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9521 - 9530 of 52807 results
  • Journal Article
    On the Necessity of Recurrent Processing during Object Recognition: It Depends on the Need for Scene Segmentation | Journal of Neuroscience
    Although feedforward activity may suffice for recognizing objects in isolation, additional visual operations that aid object recognition might be needed for real-world scenes. One such additional operation is figure-ground segmentation, extracting the relevant features and locations of the target object while ignoring irrelevant features. In this study of 60 human participants (female and male), we show objects on backgrounds of increasing complexity to investigate whether recurrent computations are increasingly important for segmenting objects from more complex backgrounds. Three lines of evidence show that recurrent processing is critical for recognition of objects embedded in complex scenes. First, behavioral results indicated a greater reduction in performance after masking objects presented on more complex backgrounds, with the degree of impairment increasing with increasing background complexity. Second, electroencephalography (EEG) measurements showed clear differences in the evoked response potenti...
    Jul 21, 2021 Noor Seijdel
  • Journal Article
    Medial Prefrontal Cortex Has a Causal Role in Selectively Enhanced Consolidation of Emotional Memories after a 24-Hour Delay: A TBS Study | Journal of Neuroscience
    Previous research points to an association between retrieval-related activity in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and preservation of emotional information compared with co-occurring neutral information following sleep. Although the role of the mPFC in emotional memory likely begins at encoding, little research has examined how mPFC activity during encoding interacts with consolidation processes to enhance emotional memory. This issue was addressed in the present study using transcranial magnetic stimulation in conjunction with an emotional memory paradigm. Healthy young adults encoded negative and neutral scenes while undergoing concurrent TMS with a modified short intermittent theta burst stimulation (sTBS) protocol. Participants received stimulation to either the mPFC or an active control site (motor cortex) during the encoding phase. Recognition memory for scene components (objects and backgrounds) was assessed after a short delay (30 min) and a long delay [24 h (including a night of sleep)] to obta...
    Jul 21, 2021 Nicholas Yeh
  • 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, whereas 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 circu...
    Jul 21, 2021 Dustin J. Hayden
  • Journal Article
    This Week in The Journal | Journal of Neuroscience
    Brian J. Bondy, David B. Haimes, and Nace L. Golding (see pages [6234–6245][1]) Birds and mammals can localize sounds in the horizontal plane by comparing the time of arrival of the sound at each ear. In mammals, interaural time differences are detected by neurons in the medial superior olive (
    Jul 21, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Bolstered Neuronal Antioxidant Response May Confer Resistance to Development of Dementia in Individuals with Alzheimer's Neuropathology by Ameliorating Amyloid-β-Induced Oxidative Stress | Journal of Neuroscience
    Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most prevalent neurodegenerative disease worldwide. It is characterized by cognitive decline and concomitant dementia, primarily resulting from progressive degeneration of cortical and hippocampal neurons. AD is definitively diagnosed postmortem by the analysis of two
    Jul 21, 2021 Ryan D. Hallam
  • Journal Article
    Distinct Neurophysiological Correlates of the fMRI BOLD Signal in the Hippocampus and Neocortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is among the foremost methods for mapping human brain function but provides only an indirect measure of underlying neural activity. Recent findings suggest that the neurophysiological correlates of the fMRI blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal might be regionally specific. We examined the neurophysiological correlates of the fMRI BOLD signal in the hippocampus and neocortex, where differences in neural architecture might result in a different relationship between the respective signals. Fifteen human neurosurgical patients (10 female, 5 male) implanted with depth electrodes performed a verbal free recall task while electrophysiological activity was recorded simultaneously from hippocampal and neocortical sites. The same patients subsequently performed a similar version of the task during a later fMRI session. Subsequent memory effects (SMEs) were computed for both imaging modalities as patterns of encoding-related brain activity predictive of later fr...
