TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
29Total items
21ePosters
8Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Distinct contributions of different anterior frontal regions to rule-guided decision-making in primates: complementary evidence from lesions, electrophysiology, and neurostimulation

Mark Buckley
Oxford University
May 5, 2023

Different prefrontal areas contribute in distinctly different ways to rule-guided behaviour in the context of a Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) analog for macaques. For example, causal evidence from circumscribed lesions in NHPs reveals that dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) is necessary to maintain a reinforced abstract rule in working memory, orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) is needed to rapidly update representations of rule value, and the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) plays a key role in cognitive control and integrating information for correct and incorrect trials over recent outcomes. Moreover, recent lesion studies of frontopolar cortex (FPC) suggest it contributes to representing the relative value of unchosen alternatives, including rules. Yet we do not understand how these functional specializations relate to intrinsic neuronal activities nor the extent to which these neuronal activities differ between different prefrontal regions. After reviewing the aforementioned causal evidence I will present our new data from studies using multi-area multi-electrode recording techniques in NHPs to simultaneously record from four different prefrontal regions implicated in rule-guided behaviour. Multi-electrode micro-arrays (‘Utah arrays’) were chronically implanted in dlPFC, vlPFC, OFC, and FPC of two macaques, allowing us to simultaneously record single and multiunit activity, and local field potential (LFP), from all regions while the monkey performs the WCST analog. Rule-related neuronal activity was widespread in all areas recorded but it differed in degree and in timing between different areas. I will also present preliminary results from decoding analyses applied to rule-related neuronal activities both from individual clusters and also from population measures. These results confirm and help quantify dynamic task-related activities that differ between prefrontal regions. We also found task-related modulation of LFPs within beta and gamma bands in FPC. By combining this correlational recording methods with trial-specific causal interventions (electrical microstimulation) to FPC we could significantly enhance and impair animals performance in distinct task epochs in functionally relevant ways, further consistent with an emerging picture of regional functional specialization within a distributed framework of interacting and interconnected cortical regions.

SeminarNeuroscience

A Network for Computing Value Equilibrium in the Human Medial Prefrontal Corte

Anush Ghambaryan
HSE University
Dec 23, 2021

Humans and other animals make decisions in order to satisfy their goals. However, it remains unknown how neural circuits compute which of multiple possible goals should be pursued (e.g., when balancing hunger and thirst) and how to combine these signals with estimates of available reward alternatives. Here, humans undergoing fMRI accumulated two distinct assets over a sequence of trials. Financial outcomes depended on the minimum cumulate of either asset, creating a need to maintain “value equilibrium” by redressing any imbalance among the assets. Blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) signals in the rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC) tracked the level of imbalance among goals, whereas the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) signaled the level of redress incurred by a choice rather than the overall amount received. These results suggest that a network of medial frontal brain regions compute a value signal that maintains value equilibrium among internal goals.

SeminarNeuroscience

Homeostatic structural plasticity of neuronal connectivity triggered by optogenetic stimulation

Han Lu
Vlachos lab, University of Freiburg, Germany
Nov 25, 2021

Ever since Bliss and Lømo discovered the phenomenon of long-term potentiation (LTP) in rabbit dentate gyrus in the 1960s, Hebb’s rule—neurons that fire together wire together—gained popularity to explain learning and memory. Accumulating evidence, however, suggests that neural activity is homeostatically regulated. Homeostatic mechanisms are mostly interpreted to stabilize network dynamics. However, recent theoretical work has shown that linking the activity of a neuron to its connectivity within the network provides a robust alternative implementation of Hebb’s rule, although entirely based on negative feedback. In this setting, both natural and artificial stimulation of neurons can robustly trigger network rewiring. We used computational models of plastic networks to simulate the complex temporal dynamics of network rewiring in response to external stimuli. In parallel, we performed optogenetic stimulation experiments in the mouse anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and subsequently analyzed the temporal profile of morphological changes in the stimulated tissue. Our results suggest that the new theoretical framework combining neural activity homeostasis and structural plasticity provides a consistent explanation of our experimental observations.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Context-Dependent Relationships between Locus Coeruleus Firing Patterns and Coordinated Neural Activity in the Anterior Cingulate Cortex

