Skip Navigation

Log In
  • Scientific Research
  • Training
  • Professional Development
  • Community
  • Advocacy and Outreach
  • Career Paths
  • Image of three blue squares stacked vertically to look like pages. Collections
  • Careers in Neuroscience
  • Community Discussion
  • image of an open book Read
  • image of a play button: a triangle inside a circle Watch
  • an image of a calendar with a check mark signifying events to attend Attend
  • image of a blue microphone Listen
  • Image of two overlapping dialogue bubbles. Discuss
  • About Neuronline
  • SfN Events Calendar
  • Community Leaders Program
  • Community Guidelines
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
Neuronline logo
SfN's home for learning and discussion
  • image of an open bookRead
  • image of a play button: a triangle inside a circleWatch
  • an image of a calendar with a check mark signifying events to attendAttend
  • image of a blue microphone Listen
  • Image of two overlapping dialogue bubbles.Discuss
Log In
  • Scientific Research
  • Training
  • Professional Development
  • Community
  • Advocacy and Outreach
  • Career Paths
  • COLLECTIONS

Filter

  • (117)
    • (26)
  • (4)
  • (151)
    • (32)
    • (8)
    • (17)
    • (14)
    • (14)
    • (6)
    • (20)
  • (55)
    • (12)
    • (20)
  • (85)
    • (36)
    • (32)
  • (107)
    • (39)
    • (15)
  • (516)
    • (8)
    • (28)
    • (105)
    • (10)
    • (17)
    • (31)
    • (14)
    • (51)
    • (7)
    • (47)
    • (6)
    • (13)
    • (19)
    • (27)
    • (34)
  • (602)
    • (11)
    • (26)
    • (29)
    • (14)
    • (15)
    • (43)
  • (200)
    • (24)
    • (45)
    • (59)
  • (133)
  • (733)
  • (4)
  • (1)
  • (47845)
  • (92)
  • (25)
  • (14)
  • (435)
  • (7)
  • (184)
  • (8)
  • (33)
  • (17)
  • (7)
  • (9)
  • (9)
  • (5)
  • (21)
  • (8)
  • (12)
  • (9)
  • (3)
  • (10)
  • (10)
  • (56)
  • (45)
  • (12)
  • (3)
  • (7)
  • (6)
  • (5)
  • (8)
  • (7)
  • (11)
  • (58)
  • (13)
  • (31)
  • (8)
  • (5)
  • (10)
  • (5)
  • (16)
  • (4)
Filter
4581 - 4590 of 52774 results
  • Journal Article
    Everything You Always Wanted to Say about Science (But Were Afraid to Publish) | eNeuro
    As you know, the raison d’être of eNeuro is to serve the neuroscience community. The main mission of the journal is to publish excellent and reliable results, while making sure that authors, reviewers, and reviewing editors have a great experience. But eNeuro offers other services to the community, as well: it is a forum open to all if the message you want to convey can help us neuroscientists, teach us something, question us, or make us reflect on important matters. The present state of neuroscience is not only the result of the knowledge that is being accumulated over time but also strongly influenced by …
    Mar 1, 2022 Christophe Bernard
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Mazziotti et al., “MEYE: Web App for Translational and Real-Time Pupillometry” | eNeuro
    In the article “MEYE: Web App for Translational and Real-Time Pupillometry,” by Raffaele Mazziotti, Fabio Carrara, Aurelia Viglione, Leonardo Lupori, Luca Lo …
    Mar 1, 2022 Raffaele Mazziotti
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Heltberg et al., “Biophysical Modeling of Dopaminergic Denervation Landscapes in the Striatum Reveals New Therapeutic Strategy” | eNeuro
    In the article, “Biophysical Modeling of Dopaminergic Denervation Landscapes in the Striatum Reveals New Therapeutic Strategy,” by Mathias L. Heltberg, Hussein N. Awada, Alessandra Lucchetti, Mogens H. Jensen, Jakob K. Dreyer, and Rune N. Rasmussen, which was published online February 14, 2022, Mathias L. Heltberg’s and Hussein N. Awada’s affiliations …
    Mar 1, 2022 Mathias L. Heltberg
  • Journal Article
    Sensorimotor Learning in Response to Errors in Task Performance | eNeuro
    The human sensorimotor system is sensitive to both limb-related prediction errors and task-related performance errors. Prediction error signals are believed to drive implicit refinements to motor plans. However, an understanding of the mechanisms that performance errors stimulate has remained unclear largely because their effects have not been probed in isolation from prediction errors. Diverging from past work, we induced performance errors independent of prediction errors by shifting the location of a reach target but keeping the intended and actual kinematic consequences of the motion matched. Our first two experiments revealed that rather than implicit learning, motor adjustments in response to performance errors reflect the use of deliberative, volitional strategies. Our third experiment revealed a potential dissociation of performance-error-driven strategies based on error size. Specifically, behavioral changes following large errors were consistent with goal-directed or model-based control, known to...
