TopicNeuro

communication

50 Seminars40 ePosters

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Organization of thalamic networks and mechanisms of dysfunction in schizophrenia and autism

Vasileios Zikopoulos
Boston University
Nov 3, 2025

Thalamic networks, at the core of thalamocortical and thalamosubcortical communications, underlie processes of perception, attention, memory, emotions, and the sleep-wake cycle, and are disrupted in mental disorders, including schizophrenia and autism. However, the underlying mechanisms of pathology are unknown. I will present novel evidence on key organizational principles, structural, and molecular features of thalamocortical networks, as well as critical thalamic pathway interactions that are likely affected in disorders. This data can facilitate modeling typical and abnormal brain function and can provide the foundation to understand heterogeneous disruption of these networks in sleep disorders, attention deficits, and cognitive and affective impairments in schizophrenia and autism, with important implications for the design of targeted therapeutic interventions

SeminarNeuroscience

SWEBAGS conference 2024: Shared network mechanisms of dopamine and deep brain stimulation for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease: From modulation of oscillatory cortex – basal ganglia communication to intelligent clinical brain computer interfaces

Wolf-Julian Neumann
Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin
Dec 5, 2024
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Sophie Scott - The Science of Laughter from Evolution to Neuroscience

Sophie Scott
University College London, UK
Sep 10, 2024

Keynote Address to British Association of Cognitive Neuroscience, London, 10th September 2024

SeminarNeuroscience

Neuronal population interactions between brain areas

Byron Yu
Carnegie Mellon University
Dec 8, 2023

Most brain functions involve interactions among multiple, distinct areas or nuclei. Yet our understanding of how populations of neurons in interconnected brain areas communicate is in its infancy. Using a population approach, we found that interactions between early visual cortical areas (V1 and V2) occur through a low-dimensional bottleneck, termed a communication subspace. In this talk, I will focus on the statistical methods we have developed for studying interactions between brain areas. First, I will describe Delayed Latents Across Groups (DLAG), designed to disentangle concurrent, bi-directional (i.e., feedforward and feedback) interactions between areas. Second, I will describe an extension of DLAG applicable to three or more areas, and demonstrate its utility for studying simultaneous Neuropixels recordings in areas V1, V2, and V3. Our results provide a framework for understanding how neuronal population activity is gated and selectively routed across brain areas.

SeminarNeuroscience

Connectome-based models of neurodegenerative disease

Jacob Vogel
Lund University
Dec 6, 2023

Neurodegenerative diseases involve accumulation of aberrant proteins in the brain, leading to brain damage and progressive cognitive and behavioral dysfunction. Many gaps exist in our understanding of how these diseases initiate and how they progress through the brain. However, evidence has accumulated supporting the hypothesis that aberrant proteins can be transported using the brain’s intrinsic network architecture — in other words, using the brain’s natural communication pathways. This theory forms the basis of connectome-based computational models, which combine real human data and theoretical disease mechanisms to simulate the progression of neurodegenerative diseases through the brain. In this talk, I will first review work leading to the development of connectome-based models, and work from my lab and others that have used these models to test hypothetical modes of disease progression. Second, I will discuss the future and potential of connectome-based models to achieve clinically useful individual-level predictions, as well as to generate novel biological insights into disease progression. Along the way, I will highlight recent work by my lab and others that is already moving the needle toward these lofty goals.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Learning with multimodal enrichment

Katharina von Kriegstein
Technical University Dresden
Oct 5, 2023
SeminarNeuroscience

Untitled Seminar

Jennifer Garrison
Buck Institute for Research on Aging
Sep 19, 2023
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Brain network communication: concepts, models and applications

Caio Seguin
Indiana University
Aug 25, 2023

Understanding communication and information processing in nervous systems is a central goal of neuroscience. Over the past two decades, advances in connectomics and network neuroscience have opened new avenues for investigating polysynaptic communication in complex brain networks. Recent work has brought into question the mainstay assumption that connectome signalling occurs exclusively via shortest paths, resulting in a sprawling constellation of alternative network communication models. This Review surveys the latest developments in models of brain network communication. We begin by drawing a conceptual link between the mathematics of graph theory and biological aspects of neural signalling such as transmission delays and metabolic cost. We organize key network communication models and measures into a taxonomy, aimed at helping researchers navigate the growing number of concepts and methods in the literature. The taxonomy highlights the pros, cons and interpretations of different conceptualizations of connectome signalling. We showcase the utility of network communication models as a flexible, interpretable and tractable framework to study brain function by reviewing prominent applications in basic, cognitive and clinical neurosciences. Finally, we provide recommendations to guide the future development, application and validation of network communication models.

SeminarNeuroscience

Why spikes?