Siddhartha Joshi
Baylor College of Medicine
Oct 8, 2021

Ascending neuromodulatory projections from the locus coeruleus (LC) affect cortical neural networks via the release of norepinephrine (NE). However, the exact nature of these neuromodulatory effects on neural activity patterns in vivo is not well understood. Here we show that in awake monkeys, LC activation is associated with changes in coordinated activity patterns in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC). These relationships, which are largely independent of changes in firing rates of individual ACC neurons, depend on the type of LC activation: ACC pairwise correlations tend to be reduced when tonic (baseline) LC activity increases but are enhanced when external events drive phasic LC responses. Both relationships covary with pupil changes that reflect LC activation and arousal. These results suggest that modulations of information processing that reflect changes in coordinated activity patterns in cortical networks can result partly from ongoing, context-dependent, arousal-related changes in activation of the LC-NE system.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Anterior Cingulate inputs to nucleus accumbens control the social transfer of pain and analgesia

Monique Smith
Malenka lab, Stanford University
Apr 7, 2021

Empathy plays a critical role in social interactions, and many species, including rodents, display evolutionarily conserved behavioral antecedents of empathy. In both humans and rodents, the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) encodes information about the affective state of others. However, little is known about which downstream targets of the ACC contribute to empathy behaviors. We optimized a protocol for the social transfer of pain behavior in mice and compared the ACC-dependent neural circuitry responsible for this behavior with the neural circuitry required for the social transfer of two related states: analgesia and fear. We found that a 1-hour social interaction between a bystander mouse and a cagemate experiencing inflammatory pain led to congruent mechanical hyperalgesia in the bystander. This social transfer led to activation of neurons in the ACC and several downstream targets, including the nucleus accumbens (NAc), which was revealed by monosynaptic rabies virus tracing to be directly connected to the ACC. Bidirectional manipulation of activity in ACC-to-NAc inputs influenced the acquisition of socially transferred pain. Further, the social transfer of analgesia also depended upon ACC-NAc inputs. By contrast, the social transfer of fear instead required activity in ACC projections to the basolateral amygdala. This shows that mice rapidly adopt the sensory-affective state of a social partner, regardless of the valance of the information (pain, fear, or pain relief). We find that the ACC generates specific and appropriate empathic behavioral responses through distinct downstream targets. More sophisticated understanding of evolutionarily conserved brain mechanisms of empathy will also expedite the development of new therapies for the empathy-related deficits associated with a broad range of neuropsychiatric disorders.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The geometry of abstraction in hippocampus and pre-frontal cortex

Stefano Fusi
Columbia University
Oct 16, 2020

The curse of dimensionality plagues models of reinforcement learning and decision-making. The process of abstraction solves this by constructing abstract variables describing features shared by different specific instances, reducing dimensionality and enabling generalization in novel situations. Here we characterized neural representations in monkeys performing a task where a hidden variable described the temporal statistics of stimulus-response-outcome mappings. Abstraction was defined operationally using the generalization performance of neural decoders across task conditions not used for training. This type of generalization requires a particular geometric format of neural representations. Neural ensembles in dorsolateral pre-frontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex and hippocampus, and in simulated neural networks, simultaneously represented multiple hidden and explicit variables in a format reflecting abstraction. Task events engaging cognitive operations modulated this format. These findings elucidate how the brain and artificial systems represent abstract variables, variables critical for generalization that in turn confers cognitive flexibility.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Neuroimaging in human drug addiction: an eye towards intervention development

