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2851 - 2860 of 52762 results
  • Journal Article
    Bidirectional Modulation of Nociception by GlyT2+ Neurons in the Ventrolateral Periaqueductal Gray | eNeuro
    The midbrain periaqueductal gray (PAG), particularly its ventrolateral column (vlPAG), is part of a key descending pathway that modulates nociception, fear and anxiety behaviors in both humans and rodents. It has been previously demonstrated that inhibitory GABAergic neurons within the vlPAG have a major role in this nociceptive modulation. However, the PAG contains a diverse range of neuronal subtypes and the contribution of different subtypes of inhibitory neurons to nociceptive control has not been investigated. Here, we employed a chemogenetic strategy in mice that express Cre recombinase under the promotor for the glycine transporter 2 (GlyT2::cre) to modulate a novel group of glycinergic neurons within the vlPAG and then investigate their role in nociceptive control. We show that activation of GlyT2-PAG neurons enhances cold and noxious heat responses and increases locomotor activity (LMA) in both male and female mice. In contrast, inhibition of GlyT2-PAG neurons reduced nociceptive responses, while ...
    Jun 1, 2023 Neda Assareh
  • Journal Article
    Target–Distractor Competition Modulates Saccade Trajectories in Space and Object Space | eNeuro
    Saccade planning and execution can be affected by a multitude of factors present in a target selection task. Recent studies have shown that the similarity between a target and nearby distractors affects the curvature of saccade trajectories, because of target–distractor competition. To further understand the nature of this competition, we varied the distance between and the similarity of complex target and distractor objects in a delayed match-to-sample task to examine their effects on human saccade trajectories and better understand the underlying neural circuitry. For trials with short saccadic reaction times (SRTs) when target–distractor competition is still active, the distractor is attractive and saccade trajectories are deviated toward the distractor. We found a robust effect of distance consistent with saccade vector averaging, whereas the effect of similarity suggested the existence of an object-based suppressive surround. At longer SRTs, there was sufficient time for competition between the object...
    Jun 1, 2023 Caroline Giuricich
  • Journal Article
    Modulation of Visual Contrast Sensitivity with tRNS across the Visual System, Evidence from Stimulation and Simulation | eNeuro
    Transcranial random noise stimulation (tRNS) has been shown to significantly improve visual perception. Previous studies demonstrated that tRNS delivered over cortical areas acutely enhances visual contrast detection of weak stimuli. However, it is currently unknown whether tRNS-induced signal enhancement could be achieved within different neural substrates along the retino-cortical pathway. In three experimental sessions, we tested whether tRNS applied to the primary visual cortex (V1) and/or to the retina improves visual contrast detection. We first measured visual contrast detection threshold (VCT; N  = 24, 16 females) during tRNS delivery separately over V1 and over the retina, determined the optimal tRNS intensities for each individual (ind-tRNS), and retested the effects of ind-tRNS within the sessions. We further investigated whether we could reproduce the ind-tRNS-induced modulation on a different session ( N  = 19, 14 females). Finally, we tested whether the simultaneous application of ind-tRNS to...
    Jun 1, 2023 Weronika Potok
  • Journal Article
    Sepsis-Induced Changes in Spectral Segregation and Kinetics of Hippocampal Oscillatory States in Rats | eNeuro
    Sepsis-associated encephalopathy (SAE) is a frequent severe complication of sepsis and the systemic inflammatory response syndrome, associated with high mortality and long-term neurologic consequences in surviving patients. One of the main clinical signs of SAE are discontinuous sleep periods that are fragmented by frequent awakenings. Although this brain state fragmentation strongly impacts the functionality of the nervous and other systems, its underlying network mechanisms are still poorly understood. In this work, we therefore aim to characterize the properties and dynamics of brain oscillatory states in response to SAE in an acute rat model of sepsis induced by high-dose lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 10 mg/kg). To focus on intrinsically generated brain state dynamics, we used a urethane model that spares oscillatory activity in rapid eye movement (REM)-like and nonrapid eye movement (NREM)-like sleep states. Intraperitoneal LPS injection led to a robust instability of both oscillatory states resulting in s...
    Jun 1, 2023 Annu Kala
  • Journal Article
    Attention without Constraint: Alpha Lateralization in Uncued Willed Attention | eNeuro
    Studies of voluntary visual spatial attention have used attention-directing cues, such as arrows, to induce or instruct observers to focus selective attention on relevant locations in visual space to detect or discriminate subsequent target stimuli. In everyday vision, however, voluntary attention is influenced by a host of factors, most of which are quite different from the laboratory paradigms that use attention-directing cues. These factors include priming, experience, reward, meaning, motivations, and high-level behavioral goals. Attention that is endogenously directed in the absence of external attention-directing cues has been referred to as “self-initiated attention” or, as in our prior work, as “willed attention” where volunteers decide where to attend in response to a prompt to do so. Here, we used a novel paradigm that eliminated external influences (i.e., attention-directing cues and prompts) about where and/or when spatial attention should be directed. Using machine learning decoding methods, w...