Romaine Brette
Institut de la Vision
May 31, 2023

On a fast timescale, neurons mostly interact by short, stereotypical electrical impulses or spikes. Why? A common answer is that spikes are useful for long-distance communication, to avoid alterations while traveling along axons. But as it turns out, spikes are seen in many places outside neurons: in the heart, in muscles, in plants and even in protists. From these examples, it appears that action potentials mediate some form of coordinated action, a timed event. From this perspective, spikes should not be seen simply as noisy implementations of underlying continuous signals (a sort of analog-to-digital conversion), but rather as events or actions. I will give a number of examples of functional spike-based interactions in living systems.

SeminarNeuroscience

The embodied brain

Pierre-Marie Lledo
Institut Pasteur
May 9, 2023

Understanding the brain is not only intrinsically fascinating, but also highly relevant to increase our well-being since our brain exhibits a power over the body that makes it capable both of provoking illness or facilitating the healing process. Bearing in mind this dark force, brain sciences have undergone and will undergo an important revolution, redefining its boundaries beyond the cranial cavity. During this presentation, we will discuss about the communication between the brain and other systems that shapes how we feel the external word and how we think. We are starting to unravel how our organs talk to the brain and how the brain talks back. That two-way communication encompasses a complex, body-wide system of nerves, hormones and other signals that will be discussed. This presentation aims at challenging a long history of thinking of bodily regulation as separate from "higher" mental processes. Four centuries ago, René Descartes famously conceptualized the mind as being separate from the body, it is time now to embody our mind.

SeminarNeuroscience

Obesity and Brain – Bidirectional Influences

Alain Dagher
McGill University
Apr 11, 2023

The regulation of body weight relies on homeostatic mechanisms that use a combination of internal signals and external cues to initiate and terminate food intake. Homeostasis depends on intricate communication between the body and the hypothalamus involving numerous neural and hormonal signals. However, there is growing evidence that higher-level cognitive function may also influence energy balance. For instance, research has shown that BMI is consistently linked to various brain, cognitive, and personality measures, implicating executive, reward, and attentional systems. Moreover, the rise in obesity rates over the past half-century is attributed to the affordability and widespread availability of highly processed foods, a phenomenon that contradicts the idea that food intake is solely regulated by homeostasis. I will suggest that prefrontal systems involved in value computation and motivation act to limit food overconsumption when food is scarce or expensive, but promote over-eating when food is abundant, an optimum strategy from an economic standpoint. I will review the genetic and neuroscience literature on the CNS control of body weight. I will present recent studies supporting a role of prefrontal systems in weight control. I will also present contradictory evidence showing that frontal executive and cognitive findings in obesity may be a consequence not a cause of increased hunger. Finally I will review the effects of obesity on brain anatomy and function. Chronic adiposity leads to cerebrovascular dysfunction, cortical thinning, and cognitive impairment. As the most common preventable risk factor for dementia, obesity poses a significant threat to brain health. I will conclude by reviewing evidence for treatment of obesity in adults to prevent brain disease.

SeminarNeuroscience

Self-perception: mechanosensation and beyond

Wei Zhang
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Apr 4, 2023

Brain-organ communications play a crucial role in maintaining the body's physiological and psychological homeostasis, and are controlled by complex neural and hormonal systems, including the internal mechanosensory organs. However, the progress has been slow due to technical hurdles: the sensory neurons are deeply buried inside the body and are not readily accessible for direct observation, the projection patterns from different organs or body parts are complex rather than converging into dedicate brain regions, the coding principle cannot be directly adapted from that learned from conventional sensory pathways. Our lab apply the pipeline of "biophysics of receptors-cell biology of neurons-functionality of neural circuits-animal behaviors" to explore the molecular and neural mechanisms of self-perception. In the lab, we mainly focus on the following three questions: 1, The molecular and cellular basis for proprioception and interoception. 2, The circuit mechanisms of sensory coding and integration of internal and external information. 3, The function of interoception in regulating behavior homeostasis.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A carnivorous mushroom paralyzes and kills nematodes via a volatile ketone

Yi-Yun Lee
Academia Sinica
Mar 17, 2023
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

How a fungus overcomes the defence of C. elegans

Reinhard Fischer
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Mar 17, 2023
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Gut-to-brain communication of nutritional information prioritizes courtship over feeding

Hui-Hao Lin
UNY Upstate Medical University
Feb 17, 2023
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Children-Agent Interaction For Assessment and Rehabilitation: From Linguistic Skills To Mental Well-being

Micole Spitale
Department of Computer Science and Technology, University of Cambridge
Feb 7, 2023

