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2411 - 2420 of 52762 results
  • Journal Article
    Differences in Discounting Behavior and Brain Responses for Food and Money Reward | eNeuro
    Most neuroeconomic research seeks to understand how value influences decision-making. The influence of reward type is less well understood. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate delay discounting of primary (i.e., food) and secondary rewards (i.e., money) in 28 healthy, normal-weighted participants (mean age = 26.77; 18 females). To decipher differences in discounting behavior between reward types, we compared how well-different option-based statistical models (exponential, hyperbolic discounting) and attribute-wise heuristic choice models (intertemporal choice heuristic, dual reasoning and implicit framework theory, trade-off model) captured the reward-specific discounting behavior. Contrary to our hypothesis of different strategies for different rewards, we observed comparable discounting behavior for money and food (i.e., exponential discounting). Higher k values for food discounting suggest that individuals decide more impulsive if confronted with food. The fMRI revealed t...
    Apr 1, 2024 M. Markman
  • Journal Article
    Nonbinary 2D Distribution Tool Maps Autonomic Nerve Fiber Clustering in Lumbosacral Ventral Roots of Rhesus Macaques | eNeuro
    Neuromodulation of the peripheral nervous system (PNS) by electrical stimulation may augment autonomic function after injury or in neurodegenerative disorders. Nerve fiber size, myelination, and distance between individual fibers and the stimulation electrode may influence response thresholds to electrical stimulation. However, information on the spatial distribution of nerve fibers within the PNS is sparse. We developed a new two-dimensional (2D) morphological mapping tool to assess spatial heterogeneity and clustering of nerve fibers. The L6-S3 ventral roots (VRs) in rhesus macaques were used as a model system to map preganglionic parasympathetic, γ-motor, and α-motor fibers. Random and ground truth distributions of nerve fiber centroids were determined for each VR by light microscopy. The proposed tool allows for nonbinary determinations of fiber heterogeneity by defining the minimum distance between nerve fibers for cluster inclusion and comparisons with random fiber distributions for each VR. There wa...
    Apr 1, 2024 Petra M. Bartmeyer
  • Journal Article
    Auditory and Visual Gratings Elicit Distinct Gamma Responses | eNeuro
    Sensory stimulation is often accompanied by fluctuations at high frequencies (>30 Hz) in brain signals. These could be “narrowband” oscillations in the gamma band (30–70 Hz) or nonoscillatory “broadband” high-gamma (70–150 Hz) activity. Narrowband gamma oscillations, which are induced by presenting some visual stimuli such as gratings and have been shown to weaken with healthy aging and the onset of Alzheimer's disease, hold promise as potential biomarkers. However, since delivering visual stimuli is cumbersome as it requires head stabilization for eye tracking, an equivalent auditory paradigm could be useful. Although simple auditory stimuli have been shown to produce high-gamma activity, whether specific auditory stimuli can also produce narrowband gamma oscillations is unknown. We tested whether auditory ripple stimuli, which are considered an analog to visual gratings, could elicit narrowband oscillations in auditory areas. We recorded 64-channel electroencephalogram from male and female (18 each) subj...
    Apr 1, 2024 Divya Gulati
  • Journal Article
    Locus Ceruleus Dynamics Are Suppressed during Licking and Enhanced Postlicking Independent of Taste Novelty | eNeuro
    Attending to salient sensory attributes of food, such as tastes that are new, displeasing, or unexpected, allows the procurement of nutrients without food poisoning. Exposure to new tastes is known to increase norepinephrine (NE) release in taste processing forebrain areas, yet the central source for this release is unknown. Locus ceruleus norepinephrine neurons (LC-NE) emerge as a candidate in signaling salient information about taste, as other salient sensory stimuli (e.g., visual, auditory, somatosensation) are known to activate LC neurons. To determine if LC neurons are sensitive to features of taste novelty, we used fiber photometry to record LC-NE activity in water-restricted mice that voluntarily licked either novel or familiar substances of differential palatability (saccharine, citric acid). We observed that LC-NE activity was suppressed during lick bursts and transiently activated upon the termination of licking and that these dynamics were independent of the familiarity of the substance consumed...
    Apr 1, 2024 Will Fan
  • Journal Article
    Identification of Early Hippocampal Dynamics during Recognition Memory with Independent Component Analysis | eNeuro
    The hippocampus is generally considered to have relatively late involvement in recognition memory, its main electrophysiological signature being between 400 and 800 ms after stimulus onset. However, most electrophysiological studies have analyzed the hippocampus as a single responsive area, selecting only a single-site signal exhibiting the strongest effect in terms of amplitude. These classical approaches may not capture all the dynamics of this structure, hindering the contribution of other hippocampal sources that are not located in the vicinity of the selected site. We combined intracerebral electroencephalogram recordings from epileptic patients with independent component analysis during a recognition memory task involving the recognition of old and new images. We identified two sources with different responses emerging from the hippocampus: a fast one (maximal amplitude at ∼250 ms) that could not be directly identified from raw recordings and a latter one, peaking at ∼400 ms. The former component pre...
