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9881 - 9890 of 52809 results
  • Journal Article
    Prefrontal cortical neurons are selective for non-local hippocampal representations during replay and behavior | Journal of Neuroscience
    Diverse functions such as decision-making and memory consolidation may depend upon communication between neurons in hippocampus (HP) and prefrontal cortex (PFC). HP replay is a candidate mechanism to facilitate this communication, however details remain largely unknown due to the technical challenges of recording sufficient numbers of HP neurons for replay while also recording PFC neurons. Here we implanted male rats with 40-tetrode drives, split between HP and PFC, during learning of a Y-maze spatial memory task. Surprisingly, we found that in contrast to their non-selectivity for maze arm during movement, a portion of PFC neurons were highly selective for HP replay of different arms. Moreover, PFC neurons' selectivity to HP non-local arm representation during running tended to match their replay arm selectivity and was predictive of future choice. Thus, PFC activity that is tuned to HP activity is best explained by non-local HP position representations rather than HP representation of actual position, pr...
    May 25, 2021 Alice Berners-Lee
  • Journal Article
    Factors that Influence Career Choice Among Different Populations of Neuroscience Trainees | eNeuro
    Specific groups have historically been, and continue to be, underrepresented in the biomedical research workforce, especially academia. Career choice is a multi-factorial process that evolves over time; among all trainees, expressed interest in faculty research careers decreases over time in graduate school, but that trend is amplified in women and members of historically underrepresented (UR) racial and ethnic groups (Fuhrmann et al., 2011; Gibbs et al, 2014; Golde & Dore, 2004; Roach & Sauermann, 2017; Sauermann & Roach, 2012). This work was designed to investigate how career interest changes over time among recent neuroscience PhD graduates, and whether differences in career interests are associated with social identity, experiences in graduate school and postdoctoral training, and personal characteristics. We report results from a survey of 1,479 PhD neuroscientists (including 16% underrepresented and 54% women scientists). We saw repeated evidence that individual preferences about careers in general, ...
    May 25, 2021 Lauren E Ullrich
  • Journal Article
    3D analysis of the synaptic organization in the Entorhinal cortex in Alzheimer’s disease | eNeuro
    The entorhinal cortex (EC) is especially vulnerable in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). In particular, cognitive deficits have been linked to alterations in the upper layers of EC. In the present report, we examined layers II and III from eight human brain autopsies (four subjects with no recorded neurological alterations and four AD cases). We used stereological methods to assess cortical atrophy of the EC, and possible changes in the volume occupied by different cortical elements (neuronal and glial cell bodies; blood vessels; and neuropil). We performed 3D ultrastructural analyses of synapses using Focused Ion Beam/Scanning Electron Microscopy (FIB/SEM) to examine possible alterations related to AD. At the light microscope level, we found a significantly lower volume fraction occupied by neuronal bodies in layer III and a higher volume fraction occupied by glial cell bodies in layer II in AD cases. At the ultrastructural level we observed that (i) there was a significantly lower synaptic d...
    May 25, 2021 M Domínguez-Álvaro
  • Journal Article
    The Complex Hodological Architecture of the Macaque Dorsal Intraparietal Areas as Emerging from Neural Tracers and DW-MRI Tractography | eNeuro
    In macaque monkeys, dorsal intraparietal areas are involved in several daily visuo-motor actions. However, their border and sources of cortical afferents remain loosely defined. Combining retrograde histological tracing and MRI diffusion-based tractography we found a complex hodology of the dorsal bank of the IPS, which can be subdivided into a rostral area PEip, projecting to the spinal cord, and a caudal area MIP lacking such projections. Both include a rostral and a caudal sector, emerging from their ipsilateral, gradient-like connectivity profiles. As tractography estimations, we used the cross-sectional volume of the white matter bundles connecting each area with other parietal and frontal regions, after selecting ROIs corresponding to the injection sites of neural tracers. For most connections, we found a significant correlation between the proportions of cells projecting to all sectors of PEip and MIP along the continuum of the dorsal bank of the IPS and tractography. The latter also revealed “false...
    May 25, 2021 Roberto Caminiti
  • Journal Article
    Enhanced synaptic transmission in the extended amygdala and altered excitability in an extended amygdala to brainstem circuit in a Dravet syndrome mouse model | eNeuro
    Objective : Dravet syndrome (DS) is a developmental and epileptic encephalopathy with an increased incidence of sudden death. Evidence of interictal breathing deficits in DS suggests that alterations in subcortical projections to brainstem nuclei may exist, which might be driving comorbidities in DS. The aim of this study was to determine if a subcortical structure, the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) in the extended amygdala, is activated by seizures, exhibits changes in excitability, and expresses any alterations in neurons projecting to a brainstem nucleus associated with respiration, stress response and homeostasis. Methods : Experiments were conducted using F1 mice generated by breeding 129.Scn1a+/− mice with wildtype C57BL/6J mice. Immunohistochemistry was performed to quantify neuronal c-fos activation in DS mice after observed spontaneous seizures. Whole cell patch clamp and current clamp electrophysiology recordings were conducted to evaluate changes in intrinsic and synaptic excitabil...