Socially Assistive Robots (SARs) have shown great potential to help children in therapeutic and healthcare contexts. SARs have been used for companionship, learning enhancement, social and communication skills rehabilitation for children with special needs (e.g., autism), and mood improvement. Robots can be used as novel tools to assess and rehabilitate children’s communication skills and mental well-being by providing affordable and accessible therapeutic and mental health services. In this talk, I will present the various studies I have conducted during my PhD and at the Cambridge Affective Intelligence and Robotics Lab to explore how robots can help assess and rehabilitate children’s communication skills and mental well-being. More specifically, I will provide both quantitative and qualitative results and findings from (i) an exploratory study with children with autism and global developmental disorders to investigate the use of intelligent personal assistants in therapy; (ii) an empirical study involving children with and without language disorders interacting with a physical robot, a virtual agent, and a human counterpart to assess their linguistic skills; (iii) an 8-week longitudinal study involving children with autism and language disorders who interacted either with a physical or a virtual robot to rehabilitate their linguistic skills; and (iv) an empirical study to aid the assessment of mental well-being in children. These findings can inform and help the child-robot interaction community design and develop new adaptive robots to help assess and rehabilitate linguistic skills and mental well-being in children.

SeminarNeuroscience

Spatially-embedded recurrent neural networks reveal widespread links between structural and functional neuroscience findings

Jascha Achterberg
University of Cambridge
Feb 1, 2023

Brain networks exist within the confines of resource limitations. As a result, a brain network must overcome metabolic costs of growing and sustaining the network within its physical space, while simultaneously implementing its required information processing. To observe the effect of these processes, we introduce the spatially-embedded recurrent neural network (seRNN). seRNNs learn basic task-related inferences while existing within a 3D Euclidean space, where the communication of constituent neurons is constrained by a sparse connectome. We find that seRNNs, similar to primate cerebral cortices, naturally converge on solving inferences using modular small-world networks, in which functionally similar units spatially configure themselves to utilize an energetically-efficient mixed-selective code. As all these features emerge in unison, seRNNs reveal how many common structural and functional brain motifs are strongly intertwined and can be attributed to basic biological optimization processes. seRNNs can serve as model systems to bridge between structural and functional research communities to move neuroscientific understanding forward.

SeminarNeuroscience

The embodied brain

Pierre-Marie Lledo
Institut Pasteur
Nov 29, 2022

Understanding the brain is not only intrinsically fascinating, but also highly relevant to increase our well-being since our brain exhibits a power over the body that makes it capable both of provoking illness or facilitating the healing process. Bearing in mind this dark force, brain sciences have undergone and will undergo an important revolution, redefining its boundaries beyond the cranial cavity. During this presentation, we will discuss about the communication between the brain and other systems that shapes how we feel the external word and how we think. We are starting to unravel how our organs talk to the brain and how the brain talks back. That two-way communication encompasses a complex, body-wide system of nerves, hormones and other signals that will be discussed. This presentation aims at challenging a long history of thinking of bodily regulation as separate from "higher" mental processes. Four centuries ago, René Descartes famously conceptualized the mind as being separate from the body, it is time now to embody our mind.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Representations of people in the brain

Lucia Garrido
City, University of London
Nov 22, 2022

Faces and voices convey much of the non-verbal information that we use when communicating with other people. We look at faces and listen to voices to recognize others, understand how they are feeling, and decide how to act. Recent research in my lab aims to investigate whether there are similar coding mechanisms to represent faces and voices, and whether there are brain regions that integrate information across the visual and auditory modalities. In the first part of my talk, I will focus on an fMRI study in which we found that a region of the posterior STS exhibits modality-general representations of familiar people that can be similarly driven by someone’s face and their voice (Tsantani et al. 2019). In the second part of the talk, I will describe our recent attempts to shed light on the type of information that is represented in different face-responsive brain regions (Tsantani et al., 2021).