    Jun 1, 2023 John G. Nadra
  • Journal Article
    Differential Development of Dendritic Spines in Striatal Projection Neurons of Direct and Indirect Pathways in the Caudoputamen and Nucleus Accumbens | eNeuro
    Synaptic modification in postnatal development is essential for the maturation of neural networks. Developmental maturation of excitatory synapses occurs at the loci of dendritic spines that are dynamically regulated by growth and pruning. Striatal spiny projection neurons (SPNs) receive excitatory input from the cerebral cortex and thalamus. SPNs of the striatonigral direct pathway (dSPNs) and SPNs of the striatopallidal indirect pathway (iSPNs) have different developmental roots and functions. The spatial and temporal dynamics of dendritic spine maturation of these two types of SPNs remain elusive. Here, we delineate the developmental trajectories of dendritic spines of dSPNs and iSPNs in the caudoputamen and nucleus accumbens (NAc). We labeled dendritic spines of SPNs by microinjecting Cre-dependent AAV-eYFP viruses into newborn Drd1-Cre or Adora2a-Cre mice, and analyzed spinogenesis at three levels, including different SPN cell types, subregions and postnatal times. In the dorsolateral striatum, spine ...
    Jun 1, 2023 Hsiao-Ying Kuo
  • Journal Article
    Ocular following Eye Movements in Marmosets Follow Complex Motion Trajectories | eNeuro
    Ocular following eye movements help stabilize images on the retina and offer a window to study motion interpretation by visual circuits. We use these ocular following eye movements to study motion integration behavior in the marmosets. We characterize ocular following responses in the marmosets using different moving stimuli such as dot patterns, gratings, and plaids. Marmosets track motion along different directions and exhibit spatial frequency and speed sensitivity, which closely matches the sensitivity reported in neurons from their motion-selective area MT. Marmosets are also able to track the integrated motion of plaids, with tracking direction consistent with an intersection of constraints model of motion integration. Marmoset ocular following responses are similar to responses in macaques and humans with certain species-specific differences in peak sensitivities. Such motion-sensitive eye movement behavior in combination with direct access to cortical circuitry makes the marmoset model well suited ...
    Jun 1, 2023 Jagruti J. Pattadkal
  • Journal Article
    Impaired Speaking-Induced Suppression in Alzheimer’s Disease | eNeuro
    Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease involving cognitive impairment and abnormalities in speech and language. Here, we examine how AD affects the fidelity of auditory feedback predictions during speaking. We focus on the phenomenon of speaking-induced suppression (SIS), the auditory cortical responses’ suppression during auditory feedback processing. SIS is determined by subtracting the magnitude of auditory cortical responses during speaking from listening to playback of the same speech. Our state feedback control (SFC) model of speech motor control explains SIS as arising from the onset of auditory feedback matching a prediction of that feedback onset during speaking, a prediction that is absent during passive listening to playback of the auditory feedback. Our model hypothesizes that the auditory cortical response to auditory feedback reflects the mismatch with the prediction: small during speaking, large during listening, with the difference being SIS. Normally, during speaking, audi...
    Jun 1, 2023 Kyunghee X. Kim
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Mulvey et al., “Cnih3 Deletion Dysregulates Dorsal Hippocampal Transcription across the Estrous Cycle” | eNeuro
    In the article, “ Cnih3 Deletion Dysregulates Dorsal Hippocampal Transcription across the Estrous Cycle,” by Bernard Mulvey, Hannah E. Frye, Tania Lintz, …
    Jun 1, 2023
  • Journal Article
    Target-distractor competition modulates saccade trajectories in space and object-space | eNeuro
    Saccade planning and execution can be affected by a multitude of factors present in a target selection task. Recent studies have shown that the similarity between a target and nearby distractors affects the curvature of saccade trajectories, due to target-distractor competition. To further understand the nature of this competition, we varied the distance between and the similarity of complex target and distractor objects in a delayed match-to-sample task to examine their effects on human saccade trajectories and better understand the underlying neural circuitry. For trials with short saccadic reaction times (SRTs) when target-distractor competition is still active, the distractor is attractive and saccade trajectories are deviated towards the distractor. We found a robust effect of distance consistent with saccade vector averaging, whereas the effect of similarity suggested the existence of an object-based suppressive surround. At longer SRTs there was sufficient time for competition between the objects to...
    Jun 1, 2023 Caroline Giuricich
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