    Mar 1, 2022 Dhwani P. Sadaphal
  • Journal Article
    Temporal Context Modulates Encoding and Retrieval of Overlapping Events | Journal of Neuroscience
    Overlap between events can lead to interference because of a trade-off between encoding the present event and retrieving the past event. Temporal context information, “when” something occurred, a defining feature of episodic memory, can cue retrieval of a past event. However, the influence of temporal overlap, or proximity in time, on the mechanisms of interference is unclear. Here, by identifying brain states using scalp eEEG from male and female human subjects, we show the extent to which temporal overlap promotes interference and induces retrieval. In this experiment, subjects were explicitly directed to either encode the present event or retrieve a past, overlapping event while perceptual input was held constant. We find that the degree of temporal overlap between events leads to selective interference. Specifically, greater temporal overlap between two events leads to impaired memory for the past event selectively when the top-down goal is to encode the present event. Using pattern classification anal...
    Mar 1, 2022 Devyn E. Smith
  • Journal Article
    Lateralized and region-specific thalamic processing of lexical status during reading aloud | Journal of Neuroscience
    To explore whether the thalamus participates in lexical status (word vs. nonword) processing during spoken word production, we recorded local field potentials from the ventral lateral thalamus in 11 essential tremor patients (three females) undergoing thalamic deep brain stimulation lead implantation during a visually cued word- and nonword-reading aloud task. We observed task-related beta (12-30 Hz) activity decreases that were preferentially time-locked to stimulus presentation, and broadband gamma (70-150 Hz) activity increases, which are thought to index increased multi-unit spiking activity, occurring shortly before and predominantly time-locked to speech onset. We further found that thalamic beta activity decreases bilaterally were greater when nonwords were read, demonstrating bilateral sensitivity to lexical status that likely reflects the tracking of task effort; in contrast, greater nonword-related increases in broadband gamma activity were observed only on the left, demonstrating lateralization ...
    Mar 1, 2022 Dengyu Wang
  • Journal Article
    Perceptual Weighting of V1 Spikes Revealed by Optogenetic White Noise Stimulation | Journal of Neuroscience
    During visually guided behaviors, mere hundreds of milliseconds can elapse between a sensory input and its associated behavioral response. How spikes occurring at different times are integrated to drive perception and action remains poorly understood. We delivered random trains of optogenetic stimulation (white noise) to excite inhibitory interneurons in V1 of mice of both sexes while they performed a visual detection task. We then performed a reverse correlation analysis on the optogenetic stimuli to generate a neuronal-behavioral kernel: an unbiased, temporally-precise estimate of how suppression of V1 spiking at different moments around the onset of a visual stimulus affects detection of that stimulus. Electrophysiological recordings enabled us to capture the effects of optogenetic stimuli on V1 responsivity and revealed that the earliest stimulus-evoked spikes are preferentially weighted for guiding behavior. These data demonstrate that white noise optogenetic stimulation is a powerful tool for underst...