Rita Goldstein
Mount Sinai
Sep 2, 2020

Drug addiction is a chronically relapsing disorder characterized by compulsive drug use despite catastrophic personal consequences (e.g., loss of family, job) and even when the substance is no longer perceived as pleasurable. In this talk, I will present results of human neuroimaging studies, utilizing a multimodal approach (neuropsychology, functional magnetic resonance imaging, event-related potentials recordings), to explore the neurobiology underlying the core psychological impairments in drug addiction (impulsivity, drive/motivation, insight/awareness) as associated with its clinical symptomatology (intoxication, craving, bingeing, withdrawal). The focus of this talk is on understanding the role of the dopaminergic mesocorticolimbic circuit, and especially the prefrontal cortex, in higher-order executive dysfunction (e.g., disadvantageous decision-making such as trading a car for a couple of cocaine hits) in drug addicted individuals. The theoretical model that guides the presented research is called iRISA (Impaired Response Inhibition and Salience Attribution), postulating that abnormalities in the orbitofrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex, as related to dopaminergic dysfunction, contribute to the core clinical symptoms in drug addiction. Specifically, our multi-modality program of research is guided by the underlying working hypothesis that drug addicted individuals disproportionately attribute reward value to their drug of choice at the expense of other potentially but no-longer-rewarding stimuli, with a concomitant decrease in the ability to inhibit maladaptive drug use. In this talk I will also explore whether treatment (as usual) and 6-month abstinence enhance recovery in these brain-behavior compromises in treatment seeking cocaine addicted individuals. Promising neuroimaging studies, which combine pharmacological (i.e., oral methylphenidate, or RitalinTM) and salient cognitive tasks or functional connectivity during resting-state, will be discussed as examples for using neuroimaging for empirically guiding the development of effective neurorehabilitation strategies (encompassing cognitive reappraisal and transcranial direct current stimulation) in drug addiction.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The geometry of abstraction in artificial and biological neural networks

Stefano Fusi
Columbia University
Jun 11, 2020

The curse of dimensionality plagues models of reinforcement learning and decision-making. The process of abstraction solves this by constructing abstract variables describing features shared by different specific instances, reducing dimensionality and enabling generalization in novel situations. We characterized neural representations in monkeys performing a task where a hidden variable described the temporal statistics of stimulus-response-outcome mappings. Abstraction was defined operationally using the generalization performance of neural decoders across task conditions not used for training. This type of generalization requires a particular geometric format of neural representations. Neural ensembles in dorsolateral pre-frontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex and hippocampus, and in simulated neural networks, simultaneously represented multiple hidden and explicit variables in a format reflecting abstraction. Task events engaging cognitive operations modulated this format. These findings elucidate how the brain and artificial systems represent abstract variables, variables critical for generalization that in turn confers cognitive flexibility.

ePosterNeuroscience

Mechanical vs thermal analgesia induced by relaxin-3/RXFP3 peptidergic transmission in anterior cingulate cortex and amygdala

Marie Tuifua, Thibault Dhellemmes, Cynthia Abboub, Louison Brochoire, Sandra Sánchez-Sarasúa, Melina Petrel, André Calas, Eric Boué-Grabot, Akhter Hossain, Francisco E. Olucha-Bordonau, Andrew L. Gundlach, Marc Landry
ePosterNeuroscience

Anterior cingulate cortex enables rapid set-shifting behaviour via prediction mismatch signalling

Nicholas Cole,Dylan Myers-Joseph,Adil Khan,Matthew Harvey,Aditya Gilra

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Aversion learning mediated by dopaminergic neurotransmission in the anterior cingulate cortex

Lotte J. Jonker, Walter Senn, Thomas Nevian
ePosterNeuroscience

Basolateral amygdala input to anterior cingulate cortex mediates pain-avoidance behaviors

Kristina Valentinova, Thomas Nevian
ePosterNeuroscience

Differential modulation of anterior cingulate cortex subregional connectivity by intravenous ketamine

Laith Alexander, Peter Hawkins, Jennifer W. Evans, Carlos A. Zarate Jr., Mitul A. Mehta
ePosterNeuroscience