    Jul 21, 2021 Paul F. Hill
  • Journal Article
    Establishment of emotional memories is mediated by vagal nerve activation: Evidence from non-invasive taVNS | Journal of Neuroscience
    Emotional memories are better remembered than neutral ones, but the mechanisms leading to this memory bias are not well understood in humans yet. Based on animal research, it is suggested that the memory enhancing effect of emotion is based on central noradrenergic release, which is triggered by afferent vagal nerve activation. To test the causal link between vagus nerve activation and emotional memory in humans, we applied continuous non-invasive transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) during exposure to emotional arousing and neutral scenes and tested subsequent, long-term recognition memory after one week. We found that taVNS, compared to sham, increased recollection-based memory performance for emotional, but not neutral, material. These findings were complemented by larger recollection-related brain potentials (parietal ERP Old/New effect) during retrieval of emotional scenes encoded under taVNS, compared to sham. Furthermore, brain potentials recorded during encoding also revealed th...
    Jul 19, 2021 C. Ventura-Bort
  • Journal Article
    Arcuate and Preoptic Kisspeptin neurons exhibit differential projections to hypothalamic nuclei and exert opposite postsynaptic effects on hypothalamic paraventricular and dorsomedial nuclei in the female mouse | eNeuro
    Kisspeptin (Kiss1) neurons provide indispensable excitatory input to GnRH neurons, which is important for the coordinated release of gonadotropins, estrous cyclicity and ovulation. However, Kiss1 neurons also send projections to many other brain regions within and outside the hypothalamus. Two different populations of Kiss1 neurons, one in the arcuate nucleus (Kiss1ARH) and another in the anteroventral periventricular and periventricular nucleus (Kiss1AVPV/PeN) of the hypothalamus are differentially regulated by ovarian steroids, and are believed to form direct contacts with GnRH neurons as well as other neurons. To investigate the projection fields from Kiss1AVPV/PeN and Kiss1ARH neurons in female mice, we used anterograde projection analysis, and channelrhodopsin-assisted circuit mapping (CRACM) to explore their functional input to select target neurons within the paraventricular (PVH) and dorsomedial (DMH) hypothalamus, key pre-autonomic nuclei. Cre-dependent viral (AAV1-DIO-ChR2 mCherry) vectors were i...
    Jul 19, 2021 Todd L. Stincic
  • Journal Article
    Within-trial persistence of learned behavior as a dissociable behavioral component in hippocampus-dependent memory tasks: a potential post-learning role of immature neurons in the adult dentate gyrus | eNeuro
    The term “memory strength” generally refers to how well one remembers something but more precisely it contains multiple modalities, such as how easily, how accurately, how confidently and how vividly we remember it. In human, these modalities of memory strength are dissociable. In this study, we asked whether we can isolate a behavioral component that is dissociable from others in hippocampus-dependent memory tasks in mice, which potentially reflect a modality of memory strength. Using a virus-mediated inducible method, we ablated immature neurons in the dentate gyrus in mice after we trained the mice with hippocampus-dependent memory tasks normally. In memory retrieval tests, these ablated mice initially show intact performance. However, the ablated mice ceased learned behavior prematurely within a trial compared with control mice. In addition, the ablated mice showed shorter duration of individual episodes of learned behavior. Both affected behavioral measurements point to persistence of learned behavior...
    Jul 19, 2021 Alessandro Luchetti
  • Journal Article
    Action costs rapidly and automatically interfere with reward-based decision-making in a reaching task | eNeuro
    It is widely assumed that we select actions we value the most. While the influence of rewards on decision-making has been extensively studied, evidence regarding the influence of motor costs is scarce. Specifically, how and when motor costs are integrated in the decision process is unclear. Twenty-two right-handed human participants performed a reward-based target selection task by reaching with their right arm toward one of two visual targets. Targets were positioned in different directions according to biomechanical preference, such that one target was systematically associated with a lower motor cost than the other. Only one of the two targets was rewarded, either in a congruent or incongruent manner with respect to the associated motor cost. A timed-response paradigm was used to manipulate participants’ reaction times (RT). Results showed that when the rewarded target carried the highest motor cost, movements produced at short RT (<350ms) were deviated toward the other (i.e., non-rewarded, low-cost) ta...
    Jul 19, 2021 Emeline Pierrieau
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