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3331 - 3340 of 52763 results
  • Journal Article
    Effort Reinforces Learning | Journal of Neuroscience
    Humans routinely learn the value of actions by updating their expectations based on past outcomes – a process driven by reward prediction errors (RPEs). Importantly, however, implementing a course of action also requires the investment of effort. Recent work has revealed a close link between the neural signals involved in effort exertion and those underpinning reward-based learning, but the behavioral relationship between these two functions remains unclear. Across two experiments, we tested healthy male and female human participants ( N = 140) on a reinforcement learning task in which they registered their responses by applying physical force to a pair of hand-held dynamometers. We examined the effect of effort on learning by systematically manipulating the amount of force required to register a response during the task. Our key finding, replicated across both experiments, was that greater effort increased learning rates following positive outcomes and decreased them following negative outcomes, which cor...
    Oct 5, 2022 Huw Jarvis
  • Journal Article
    Attractor-like Dynamics in the Subicular Complex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Distinct computations are performed at multiple brain regions during the encoding of spatial environments. Neural representations in the hippocampal, entorhinal, and head direction (HD) networks during spatial navigation have been clearly documented, while the representational properties of the subicular complex (SC) are relatively underexplored, although it has extensive anatomic connections with various brain regions involved in spatial information processing. We simultaneously recorded single units from different subregions of the SC in male rats while they ran clockwise on a centrally placed textured circular track (four different textures, each covering a quadrant), surrounded by six distal cues. The neural activity was monitored in standard sessions by maintaining the same configuration between the cues, while in cue manipulation sessions, the distal and local cues were either rotated in opposite directions to create a mismatch between them or the distal cues were removed. We report a highly coherent...
    Oct 5, 2022 Apoorv Sharma
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — October 05, 2022, 42 (40) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Oct 5, 2022
  • Journal Article
    This Week in The Journal | Journal of Neuroscience
    Christoforos Tsantoulas, Aidan Ng, Larissa Pinto, Anna P. Andreou, and Peter A. McNaughton (see pages [7513–7529][1]) Migraine headaches are thought to stem from activation of trigeminal ganglion nociceptors that innervate the meninges. These neurons release calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP
    Oct 5, 2022
  • Journal Article
    Olig2 ablation in immature oligodendrocytes does not enhance CNS myelination and remyelination | Journal of Neuroscience
    The oligodendrocyte (OL) lineage transcription factor Olig2 is expressed throughout oligodendroglial development and is essential for oligodendroglial progenitor specification and differentiation. It was previously reported that deletion of Olig2 enhanced the maturation and myelination of immature OLs and accelerated the remyelination process. However, by analyzing multiple Olig2 conditional knockout mouse lines (male and female), we conclude that Olig2 has the opposite effect and is required for OL maturation and remyelination. We found that deletion of Olig2 in immature OLs driven by an immature OL-expressing Plp1 promoter resulted in defects in OL maturation and myelination, and did not enhance remyelination after demyelination. Similarly, Olig2 deletion during premyelinating stages in immature OLs using Mobp or Mog promoter-driven Cre lines also did not enhance OL maturation in the CNS. Further, we found that Olig2 was not required for myelin maintenance in mature OLs but was critical for remyelination...
    Oct 5, 2022 Jiajia Wang
  • Journal Article
    Tunable Action Potential Repolarization Governed by Kv3.4 Channels in Dorsal Root Ganglion Neurons | Journal of Neuroscience
    The Kv3.4 channel regulates action potential (AP) repolarization in nociceptors and excitatory synaptic transmission in the spinal cord. We hypothesize that this is a tunable role governed by protein kinase-C-dependent phosphorylation of the Kv3.4 cytoplasmic N-terminal inactivation domain (NTID) at four nonequivalent sites. However, there is a paucity of causation evidence linking the phosphorylation status of Kv3.4 to the properties of the AP. To establish this link, we used adeno-associated viral vectors to specifically manipulate the expression and the effective phosphorylation status of Kv3.4 in cultured dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons from mixed-sex rat embryos at embryonic day 18. These vectors encoded GFP (background control), wild-type (WT) Kv3.4, phosphonull (PN) Kv3.4 mutant (PN = S[8,9,15,21]A), phosphomimic (PM) Kv3.4 mutant (PM = S[8,9,15,21]D), and a Kv3.4 nonconducting dominant-negative (DN) pore mutant (DN = W429F). Following viral infection of the DRG neurons, we evaluated transduction...
