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9791 - 9800 of 52809 results
  • Journal Article
    Cortical Responses to the Amplitude Envelopes of Sounds Change with Age | Journal of Neuroscience
    Many older listeners have difficulty understanding speech in noise, when cues to speech-sound identity are less redundant. The amplitude envelope of speech fluctuates dramatically over time, and features such as the rate of amplitude change at onsets (attack) and offsets (decay), signal critical information about the identity of speech sounds. Aging is also thought to be accompanied by increases in cortical excitability, which may differentially alter sensitivity to envelope dynamics. Here, we recorded electroencephalography in younger and older human adults (of both sexes) to investigate how aging affects neural synchronization to 4 Hz amplitude-modulated noises with different envelope shapes (ramped: slow attack and sharp decay; damped: sharp attack and slow decay). We observed that subcortical responses did not differ between age groups, whereas older compared with younger adults exhibited larger cortical responses to sound onsets, consistent with an increase in auditory cortical excitability. Neural ac...
    Jun 9, 2021 Vanessa C. Irsik
  • Journal Article
    A Preferential Role for Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex in Assessing “the Value of the Whole” in Multiattribute Object Evaluation | Journal of Neuroscience
    Everyday decision-making commonly involves assigning values to complex objects with multiple value-relevant attributes. Drawing on object recognition theories, we hypothesized two routes to multiattribute evaluation: assessing the value of the whole object based on holistic attribute configuration or summing individual attribute values. In two samples of healthy human male and female participants undergoing eye tracking and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while evaluating novel pseudo objects, we found evidence for both forms of evaluation. Fixations to and transitions between attributes differed systematically when the value of pseudo objects was associated with individual attributes or attribute configurations. Ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) and perirhinal cortex were engaged when configural processing was required. These results converge with our recent findings that individuals with vmPFC lesions were impaired in decisions requiring configural evaluation but not when evaluating the...
    Jun 9, 2021 Gabriel Pelletier
  • Journal Article
    Unique Actions of GABA Arising from Cytoplasmic Chloride Microdomains | Journal of Neuroscience
    Developmental, cellular, and subcellular variations in the direction of neuronal Cl– currents elicited by GABAA receptor activation have been frequently reported. We found a corresponding variance in the GABAA receptor reversal potential (EGABA) for synapses originating from individual interneurons onto a single pyramidal cell. These findings suggest a similar heterogeneity in the cytoplasmic intracellular concentration of chloride ([Cl–]i) in individual dendrites. We determined [Cl–]i in the murine hippocampus and cerebral cortex of both sexes by (1) two-photon imaging of the Cl–-sensitive, ratiometric fluorescent protein SuperClomeleon; (2) Fluorescence Lifetime IMaging (FLIM) of the Cl–-sensitive fluorophore MEQ (6-methoxy- N -ethylquinolinium); and (3) electrophysiological measurements of EGABA by pressure application of GABA and RuBi-GABA uncaging. Fluorometric and electrophysiological estimates of local [Cl–]i were highly correlated. [Cl–]i microdomains persisted after pharmacological inhibition of c...
    Jun 9, 2021 Negah Rahmati
  • Journal Article
    Tacrolimus Protects against Age-Associated Microstructural Changes in the Beagle Brain | Journal of Neuroscience
    The overexpression of calcineurin leads to astrocyte hyperactivation, neuronal death, and inflammation, which are characteristics often associated with pathologic aging and Alzheimer's disease. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that tacrolimus, a calcineurin inhibitor, prevents age-associated microstructural atrophy, which we measured using higher-order diffusion MRI, in the middle-aged beagle brain ( n = 30, male and female). We find that tacrolimus reduces hippocampal ( p = 0.001) and parahippocampal ( p = 0.002) neurite density index, as well as protects against an age-associated increase in the parahippocampal ( p = 0.007) orientation dispersion index. Tacrolimus also protects against an age-related decrease in fractional anisotropy in the prefrontal cortex ( p < 0.0001). We also show that these microstructural alterations precede cognitive decline and gross atrophy. These results support the idea that calcineurin inhibitors may have the potential to prevent aging-related pathology if administere...
    Jun 9, 2021 Hamsanandini Radhakrishnan
  • Journal Article
    Responses to Heartbeats in Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex Contribute to Subjective Preference-Based Decisions | Journal of Neuroscience
    Forrest Gump or The Matrix ? Preference-based decisions are subjective and entail self-reflection. However, these self-related features are unaccounted for by known neural mechanisms of valuation and choice. Self-related processes have been linked to a basic interoceptive biological mechanism, the neural monitoring of heartbeats, in particular in ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), a region also involved in value encoding. We thus hypothesized a functional coupling between the neural monitoring of heartbeats and the precision of value encoding in vmPFC. Human participants of both sexes were presented with pairs of movie titles. They indicated either which movie they preferred or performed a control objective visual discrimination that did not require self-reflection. Using magnetoencephalography, we measured heartbeat-evoked responses (HERs) before option presentation and confirmed that HERs in vmPFC were larger when preparing for the subjective, self-related task. We retrieved the expected cortical va...
