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  • Video Webinar Scientific Research
    Updates in Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE)
    Dr. Ann McKee will describe the emergence of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) as a distinct disease over the past 20 years.
    Jan 4, 2024
  • 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 matches 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 exper...
    May 1, 2026 Alexandra Barayeu
  • Journal Article
    Spatial Adaptation of Primate Retinal Ganglion Cells Between Artificial and Natural Stimuli | eNeuro
    The retina encodes a broad range of stimuli, adapting its computations to features like brightness, contrast, and motion. However, it is unclear whether it also adapts when switching between natural scenes and white noise (WN). To address this, we analyzed the neural activity of male marmoset retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) in response to WN and naturalistic movies. We trained linear–nonlinear models on both stimuli, evaluated their performance, and compared their receptive fields across stimulus domains. We found that models with spatial filters trained on one stimulus ensemble were less accurate when predicting neural activity on the other compared to models trained directly on the target stimulus. This suggests that spatial processing adapts to stimulus statistics. Different RGC types exhibited distinct changes: The OFF midget cells’ receptive fields became enlarged under natural movies (NMs), resulting in a lower cutoff frequency. Parasol cells and large OFF cells did not significantly change their recep...
    May 1, 2026 Michaela Vystrčilová
  • Journal Article
    Role of Concentration in Opposing Effects of Anandamide on Nociceptive Synapses versus Non-nociceptive Synapses | eNeuro
    There is considerable interest in cannabinoid-based therapies to treat pain, but activation of the endogenous cannabinoid (endocannabinoid) system can elicit pro- and anti-nociceptive effects. This study tests the hypothesis that the concentration of the endocannabinoid arachidonoylethanolamine (AEA) contributes to whether pro- or anti-nociceptive effects are observed. Experiments were carried out using isolated ganglia from the medicinal leech Hirudo verbana where it is possible to selectively record from nociceptive and non-nociceptive synapses in the central nervous system (CNS). Previous studies using Hirudo have shown that endocannabinoids depress nociceptive (N) sensory cell synapses and potentiate of non-nociceptive pressure (P) sensory cell synapses. In this study, exogenously applied AEA produced depression of N synapses and potentiation of P synapses across the same range of concentrations. However, the results differed when using URB597, a drug that raises AEA by inhibiting fatty acid amine hydr...
    May 1, 2026 Brian D. Burrell
  • Journal Article
    Cell Density Impacts Population Activity in Human iPSC-Derived Neural Networks | eNeuro
    Multi-electrode recording of neuronal activity in cultures offer opportunities for understanding how the structure of a network gives rise to function. Neuronal cultures derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from male and female individuals are often plated at highly variable cell densities across studies, but its impact on neuronal activity remains poorly understood. We found that properties such as the mean firing rate of the individual cells, the pairwise correlations between cells, and the entropy of the population all changed significantly with changes in culture density. We used a maximum entropy model to capture the structure of the population activity using only the firing rates and correlations, and we found that the model performed best at the highest densities, suggesting that changes in activity reflected differences in structure of interactions between neurons across scales of complexity. Our work thus shows that culture density is an important experimental parameter that i...
    May 1, 2026 Yavuz Selim Uzun
  • Journal Article
    Neural Mechanisms of Self-Generated Action Sequences | eNeuro
    Complex problems often allow multiple paths to a solution. Choosing and taking the best path is an important part of the executive cognition that underpins intelligent problem-solving behavior. However, once a path is chosen, the motor system must be activated for executing it. This interface between problem-solving and self-generated action has rarely been studied. We recorded EEG movement-related potentials while 25 participants (7 males, 18 females) performed the “Tower of London” problem-solving task. In a control condition, participants merely followed instructed steps without planning for any goal and thus without any sense that their movements solved a problem. Readiness potentials (RPs) preceding actions showed a more sustained preparatory negativity for self-generated than stimulus-driven movements. Critically, this effect was most pronounced at the first move of a sequence and diminished at later stages, indicating that preparatory activity is closely linked to the planning demands of sequence in...
    May 1, 2026 Silvia Seghezzi
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: “Is Social Media Use a Blessing or Cure for Motor Function and Skill Acquisition? An Opinion Paper” | eNeuro
    In the article “Is Social Media Use a Blessing or Cure for Motor Function and Skill Acquisition? An Opinion …
    May 1, 2026
  • Journal Article
    Optimizing and Benchmarking Machine Learning and Traditional Synaptic Event Detection Pipelines in Neurophysiology Experiments | eNeuro
    Synaptic physiology experiments are fundamental to neuroscience research. Consequently, accurate detection of synaptic currents is crucial for conducting high-quality experiments. Traditionally, detecting inhibitory and excitatory postsynaptic currents (sIPSCs/sEPSCs) relied on hand-counting individual events. Although sEPSCs and sIPSCs are clear to the trained eye, hand analysis is time and labor intensive. Recent advances in applied machine learning promise faster, superior event detectors that may improve data quality and reduce or even completely negate the need for hand curation. While many strategies for sIPSC and sEPSC detection exist, rarely have they been quantitatively compared for accuracy within an experiment. Our study aims to establish practical ground-truth event detection in a large experimental dataset through meticulous hand counting and to assess variance in detection results across different laboratories, analysis techniques, and cell types. Using thoroughly hand-counted data as our gro...
    May 1, 2026 Joshua P. Sevigny
  • Journal Article
    Microglial Morphological Complexity in the Piriform Cortex Is Associated with Olfactory Aversion Following Chronic Stress | eNeuro
    Olfactory anhedonia and heightened aversion to unpleasant odors are well-documented features of depression in humans, yet the neural mechanisms linking chronic stress to altered olfactory perception remain poorly understood. We used the unpredictable chronic mild stress (UCMS) paradigm to examine how chronic stress affects olfactory avoidance behavior and glial cell morphology across multiple olfactory brain regions in male and female mice. UCMS-treated mice showed increased avoidance of aversive odorants in an odorized light/dark box assay, consistent with heightened aversive reactivity to odors following chronic stress. Using immunohistochemistry, we assessed microglial morphology and astrocyte density across six olfactory and limbic brain regions. Chronic stress produced region-specific glial remodeling: astrocyte counts were selectively elevated in the medial amygdala, and microglial process complexity was increased in the anterior olfactory nucleus and anterior piriform cortex. Microglial morphologica...
    May 1, 2026 Kai Clane Belonio
  • Journal Article
    Attack Repertoires in Outbred Male CD1-Mice Are Associated with Nucleus Accumbens Neuroligin-2 | eNeuro
    Aggression may be behaviorally distinguished by reactive or appetitive properties. Here, we use a model of operant aggression administration, in which outbred male CD-1 mice lever press (contingent) or do not lever press (noncontingent) to attack an intruder mouse, to examine behavioral differences in aggression reinforcement. Contingent reinforcement identifies the behavioral and neural basis of appetitive, or rewarding, aggression self-administration, while noncontingent reinforcement isolates reactive, or involuntary, components. Females are not used in this study due to their low propensity to attack. We applied supervised machine-guided behavioral classification and Shapley additive scores (SHAP) to describe differences and similarities in attack behavior features. We find that behavioral sequences of an attack bout are similar whether aggression reinforcement is contingent or noncontingent, though underlying neural mechanisms differ. Fos immunolabeling following operant reinforcement reveals distinct...
    May 1, 2026 Nastacia L. Goodwin
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