    Apr 1, 2024 Víctor J. López-Madrona
  • Journal Article
    Alpha and Beta Oscillations Differentially Support Word Production in a Rule-Switching Task | eNeuro
    Research into the role of brain oscillations in basic perceptual and cognitive functions has suggested that the alpha rhythm reflects functional inhibition while the beta rhythm reflects neural ensemble (re)activation. However, little is known regarding the generalization of these proposed fundamental operations to linguistic processes, such as speech comprehension and production. Here, we recorded magnetoencephalography in participants performing a novel rule-switching paradigm. Specifically, Dutch native speakers had to produce an alternative exemplar from the same category or a feature of a given target word embedded in spoken sentences (e.g., for the word “tuna”, an exemplar from the same category—“seafood”—would be “shrimp”, and a feature would be “pink”). A cue indicated the task rule—exemplar or feature—either before (pre-cue) or after (retro-cue) listening to the sentence. Alpha power during the working memory delay was lower for retro-cue compared with that for pre-cue in the left hemispheric lang...
    Apr 1, 2024 Ioanna Zioga
  • Journal Article
    Preconditioning-Induced Facilitation of Lactate Release from Astrocytes Is Essential for Brain Ischemic Tolerance | eNeuro
    A sublethal ischemic episode [termed preconditioning (PC)] protects neurons in the brain against a subsequent severe ischemic injury. This phenomenon is known as brain ischemic tolerance and has received much attention from researchers because of its robust neuroprotective effects. We have previously reported that PC activates astrocytes and subsequently upregulates P2X7 receptors, thereby leading to ischemic tolerance. However, the downstream signals of P2X7 receptors that are responsible for PC-induced ischemic tolerance remain unknown. Here, we show that PC-induced P2X7 receptor-mediated lactate release from astrocytes has an indispensable role in this event. Using a transient focal cerebral ischemia model caused by middle cerebral artery occlusion, extracellular lactate levels during severe ischemia were significantly increased in mice who experienced PC; this increase was dependent on P2X7 receptors. In addition, the intracerebroventricular injection of lactate protected against cerebral ischemic inju...
    Apr 1, 2024 Yuri Hirayama
  • Journal Article
    Pharmacological Inhibition of the Nucleus Accumbens Increases Dyadic Social Interaction in Macaques | eNeuro
    The nucleus accumbens (NAc) is a central component of the brain circuitry that mediates motivated behavior, including reward processing. Since the rewarding properties of social stimuli have a vital role in guiding behavior (both in humans and nonhuman animals), the NAc is likely to contribute to the brain circuitry controlling social behavior. In rodents, prior studies have found that focal pharmacological inhibition of NAc and/or elevation of dopamine in NAc increases social interactions. However, the role of the NAc in social behavior in nonhuman primates remains unknown. We measured the social behavior of eight dyads of male macaques following (1) pharmacological inhibition of the NAc using the GABAA agonist muscimol and (2) focal application of quinpirole, an agonist at the D2 family of dopamine receptors. Transient inhibition of the NAc with muscimol increased social behavior when drug was infused in submissive, but not dominant partners of the dyad. Focal application of quinpirole was without effect...
    Apr 1, 2024 Hannah F. Waguespack
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Takagishi et al., “Protein Nanoparticles Modified with PDGF-B as a Novel Therapy after Acute Cerebral Infarction” | eNeuro
    In the article “Protein Nanoparticles Modified with PDGF-B as a Novel Therapy after Acute Cerebral Infarction,” by Soh Takagishi, Koichi Arimura, Masaharu Murata, Katsuma Iwaki, Tomohiro Okuda, Keisuke Ido, Ataru Nishimura, Sayoko Narahara, Takahito Kawano, and Koji Iihara which published online on August 30, 2021, Figure 3 and its legend appeared incorrectly. In Figure 3 B , an incorrect image was used for the lower-middle panel. Additionally, the legend for G and H were labeled incorrectly as D and E . The correct figure and legend appear below. This does not affect …
    Apr 1, 2024
  • Journal Article
    Dissociating mechanisms that underlie seasonal and developmental programs for the neuroendocrine control of physiology in birds | eNeuro
    Long-term programmed rheostatic changes in physiology are essential for animal fitness. Hypothalamic nuclei and the pituitary gland govern key developmental and seasonal transitions in reproduction. The aim of this study was to identify the molecular substrates that are common, and unique to developmental and seasonal timing. Adult and juvenile quail were collected from reproductively mature and immature states and key molecular targets examined in the mediobasal hypothalamus (MBH) and pituitary gland. qPCR assays established deiodinase type-2 ( DIO2 ) and type-3 ( DIO3 ) expression in adults changed with photoperiod manipulations. However, DIO2 and DIO3 remain constitutively expressed in juveniles. Pituitary gland transcriptome analyses established 340 transcripts were differentially expressed across seasonal photoperiod programs; and 1189 transcripts displayed age-dependent variation in expression. Prolactin ( PRL ) and follicle-stimulating hormone subunit beta ( FSHβ ) are molecular markers of seasonal ...
    Mar 28, 2024 Timothy Adam Liddle
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