    Jun 9, 2021 Damiano Azzalini
  • Journal Article
    Volume of β-Bursts, But Not Their Rate, Predicts Successful Response Inhibition | Journal of Neuroscience
    In humans, impaired response inhibition is characteristic of a wide range of psychiatric diseases and of normal aging. It is hypothesized that the right inferior frontal cortex (rIFC) plays a key role by inhibiting the motor cortex via the basal ganglia. The electroencephalography (EEG)-derived β-rhythm (15–29 Hz) is thought to reflect communication within this network, with increased right frontal β-power often observed before successful response inhibition. Recent literature suggests that averaging spectral power obscures the transient, burst-like nature of β-activity. There is evidence that the rate of β-bursts following a Stop signal is higher when a motor response is successfully inhibited. However, other characteristics of β-burst events, and their topographical properties, have not yet been examined. Here, we used a large human (male and female) EEG Stop Signal task (SST) dataset ( n = 218) to examine averaged normalized β-power, β-burst rate, and β-burst “volume” (which we defined as burst duration...
    Jun 9, 2021 Nadja Enz
  • Journal Article
    Stimulus Contrast Affects Spatial Integration in the Lateral Geniculate Nucleus of Macaque Monkeys | Journal of Neuroscience
    Gain-control mechanisms adjust neuronal responses to accommodate the wide range of stimulus conditions in the natural environment. Contrast gain control and extraclassical surround suppression are two manifestations of gain control that govern the responses of neurons in the early visual system. Understanding how these two forms of gain control interact has important implications for the detection and discrimination of stimuli across a range of contrast conditions. Here, we report that stimulus contrast affects spatial integration in the lateral geniculate nucleus of alert macaque monkeys (male and female), whereby neurons exhibit a reduction in the strength of extraclassical surround suppression and an expansion in the preferred stimulus size with low-contrast stimuli compared to high-contrast stimuli. Effects were greater for magnocellular neurons than for parvocellular neurons, indicating stream-specific interactions between stimulus contrast and stimulus size. Within the magnocellular pathway, contrast...
    Jun 8, 2021 Darlene R. Archer
  • Journal Article
    Comodulation of h- and Na+/K+ Pump Currents Expands the Range of Functional Bursting in a Central Pattern Generator by Navigating Between Dysfunctional Regimes | Journal of Neuroscience
    Central pattern generators (CPGs), specialized oscillatory neuronal networks controlling rhythmic motor behaviors such as breathing and locomotion, must adjust their patterns of activity to a variable environment and changing behavioral goals. Neuromodulation adjusts these patterns by orchestrating changes in multiple ionic currents. In the medicinal leech, the endogenous neuromodulator myomodulin speeds up the heartbeat CPG by reducing the electrogenic Na+/K+ pump current and increasing h-current in pairs of mutually inhibitory leech heart interneurons (HNs)which form half-center oscillators (HN HCOs). Here we investigate whether the comodulation of two currents could have advantages over a single current in the control of functional bursting patterns of a CPG. We use a conductance-based biophysical model of an HN HCO to explain the experimental effects of myomodulin. We demonstrate that in the model, comodulation of the Na+/K+ pump current and h-current expands the range of functional bursting activity b...
    Jun 8, 2021 Parker J. Ellingson
  • Journal Article
    Visual recognition is heralded by shifts in local field potential oscillations and inhibitory networks in primary visual cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Learning to recognize and filter familiar, irrelevant sensory stimuli eases the computational burden on the cerebral cortex. Inhibition is a candidate mechanism in this filtration process, and oscillations in the cortical local field potential (LFP) serve as markers of the engagement of different inhibitory neurons. We show here that LFP oscillatory activity in visual cortex is profoundly altered as male and female mice learn to recognize an oriented grating stimulus—low frequency (∼15 Hz peak) power sharply increases while high frequency (∼65 Hz peak) power decreases. These changes report recognition of the familiar pattern, as they disappear when the stimulus is rotated to a novel orientation. Two-photon imaging of neuronal activity reveals that parvalbumin-expressing inhibitory neurons disengage with familiar stimuli and reactivate to novelty, whereas somatostatin-expressing inhibitory neurons show opposing activity patterns. We propose a model in which the balance of two interacting interneuron circuit...
    Jun 8, 2021 Dustin J. Hayden
  • Journal Article
    Neural representations in the prefrontal cortex are task-dependent for scene attributes but not for scene categories | Journal of Neuroscience
    Natural scenes deliver rich sensory information about the world. Decades of research has shown that the scene-selective network in the visual cortex represents various aspects of scenes. However, less is known about how such complex scene information is processed beyond the visual cortex, such as in the prefrontal cortex. It is also unknown how task context impacts the process of scene perception, modulating which scene content is represented in the brain. In this study, we investigate these questions using scene images from four natural scene categories, which also depict two types of scene attributes, temperature (warm or cold), and sound level (noisy or quiet). A group of healthy human subjects from both sexes participated in the present study using fMRI. In the study, participants viewed scene images under two different task conditions; temperature judgment and sound-level judgment. We analyzed how these scene attributes and categories are represented across the brain under these task conditions. Our f...
    Jun 8, 2021 Yaelan Jung
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