    Oct 5, 2022 Tyler D. Alexander
  • Journal Article
    Morphological Determinants of Cell-to-Cell Variations in Action Potential Dynamics in Substantia Nigra Dopaminergic Neurons | Journal of Neuroscience
    Action potential (AP) shape is a critical electrophysiological parameter, in particular because it strongly modulates neurotransmitter release. As it greatly varies between neuronal types, AP shape is also used to distinguish neuronal populations. For instance, AP duration ranges from hundreds of microseconds in cerebellar granule cells to 2-3 ms in SNc dopaminergic (DA) neurons. While most of this variation across cell types seems to arise from differences in the voltage- and calcium-gated ion channels expressed, a few studies suggested that dendritic morphology also affects AP shape. AP duration also displays significant variability in a same neuronal type, although the determinants of these variations are poorly known. Using electrophysiological recordings, morphological reconstructions, and realistic Hodgkin–Huxley modeling, we investigated the relationships between dendritic morphology and AP shape in rat SNc DA neurons from both sexes. In this neuronal type where the axon arises from an axon-bearing ...
    Oct 5, 2022 Estelle Moubarak
  • Journal Article
    Neural Support for Contributions of Utility and Narrative Processing of Evidence in Juror Decision Making | Journal of Neuroscience
    Efforts to explain complex human decisions have focused on competing theories emphasizing utility and narrative mechanisms. These are difficult to distinguish using behavior alone. Both narrative and utility theories have been proposed to explain juror decisions, which are among the most consequential complex decisions made in a modern society. Here, we asked jury-eligible male and female subjects to rate the strength of a series of criminal cases while recording the resulting patterns of brain activation. We compared patterns of brain activation associated with evidence accumulation to patterns of brain activation derived from a large neuroimaging database to look for signatures of the cognitive processes associated with different models of juror decision-making. Evidence accumulation correlated with multiple narrative processes, including reading and recall. Of the cognitive processes traditionally viewed as components of utility, activation patterns associated with uncertainty, but not value, were more ...
    Oct 5, 2022 Jaime J. Castrellon
  • Journal Article
    Unusually Slow Spike Frequency Adaptation in Deep Cerebellar Nuclei Neurons Preserves Linear Transformations on the Subsecond Timescale | Journal of Neuroscience
    Purkinje cells (PCs) are spontaneously active neurons of the cerebellar cortex that inhibit glutamatergic projection neurons within the deep cerebellar nuclei (DCN) that provide the primary cerebellar output. Brief reductions of PC firing rapidly increase DCN neuron firing. However, prolonged reductions of PC inhibition, as seen in some disease states, certain types of transgenic mice, during optogenetic suppression of PC firing, and in acute slices of the cerebellum, do not lead to large, sustained increases in DCN firing. Here we test whether DCN neurons undergo spike frequency adaptation that could account for these properties. We perform current-clamp recordings at near physiological temperature in acute brain slices from mice of both sexes to examine how DCN neurons respond to prolonged depolarizations. DCN neuron adaptation is exceptionally slow and bidirectional. A depolarizing current step evokes large initial increases in firing that decay to ∼20% of the initial increase within ∼10 s. We find that...
    Oct 5, 2022 Mehak M. Khan
  • Journal Article
    CSF1R-Mediated Myeloid Cell Depletion Prolongs Lifespan But Aggravates Distinct Motor Symptoms in a Model of Multiple System Atrophy | Journal of Neuroscience
    As the CNS-resident macrophages and member of the myeloid lineage, microglia fulfill manifold functions important for brain development and homeostasis. In the context of neurodegenerative diseases, they have been implicated in degenerative and regenerative processes. The discovery of distinct activation patterns, including increased phagocytosis, indicated a damaging role of myeloid cells in multiple system atrophy (MSA), a devastating, rapidly progressing atypical parkinsonian disorder. Here, we analyzed the gene expression profile of microglia in a mouse model of MSA ( MBP29-h α -syn ) and identified a disease-associated expression profile and upregulation of the colony-stimulating factor 1 ( Csf1 ). Thus, we hypothesized that CSF1 receptor-mediated depletion of myeloid cells using PLX5622 modifies the disease progression and neuropathological phenotype in this mouse model. Intriguingly, sex-balanced analysis of myeloid cell depletion in MBP29-h α -syn mice revealed a two-faced outcome comprising an imp...
    Oct 5, 2022 Kristina Battis
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