SeminarNeuroscience

Intrinsic Geometry of a Combinatorial Sensory Neural Code for Birdsong

Tim Gentner
University of California, San Diego, USA
Nov 9, 2022

Understanding the nature of neural representation is a central challenge of neuroscience. One common approach to this challenge is to compute receptive fields by correlating neural activity with external variables drawn from sensory signals. But these receptive fields are only meaningful to the experimenter, not the organism, because only the experimenter has access to both the neural activity and knowledge of the external variables. To understand neural representation more directly, recent methodological advances have sought to capture the intrinsic geometry of sensory driven neural responses without external reference. To date, this approach has largely been restricted to low-dimensional stimuli as in spatial navigation. In this talk, I will discuss recent work from my lab examining the intrinsic geometry of sensory representations in a model vocal communication system, songbirds. From the assumption that sensory systems capture invariant relationships among stimulus features, we conceptualized the space of natural birdsongs to lie on the surface of an n-dimensional hypersphere. We computed composite receptive field models for large populations of simultaneously recorded single neurons in the auditory forebrain and show that solutions to these models define convex regions of response probability in the spherical stimulus space. We then define a combinatorial code over the set of receptive fields, realized in the moment-to-moment spiking and non-spiking patterns across the population, and show that this code can be used to reconstruct high-fidelity spectrographic representations of natural songs from evoked neural responses. Notably, we find that topological relationships among combinatorial codewords directly mirror acoustic relationships among songs in the spherical stimulus space. That is, the time-varying pattern of co-activity across the neural population expresses an intrinsic representational geometry that mirrors the natural, extrinsic stimulus space.  Combinatorial patterns across this intrinsic space directly represent complex vocal communication signals, do not require computation of receptive fields, and are in a form, spike time coincidences, amenable to biophysical mechanisms of neural information propagation.

SeminarNeuroscience

Exploring emotion in the expression of ape gesture

Cat Hobaiter
University of St Andrews
Nov 8, 2022

Language appears to be the most complex system of animal communication described to date. However, its precursors were present in the communication of our evolutionary ancestors and are likely shared by our modern ape cousins.  All great apes, including humans, employ a rich repertoire of vocalizations, facial expressions, and gestures. Great ape gestural repertoires are particularly elaborate, with ape species employing over 80 different gesture types intentionally: that is towards a recipient with a specific goal in mind. Intentional usage allows us to ask not only what information is encoded in ape gestures, but what do apes mean when they use them. I will discuss recent research on ape gesture, on how we approach the question of decoding meaning, and how with new methods we are starting to integrate long overlooked aspects of ape gesture such as group and individual variation, and expression and emotion into our study of these signals.

SeminarNeuroscience

The brain: A coincidence detector between sensory experiences and internal milieu

Pierre-Marie Lledo
Pasteur Institute, Paris, France
Aug 26, 2022

Understanding the brain is not only intrinsically fascinating, but also highly relevant to increase our well-being since our brain exhibits a power over the body that makes it capable both of provoking illness or facilitating the healing process. Bearing in mind this dark force, brain sciences have undergone and will undergo an important revolution, redefining its boundaries beyond the cranial cavity. During this presentation, we will discuss about the communication between the brain and other systems that shapes how we feel the external word and how we think. We are starting to unravel how our organs talk to the brain and how the brain talks back. That two-way communication encompasses a complex, bodywide system of nerves, hormones and other signals that we will discussed. This presentation aims at challenging a long history of thinking of bodily regulation as separate from "higher" mental processes. Four centuries ago, René Descartes famously conceptualized the mind as being separate from the body, it is time now to embody our mind.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The functional architecture of the human entorhinal-hippocampal circuitry

Xenia Grande
Düzel Lab, University Magdeburg & German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases
Jul 6, 2022

Cognitive functions like episodic memory require the formation of cohesive representations. Critical for that process is the entorhinal-hippocampal circuitry’s interaction with cortical information streams and the circuitry’s inner communication. With ultra-high field functional imaging we investigated the functional architecture of the human entorhinal-hippocampal circuitry. We identified an organization that is consistent with convergence of information in anterior and lateral entorhinal subregions and the subiculum/CA1 border while keeping a second route specific for scene processing in a posterior-medial entorhinal subregion and the distal subiculum. Our findings agree with information flow along information processing routes which functionally split the entorhinal-hippocampal circuitry along its transversal axis. My talk will demonstrate how ultra-high field imaging in humans can bridge the gap between anatomical and electrophysiological findings in rodents and our understanding of human cognition. Moreover, I will point out the implications that basic research on functional architecture has for cognitive and clinical research perspectives.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

How communication networks promote cross-cultural similarities: The case of category formation

Douglas Guilbeault
University of California, Berkeley
Jun 2, 2022

Individuals vary widely in how they categorize novel phenomena. This individual variation has led canonical theories in cognitive and social science to suggest that communication in large social networks leads populations to construct divergent category systems. Yet, anthropological data indicates that large, independent societies consistently arrive at similar categories across a range of topics. How is it possible for diverse populations, consisting of individuals with significant variation in how they view the world, to independently construct similar categories? Through a series of online experiments, I show how large communication networks within cultures can promote the formation of similar categories across cultures. For this investigation, I designed an online “Grouping Game” to observe how people construct categories in both small and large populations when tasked with grouping together the same novel and ambiguous images. I replicated this design for English-speaking subjects in the U.S. and Mandarin-speaking subjects in China. In both cultures, solitary individuals and small social groups produced highly divergent category systems. Yet, large social groups separately and consistently arrived at highly similar categories both within and across cultures. These findings are accurately predicted by a simple mathematical model of critical mass dynamics. Altogether, I show how large communication networks can filter lexical diversity among individuals to produce replicable society-level patterns, yielding unexpected implications for cultural evolution. In particular, I discuss how participants in both cultures readily harnessed analogies when categorizing novel stimuli, and I examine the role of communication networks in promoting cross-cultural similarities in analogy-making as the key engine of category formation.