    Mar 1, 2022 Julian Day-Cooney
  • Journal Article
    A DROSOPHILA CIRCUIT FOR HABITUATION OVERRIDE | Journal of Neuroscience
    Habituated animals retain a latent capacity for robust engagement with familiar stimuli. In most instances, the ability to override habituation is best explained by postulating that habituation arises from the potentiation of inhibitory inputs onto stimulus-encoding assemblies and that habituation override occurs through disinhibition. Previous work has shown that inhibitory plasticity contributes to specific forms of olfactory and gustatory habituation in Drosophila . Here we analyze how exposure to a novel stimulus causes override of gustatory (proboscis-extension reflex or “PER”) habituation. While brief sucrose contact with tarsal hairs causes naïve Drosophila to extend their proboscis, persistent exposure reduces PER to subsequent sucrose stimuli. We show that in so habituated animals, either brief exposure of the proboscis to yeast or direct thermogenetic activation of sensory neurons restores PER response to tarsal sucrose stimulation. Similar override of PER habituation can also be induced by brief...
    Mar 1, 2022 Swati Trisal
  • Journal Article
    Brain Dynamics of Action Monitoring in Higher-Order Motor Control Disorders: The Case of Apraxia | eNeuro
    Limb apraxia (LA) refers to a high-order motor disorder characterized by the inability to reproduce transitive actions on commands or after observation. Studies demonstrate that action observation and action execution activate the same networks in the human brain, and provides an onlooker’s motor system with appropriate cognitive, motor and sensory-motor cues to flexibly implementing action-sequences and gestures. Tellingly, the temporal dynamics of action monitoring has never been explored in people suffering from LA. To fill this gap, we studied the electro-cortical signatures of error observation in human participants suffering from acquired left-brain lesions with (LA+) and without (LA–) LA, and in a group of healthy controls (H). EEG was acquired while participants observed from a first-person perspective (1PP) an avatar performing correct or incorrect reach-to-grasp a glass action in an immersive-virtual environment. Alterations of typical EEG signatures of error observation in time (early error posi...
    Mar 1, 2022 Giuseppe Spinelli
  • Journal Article
    Mediodorsal Thalamus Is Critical for Updating during Extradimensional Shifts But Not Reversals in the Attentional Set-Shifting Task | eNeuro
    Cognitive flexibility, attributed to frontal cortex, is vital for navigating the complexities of everyday life. The mediodorsal thalamus (MD), interconnected to frontal cortex, may influence cognitive flexibility. Here, male rats performed an attentional set-shifting task measuring intradimensional (ID) and extradimensional (ED) shifts in sensory discriminations. MD lesion rats needed more trials to learn the rewarded sensory dimension. However, once the choice response strategy was established, learning further two-choice discriminations in the same sensory dimension, and reversals of the reward contingencies in the same dimension, were unimpaired. Critically though, MD lesion rats were impaired during the ED shift, when they must rapidly update the optimal choice response strategy. Behavioral analyses showed MD lesion rats had significantly reduced correct within-trial second choice responses. This evidence shows that transfer of information via the MD is critical when rapid within-trial updates in estab...
    Mar 1, 2022 Zakaria Ouhaz
  • Previous
  • 457
  • 458
  • 459
  • 460
  • 461
  • Next
Neuronline footer 10 year anniversary logo
  • About Neuronline
  • SfN Events Calendar
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
  • Accessibility Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Notice
SfN logo with "SfN" in a blue box next to Society for Neuroscience in red text and the SfN tag line that reads "Advancing the understanding of the brain and nervous system"
Follow SfN
  • BlueSky logo
  • Threads logo
  • X Logo
  • image of linkedin logo
  • Image of the Facebook logo
  • Image of the instagram logo
  • image of youtube logo
  • RSS symbol
1121 14th Street NW, Suite 1010, Washington, DC 20005 (202) 962-4000 | 1-888-985-9246

Copyright © Society for Neuroscience