. Deletion of phosphatase and tensin homolog ( Pten ) augments mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling and enhances the intrinsic regenerative response of injured corticospinal neurons after SCI. Because of the variety of growth-restrictive extrinsic molecules, it remains unclear how inhibition of conserved inhibitory signaling elements would affect axon regeneration and rewiring after SCI. Moreover, it remains unknown how a combinatorial approach to modulate both extrinsic and intrinsic mechanisms can enhance regeneration and rewiring after SCI. In the present study, we deleted RhoA and RhoC , which encode small GTPases that mediate growth inhibition signals of a variety of extrinsic molecules, to remove global extrinsic pathways. RhoA / RhoC double deletion in mice suppressed retrac...Dec 15, 2021
-
Journal ArticleAging is often associated with cognitive decline and recurrent cellular and molecular impairments. While life-long caloric restriction (CR) may delay age-related cognitive deterioration as well as the onset of neurological disease, recent studies suggest that late-onset, short-term intermittent fasting (IF), may show comparable beneficial effects as those of life-long CR to improve brain health. We used a new optogenetic aging model to study the effects of late-onset (>18 months), short-term (4-6 weeks) IF on age-related changes in GABAergic synaptic transmission, intracellular calcium (Ca2+) buffering and cognitive status. We utilized male mice from a bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) transgenic mouse line with stable expression of the channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) variant H134R [VGAT-ChR2(H134R)-EYFP] in a reduced synaptic preparation that allows for specific optogenetic light stimulation on GABAergic synaptic terminals across aging. We performed quantal analysis using the method of failures in this mode...Dec 15, 2021
-
Journal ArticleFood choice, in animals, has been known to change with internal nutritional state and also with variable dietary conditions. To better characterize mechanisms of diet-induced plasticity of food preference in Drosophila melanogaster , we synthesized diets with macronutrient imbalances and examined how food choice and taste sensitivity were modified in flies that fed on these diets. We found that dietary macronutrient imbalances caused compensatory behavioral shifts in both sexes to increase preference for the macronutrient that was scant in the food source, and simultaneously reduce preference for the macronutrient that was enriched. Further analysis with females revealed analogous changes in sweet taste responses in labellar neurons, with increased sensitivity on sugar-reduced diet and decreased sensitivity on sugar-enriched diet. Interestingly, we found differences in the onset of changes in taste sensitivity and behavior, which occur over 1–4 d, in response to dietary sugar reduction or enrichment. To in...Dec 15, 2021
-
Journal ArticleYears of basic neuroscience on the modulation of the small circuits found in the crustacean stomatogastric ganglion have led us to study the effects of temperature on the motor patterns produced by the stomatogastric ganglion. While the impetus for this work was the study of individual variability in the parameters determining intrinsic and synaptic conductances, we are confronting substantial fluctuations in the stability of the networks to extreme temperature; these may correlate with changes in ocean temperature. Interestingly, when studied under control conditions, these wild-caught animals appear to be unchanged, but it is only when challenged by extreme temperatures that we reveal the consequences of warming oceans.Dec 15, 2021
-
Journal ArticleMost of our knowledge about human emotional memory comes from animal research. Based on this work, the amygdala is often labeled the brain's “fear center”, but it is unclear to what degree neural circuitries underlying fear and extinction learning are conserved across species. Neuroimaging studies in humans yield conflicting findings, with many studies failing to show amygdala activation in response to learned threat. Such null findings are often treated as resulting from MRI-specific problems related to measuring deep brain structures. Here we test this assumption in a mega-analysis of three studies on fear acquisition ( n = 98; 68 female) and extinction learning ( n = 79; 53 female). The conditioning procedure involved the presentation of two pictures of faces and two pictures of houses: one of each pair was followed by an electric shock [a conditioned stimulus (CS+)], the other one was never followed by a shock (CS–), and participants were instructed to learn these contingencies. Results revealed widesp...Dec 15, 2021
-
Journal ArticleA common complaint of older adults is difficulty understanding speech, particularly in challenging listening conditions. Accumulating evidence suggests that these difficulties may reflect a loss and/or dysfunction of auditory nerve (AN) fibers. We used a novel approach to study age-related changes in AN structure and several measures of AN function, including neural synchrony, in 58 older adults and 42 younger adults. AN activity was measured in response to an auditory click (compound action potential; CAP), presented at stimulus levels ranging from 70 to 110 dB pSPL. Poorer AN function was observed for older than younger adults across CAP measures at higher but not lower stimulus levels. Associations across metrics and stimulus levels were consistent with age-related AN disengagement and AN dyssynchrony. High-resolution T2-weighted structural imaging revealed age-related differences in the density of cranial nerve VIII, with lower density in older adults with poorer neural synchrony. Individual difference...Dec 15, 2021
-
Journal ArticleWhen listening to speech, our brain responses time lock to acoustic events in the stimulus. Recent studies have also reported that cortical responses track linguistic representations of speech. However, tracking of these representations is often described without controlling for acoustic properties. Therefore, the response to these linguistic representations might reflect unaccounted acoustic processing rather than language processing. Here, we evaluated the potential of several recently proposed linguistic representations as neural markers of speech comprehension. To do so, we investigated EEG responses to audiobook speech of 29 participants (22 females). We examined whether these representations contribute unique information over and beyond acoustic neural tracking and each other. Indeed, not all of these linguistic representations were significantly tracked after controlling for acoustic properties. However, phoneme surprisal, cohort entropy, word surprisal, and word frequency were all significantly tra...Dec 15, 2021
-
Journal ArticleThe primary somatosensory cortex (S1) plays a critical role in processing multiple somatosensations, but the mechanism underlying the representation of different submodalities of somatosensation in S1 remains unclear. Using in vivo two-photon calcium imaging that simultaneously monitors hundreds of layer 2/3 pyramidal S1 neurons of awake male mice, we examined neuronal responses triggered by mechanical, thermal, or pruritic stimuli. We found that mechanical, thermal, and pruritic stimuli activated largely overlapping neuronal populations in the same somatotopic S1 subregion. Population decoding analysis revealed that the local neuronal population in S1 encoded sufficient information to distinguish different somatosensory submodalities. Although multimodal S1 neurons responding to multiple types of stimuli exhibited no spatial clustering, S1 neurons preferring mechanical and thermal stimuli tended to show local clustering. These findings demonstrated the coding scheme of different submodalities of somatosen...Dec 15, 2021
-
Journal ArticleThe editors depend heavily on outside reviewers in forming opinions about papers submitted to JNeurosci and would like to formally thank the following individuals for their help during the past year. Gloster B. Aaron Nobuhito Abe Aman Aberra Jose Francisco Abisambra Alfonso Abizaid Karina P.Dec 15, 2021