SeminarNeuroscience

Learning from others, helping others learn: Cognitive foundations of distinctively human social learning

Hyowon (Hyo) Gweon
Stanford University
Jun 1, 2022

Learning does not occur in isolation. From parent-child interactions to formal classroom environments, humans explore, learn, and communicate in rich, diverse social contexts. Rather than simply observing and copying their conspecifics, humans engage in a range of epistemic practices that actively recruit those around them. What makes human social learning so distinctive, powerful, and smart? In this talk, I will present a series of studies that reveal the remarkably sophisticated inferential abilities that young children show not only in how they learn from others but also in how they help others learn. Children interact with others as learners and as teachers to learn and communicate about the world, about others, and even about the self. The results collectively paint a picture of human social learning that is far more than copying and imitation: It is active, bidirectional, and cooperative. I will end by discussing ongoing work that extends this picture beyond what we typically call “social learning”, with implications for building better machines that learn from and interact with humans.

SeminarNeuroscience

Molecular Logic of Synapse Organization and Plasticity

Tabrez Siddiqui
University of Manitoba
May 31, 2022

Connections between nerve cells called synapses are the fundamental units of communication and information processing in the brain. The accurate wiring of neurons through synapses into neural networks or circuits is essential for brain organization. Neuronal networks are sculpted and refined throughout life by constant adjustment of the strength of synaptic communication by neuronal activity, a process known as synaptic plasticity. Deficits in the development or plasticity of synapses underlie various neuropsychiatric disorders, including autism, schizophrenia and intellectual disability. The Siddiqui lab research program comprises three major themes. One, to assess how biochemical switches control the activity of synapse organizing proteins, how these switches act through their binding partners and how these processes are regulated to correct impaired synaptic function in disease. Two, to investigate how synapse organizers regulate the specificity of neuronal circuit development and how defined circuits contribute to cognition and behaviour. Three, to address how synapses are formed in the developing brain and maintained in the mature brain and how microcircuits formed by synapses are refined to fine-tune information processing in the brain. Together, these studies have generated fundamental new knowledge about neuronal circuit development and plasticity and enabled us to identify targets for therapeutic intervention.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Computational modelling of neurotransmitter release

Yulia Timofeeva
University of Warwick
May 18, 2022

Synaptic transmission provides the basis for neuronal communication. When an action-potential propagates through the axonal arbour, it activates voltage-gated Ca2+ channels located in the vicinity of release-ready synaptic vesicles docked at the presynaptic active zone. Ca2+ ions enter the presynaptic terminal and activate the vesicular Ca2+ sensor, thereby triggering neurotransmitter release. This whole process occurs on a timescale of a few milliseconds. In addition to fast, synchronous release, which keeps pace with action potentials, many synapses also exhibit delayed asynchronous release that persists for tens to hundreds of milliseconds. In this talk I will demonstrate how experimentally constrained computational modelling of underlying biological processes can complement laboratory studies (using electrophysiology and imaging techniques) and provide insights into the mechanisms of synaptic transmission.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The evolution and development of visual complexity: insights from stomatopod visual anatomy, physiology, behavior, and molecules

Megan Porter
University of Hawaii
May 2, 2022

Bioluminescence, which is rare on land, is extremely common in the deep sea, being found in 80% of the animals living between 200 and 1000 m. These animals rely on bioluminescence for communication, feeding, and/or defense, so the generation and detection of light is essential to their survival. Our present knowledge of this phenomenon has been limited due to the difficulty in bringing up live deep-sea animals to the surface, and the lack of proper techniques needed to study this complex system. However, new genomic techniques are now available, and a team with extensive experience in deep-sea biology, vision, and genomics has been assembled to lead this project. This project is aimed to study three questions 1) What are the evolutionary patterns of different types of bioluminescence in deep-sea shrimp? 2) How are deep-sea organisms’ eyes adapted to detect bioluminescence? 3) Can bioluminescent organs (called photophores) detect light in addition to emitting light? Findings from this study will provide valuable insight into a complex system vital to communication, defense, camouflage, and species recognition. This study will bring monumental contributions to the fields of deep sea and evolutionary biology, and immediately improve our understanding of bioluminescence and light detection in the marine environment. In addition to scientific advancement, this project will reach K-college aged students through the development and dissemination of educational tools, a series of molecular and organismal-based workshops, museum exhibits, public seminars, and biodiversity initiatives.