Encoding of the unpleasantness of pain in cortico-striatal neurons of the Anterior Cingulate Cortex

Constanza Ilarraz, Mario A. Acuna, Thomas Nevian, Fernando Kasanetz
ePosterNeuroscience

Highly Unstable Heterogeneous Representations in VIP Interneurons of the Anterior Cingulate Cortex

Alberto Cruz Martin, Connor Johnson, Lisa Kretsge, William W. Yen, Balaji Sriram, Alexandra O'Connor, Ruichen Sky Liu, Jessica C. Jimenez, Rhushikesh A. Phadke, Frances S. Hausmann, Luke A. Fournier, Alison Brack, Sarah Melzer
ePosterNeuroscience

Male-female differences in social behaviour of Cntnap2 mutant mice correlate with disrupted synaptic connectivity in the anterior cingulate cortex and increased microglia activity

Uwe Drescher, Matthew Dawson, Kevin Gordon-Fleet, Vera Tardos, Lingxin Yan, Zeinab Asgarian, Cathy Fernandes
ePosterNeuroscience

Motivational performance in humans as a function of the neurochemical composition of anterior insula and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex/dorsal anterior cingulate cortex

Arthur Barakat, Nicolas Clairis, Carmen Sandi
ePosterNeuroscience

Prenatal glucocorticoid exposure alters effort decision making and triggers nucleus accumbens and anterior cingulate cortex functional changes

Verónica Domingues
ePosterNeuroscience

Physiology and morphology of layer 5 neuron subtypes of anterior cingulate cortex in inflammatory pain

Federica Franciosa, Mario A. Acuna, Thomas Nevian
ePosterNeuroscience

Prediction mismatch signalling in anterior cingulate cortex drives task-switching

Nicholas Cole, Matthew Harvey, Dylan Myers-Joseph, Aditya Gilra, Adil Khan
ePosterNeuroscience

Principles of Nociception in the Anterior Cingulate Cortex

Mario A. Acuna, Fernando Kasanetz, Paolo De Luna, Marta Falkowska, Thomas Nevian
ePosterNeuroscience

The roles of the human orbitofrontal cortex, vmPFC, and anterior cingulate cortex connectome in emotion and memory

Edmund Rolls
ePosterNeuroscience

Anterior cingulate cortex hyperexcitability in a mouse model of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and pain comorbidity

Sandra Sanchez-Sarasua, Sarah Bou Sader Nehme, Marie Tuifua, Otmane Bouchatta, Marc Landry

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Effect of voluntary wheel running on the anterior cingulate cortex in neuropathic pain mice

Kohei Oyabu, Takuya Imatoh, Keisuke Migita

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Electrical microstimulation of non-human primate mediodorsal thalamus during functional neuroimaging impacts dorsal anterior cingulate cortex

Elsie Premereur, Brook A. Perry, Juan Carlos Mendez, Vassilis Pelekanos, Urs Schuffelgen, Makoto Kusunoki, Anna Mitchell

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Incorporating new with old knowledge – curricular learning in anterior cingulate cortex

Elisabeth Abs, Roman Boehringer, Benjamin F. Grewe

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Inhibitory mechanisms in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex differentially mediate putamen activity during appetitive and aversive valence-based learning

Tal Finkelman, Edna Furman-Haran, Kristoffer C. Aberg, Rony Paz, Assaf Tal

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Microglial activation in the anterior cingulate cortex: A biological marker of early adverse events and future vulnerability to develop alcohol use disorder

Léa Aeschlimann, Narimane Bouzourène, Valentin Zufferey, Kevin Richetin, Boutrel Benjamin

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Stress susceptibility-dependent synaptic plasticity onto anterior cingulate cortex

Sabahaddin Taha Solakoglu, Evren Erdener, Olga Gliko, Alp Can, Uygar Sumbul, Emine Eren-Kocak

FENS Forum 2024

anterior cingulate cortex coverage

29 items

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