    May 25, 2021 Wen Wei Yan
  • Journal Article
    Aversive Conditioning of Spatial Position Sharpens Neural Population-level Tuning in Visual Cortex and Selectively Alters Alpha-Band Activity | Journal of Neuroscience
    Processing capabilities for many low-level visual features are experientially malleable, aiding sighted organisms in adapting to dynamic environments. Explicit instructions to attend a specific visual field location influence retinotopic visuocortical activity, amplifying responses to stimuli appearing at cued spatial positions. It remains undetermined both how such prioritization affects surrounding non-prioritized locations, and if a given retinotopic spatial position can attain enhanced cortical representation through experience rather than instruction. The current report examined visuocortical response changes as human observers (N=51, 19 male) learned, through differential classical conditioning, to associate specific screen locations with aversive outcomes. Using dense-array EEG and pupillometry, we tested the pre-registered hypotheses of either sharpening or generalization around an aversively associated location following a single conditioning session. Competing hypotheses tested if mean response ...
    May 25, 2021 Wendel M. Friedl
  • Journal Article
    Increased Visual Sensitivity and Occipital Activity in Patients With Hemianopia Following Vision Rehabilitation | Journal of Neuroscience
    Hemianopia, loss of vision in half of the visual field, results from damage to the visual pathway posterior to the optic chiasm. Despite negative effects on quality of life, few rehabilitation options are currently available. Recently, several long-term training programs have been developed that show visual improvement within the blind field. Little is known of the underlying neural changes. Here, we have investigated functional and structural changes in the brain associated with visual rehabilitation. Seven human participants with occipital lobe damage enrolled in a visual training program to distinguish which of two intervals contained a drifting Gabor patch presented within the blind field. Participants performed ∼25 min of training each day for 3–6 months and undertook psychophysical tests and an magnetic resonance imaging scan before and after training. A control group undertook psychophysical tests before and after an equivalent period without training. Participants who were not at ceiling on baselin...
    May 25, 2021 Sara Ajina
  • Journal Article
    Human somatosensory cortex is modulated during motor planning | Journal of Neuroscience
    Recent data and motor control theory argues that movement planning involves preparing the neural state of primary motor cortex (M1) for forthcoming action execution. Theories related to internal models, feedback control, and predictive coding also emphasize the importance of sensory prediction (and processing) prior to (and during) the movement itself, explaining why motor-related deficits can arise from damage to primary somatosensory cortex (S1). Motivated by this work, here we examined whether motor planning, in addition to changing the neural state of M1, changes the neural state of S1, preparing it for the sensory feedback that arises during action. We tested this idea in two human functional MRI studies (N=31, 16 female) involving delayed object manipulation tasks, focusing our analysis on pre-movement activity patterns in M1 and S1. We found that the motor effector to be used in the upcoming action could be decoded, well before movement, from neural activity in M1 in both studies. Critically, we fou...
    May 25, 2021 Daniel J. Gale
  • Journal Article
    Getting to know you: emerging neural representations during face familiarization | Journal of Neuroscience
    The successful recognition of familiar persons is critical for social interactions. Despite extensive research on the neural representations of familiar faces, we know little about how such representations unfold as someone becomes familiar. In three EEG experiments on human participants of both sexes, we elucidated how representations of face familiarity and identity emerge from different qualities of familiarization: brief perceptual exposure (Experiment 1), extensive media familiarization (Experiment 2) and real-life personal familiarization (Experiment 3). Time-resolved representational similarity analysis revealed that familiarization quality has a profound impact on representations of face familiarity: they were strongly visible after personal familiarization, weaker after media familiarization, and absent after perceptual familiarization. Across all experiments, we found no enhancement of face identity representation, suggesting that familiarity and identity representations emerge independently duri...
    May 24, 2021 Géza Gergely Ambrus
  • Journal Article
    Control of sugar and amino acid feeding via pharyngeal taste neurons | Journal of Neuroscience
    Insect gustatory systems comprise multiple taste organs for detecting chemicals that signal palatable or noxious quality. Although much is known about how taste neurons sense various chemicals, many questions remain about how individual taste neurons in each taste organ control feeding. Here, we use the Drosophila pharynx as a model to investigate how taste information is encoded at the cellular level to regulate consumption of sugars and amino acids. We first generate taste-blind animals and establish a critical role for pharyngeal input in food selection. We then investigate feeding behavior of both male and female flies in which only selected classes of pharyngeal neurons are restored via binary choice feeding preference assays as well as Fly Liquid-Food Interaction Counter (FLIC) assays. We find instances of integration as well as redundancy in how pharyngeal neurons control behavioral responses to sugars and amino acids. Additionally, we find that pharyngeal neurons drive sugar feeding preference base...
    May 24, 2021 Yu-Chieh David Chen
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