SeminarNeuroscience

Extrinsic control and autonomous computation in the hippocampal CA1 circuit

Ipshita Zutshi
NYU
Apr 27, 2022

In understanding circuit operations, a key issue is the extent to which neuronal spiking reflects local computation or responses to upstream inputs. Because pyramidal cells in CA1 do not have local recurrent projections, it is currently assumed that firing in CA1 is inherited from its inputs – thus, entorhinal inputs provide communication with the rest of the neocortex and the outside world, whereas CA3 inputs provide internal and past memory representations. Several studies have attempted to prove this hypothesis, by lesioning or silencing either area CA3 or the entorhinal cortex and examining the effect of firing on CA1 pyramidal cells. Despite the intense and careful work in this research area, the magnitudes and types of the reported physiological impairments vary widely across experiments. At least part of the existing variability and conflicts is due to the different behavioral paradigms, designs and evaluation methods used by different investigators. Simultaneous manipulations in the same animal or even separate manipulations of the different inputs to the hippocampal circuits in the same experiment are rare. To address these issues, I used optogenetic silencing of unilateral and bilateral mEC, of the local CA1 region, and performed bilateral pharmacogenetic silencing of the entire CA3 region. I combined this with high spatial resolution recording of local field potentials (LFP) in the CA1-dentate axis and simultaneously collected firing pattern data from thousands of single neurons. Each experimental animal had up to two of these manipulations being performed simultaneously. Silencing the medial entorhinal (mEC) largely abolished extracellular theta and gamma currents in CA1, without affecting firing rates. In contrast, CA3 and local CA1 silencing strongly decreased firing of CA1 neurons without affecting theta currents. Each perturbation reconfigured the CA1 spatial map. Yet, the ability of the CA1 circuit to support place field activity persisted, maintaining the same fraction of spatially tuned place fields, and reliable assembly expression as in the intact mouse. Thus, the CA1 network can maintain autonomous computation to support coordinated place cell assemblies without reliance on its inputs, yet these inputs can effectively reconfigure and assist in maintaining stability of the CA1 map.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Network resonance: a framework for dissecting feedback and frequency filtering mechanisms in neuronal systems

Horacio Rotstein
New Jersey Institute of Technology
Apr 13, 2022

Resonance is defined as a maximal amplification of the response of a system to periodic inputs in a limited, intermediate input frequency band. Resonance may serve to optimize inter-neuronal communication, and has been observed at multiple levels of neuronal organization including membrane potential fluctuations, single neuron spiking, postsynaptic potentials, and neuronal networks. However, it is unknown how resonance observed at one level of neuronal organization (e.g., network) depends on the properties of the constituting building blocks, and whether, and if yes how, it affects the resonant and oscillatory properties upstream. One difficulty is the absence of a conceptual framework that facilitates the interrogation of resonant neuronal circuits and organizes the mechanistic investigation of network resonance in terms of the circuit components, across levels of organization. We address these issues by discussing a number of representative case studies. The dynamic mechanisms responsible for the generation of resonance involve disparate processes, including negative feedback effects, history-dependence, spiking discretization combined with subthreshold passive dynamics, combinations of these, and resonance inheritance from lower levels of organization. The band-pass filters associated with the observed resonances are generated by primarily nonlinear interactions of low- and high-pass filters. We identify these filters (and interactions) and we argue that these are the constitutive building blocks of a resonance framework. Finally, we discuss alternative frameworks and we show that different types of models (e.g., spiking neural networks and rate models) can show the same type of resonance by qualitative different mechanisms.

SeminarNeuroscience

Astroglial modulation of the antidepressant action of deep brain and bright light stimulation

Nasser Haddjeri
Stem Cell And Brain Research Institute, INSERM 1208, Bron, France
Apr 8, 2022

Even if major depression is now the most common of psychiatric disorders, successful antidepressant treatments are still difficult to achieve. Therefore, a better understanding of the mechanisms of action of current antidepressant treatments is needed to ultimately identify new targets and enhance beneficial effects. Given the intimate relationships between astrocytes and neurons at synapses and the ability of astrocytes to "sense" neuronal communication and release gliotransmitters, an attractive hypothesis is emerging stating that the effects of antidepressants on brain function could be, at least in part, modulated by direct influences of astrocytes on neuronal networks. We will present two preclinical studies revealing a permissive role of glia in the antidepressant response: i) Control of the antidepressant-like effects of rat prefrontal cortex Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) by astroglia, ii) Modulation of antidepressant efficacy of Bright Light Stimulation (BLS) by lateral habenula astroglia. Therefore, it is proposed that an unaltered neuronal-glial system constitutes a major prerequisite to optimize antidepressant efficacy of DBS or BLS. Collectively, these results pave also the way to the development of safer and more effective antidepressant strategies.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Visualization and manipulation of our perception and imagery by BCI

Takufumi Yanagisawa
Osaka University
Apr 1, 2022

We have been developing Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) using electrocorticography (ECoG) [1] , which is recorded by electrodes implanted on brain surface, and magnetoencephalography (MEG) [2] , which records the cortical activities non-invasively, for the clinical applications. The invasive BCI using ECoG has been applied for severely paralyzed patient to restore the communication and motor function. The non-invasive BCI using MEG has been applied as a neurofeedback tool to modulate some pathological neural activities to treat some neuropsychiatric disorders. Although these techniques have been developed for clinical application, BCI is also an important tool to investigate neural function. For example, motor BCI records some neural activities in a part of the motor cortex to generate some movements of external devices. Although our motor system consists of complex system including motor cortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum, spinal cord and muscles, the BCI affords us to simplify the motor system with exactly known inputs, outputs and the relation of them. We can investigate the motor system by manipulating the parameters in BCI system. Recently, we are developing some BCIs to visualize and manipulate our perception and mental imagery. Although these BCI has been developed for clinical application, the BCI will be useful to understand our neural system to generate the perception and imagery. In this talk, I will introduce our study of phantom limb pain [3] , that is controlled by MEG-BCI, and the development of a communication BCI using ECoG [4] , that enable the subject to visualize the contents of their mental imagery. And I would like to discuss how much we can control our cortical activities that represent our perception and mental imagery. These examples demonstrate that BCI is a promising tool to visualize and manipulate the perception and imagery and to understand our consciousness. References 1. Yanagisawa, T., Hirata, M., Saitoh, Y., Kishima, H., Matsushita, K., Goto, T., Fukuma, R., Yokoi, H., Kamitani, Y., and Yoshimine, T. (2012). Electrocorticographic control of a prosthetic arm in paralyzed patients. AnnNeurol 71, 353-361. 2. Yanagisawa, T., Fukuma, R., Seymour, B., Hosomi, K., Kishima, H., Shimizu, T., Yokoi, H., Hirata, M., Yoshimine, T., Kamitani, Y., et al. (2016). Induced sensorimotor brain plasticity controls pain in phantom limb patients. Nature communications 7, 13209. 3. Yanagisawa, T., Fukuma, R., Seymour, B., Tanaka, M., Hosomi, K., Yamashita, O., Kishima, H., Kamitani, Y., and Saitoh, Y. (2020). BCI training to move a virtual hand reduces phantom limb pain: A randomized crossover trial. Neurology 95, e417-e426. 4. Ryohei Fukuma, Takufumi Yanagisawa, Shinji Nishimoto, Hidenori Sugano, Kentaro Tamura, Shota Yamamoto, Yasushi Iimura, Yuya Fujita, Satoru Oshino, Naoki Tani, Naoko Koide-Majima, Yukiyasu Kamitani, Haruhiko Kishima (2022). Voluntary control of semantic neural representations by imagery with conflicting visual stimulation. arXiv arXiv:2112.01223.

SeminarNeuroscience

The functional connectome across temporal scales

Sepideh Sadaghiani
Assistant Professor, University of Illinois, USA
Mar 30, 2022

The view of human brain function has drastically shifted over the last decade, owing to the observation that the majority of brain activity is intrinsic rather than driven by external stimuli or cognitive demands. Specifically, all brain regions continuously communicate in spatiotemporally organized patterns that constitute the functional connectome, with consequences for cognition and behavior. In this talk, I will argue that another shift is underway, driven by new insights from synergistic interrogation of the functional connectome using different acquisition methods. The human functional connectome is typically investigated with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) that relies on the indirect hemodynamic signal, thereby emphasizing very slow connectivity across brain regions. Conversely, more recent methodological advances demonstrate that fast connectivity within the whole-brain connectome can be studied with real-time methods such as electroencephalography (EEG). Our findings show that combining fMRI with scalp or intracranial EEG in humans, especially when recorded concurrently, paints a rich picture of neural communication across the connectome. Specifically, the connectome comprises both fast, oscillation-based connectivity observable with EEG, as well as extremely slow processes best captured by fMRI. While the fast and slow processes share an important degree of spatial organization, these processes unfold in a temporally independent manner. Our observations suggest that fMRI and EEG may be envisaged as capturing distinct aspects of functional connectivity, rather than intermodal measurements of the same phenomenon. Infraslow fluctuation-based and rapid oscillation-based connectivity of various frequency bands constitute multiple dynamic trajectories through a shared state space of discrete connectome configurations. The multitude of flexible trajectories may concurrently enable functional connectivity across multiple independent sets of distributed brain regions.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Different hypotheses on the role of the PFC in solving simple cognitive tasks

Nathan Cloos (he/him)
Université Catholique de Louvain
Dec 2, 2021

Low-dimensional population dynamics can be observed in neural activity recorded from the prefrontal cortex (PFC) of subjects performing simple cognitive tasks. Many studies have shown that recurrent neural networks (RNNs) trained on the same tasks can reproduce qualitatively these state space trajectories, and have used them as models of how neuronal dynamics implement task computations. The PFC is also viewed as a conductor that organizes the communication between cortical areas and provides contextual information. It is then not clear what is its role in solving simple cognitive tasks. Do the low-dimensional trajectories observed in the PFC really correspond to the computations that it performs? Or do they indirectly reflect the computations occurring within the cortical areas projecting to the PFC? To address these questions, we modelled cortical areas with a modular RNN and equipped it with a PFC-like cognitive system. When trained on cognitive tasks, this multi-system brain model can reproduce the low-dimensional population responses observed in neuronal activity as well as classical RNNs. Qualitatively different mechanisms can emerge from the training process when varying some details of the architecture such as the time constants. In particular, there is one class of models where it is the dynamics of the cognitive system that is implementing the task computations, and another where the cognitive system is only necessary to provide contextual information about the task rule as task performance is not impaired when preventing the system from accessing the task inputs. These constitute two different hypotheses about the causal role of the PFC in solving simple cognitive tasks, which could motivate further experiments on the brain.

SeminarNeuroscience

Dysfunctional synaptic vesicle recycling – links to epilepsy

Mike Cousin
University of Edinburgh
Dec 1, 2021

Accurate and synchronous neurotransmitter release is essential for brain communication and occurs when neurotransmitter-containing synaptic vesicles (SVs) fuse to release their content in response to neuronal activity. Neurotransmission is sustained by the process of SV recycling, which generates SVs locally at the presynapse. Until relatively recently it was believed that most mutations in genes that were essential for SV recycling would be incompatible with life, due to this fundamental role. However, this is not the case, with mutations in essential genes for SV fusion, retrieval and recycling identified in individuals with epilepsy. This seminar will cover our laboratory’s progress in determining how genetic mutations in people with epilepsy translate into presynaptic dysfunction and ultimately into seizure activity. The principal focus of these studies will be in vitro investigations of, 1) the biological role of these gene products and 2) how their dysfunction impacts SV recycling, using live fluorescence imaging of genetically-encoded reporters. The gene products to be discussed in more detail will be the SV protein SV2A, the protein kinase CDKL5 and the translation repressor FMRP.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: A mechanism for inter-areal coherence through communication based on connectivity and oscillatory power

Marius Schneider
Ernst Strüngmann Institute for Neuroscience
Dec 1, 2021

Inter-areal coherence between cortical field-potentials is a widespread phenomenon and depends on numerous behavioral and cognitive factors. It has been hypothesized that inter-areal coherence reflects phase-synchronization between local oscillations and flexibly gates communication. We reveal an alternative mechanism, where coherence results from and is not the cause of communication, and naturally emerges as a consequence of the fact that spiking activity in a sending area causes post-synaptic inputs both in the same area and in other areas. Consequently, coherence depends in a lawful manner on oscillatory power and phase-locking in a sending area and inter-areal connectivity. We show that changes in oscillatory power explain prominent changes in fronto-parietal beta-coherence with movement and memory, and LGN-V1 gamma-coherence with arousal and visual stimulation. Optogenetic silencing of a receiving area and E/I network simulations demonstrate that afferent synaptic inputs rather than spiking entrainment are the main determinant of inter-areal coherence. These findings suggest that the unique spectral profiles of different brain areas automatically give rise to large-scale inter-areal coherence patterns that follow anatomical connectivity and continuously reconfigure as a function of behavior and cognition.

ePosterNeuroscience

Estimating flexible across-area communication with neurally-constrained RNNs

Joao Barbosa, Adrian Valente, Scot Brincat, Earl Miller, Srdjan Ostojic

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

The evolution of communication axes in the developing brain

Elizabeth Herbert, Ricardo Chirif Molina, Mattia Chini, Irina Pochinok, Ileana Hanganu-Opatz, Julijana Gjorgjieva

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

State-dependent population activity, dimensionality and communication in the visual cortex

Aitor Morales-Gregorio, Anno Kurth, Junji Ito, Alexander Kleinjohann, Frédéric Barthélemy, Thomas Brochier, Sonja Grün, Sacha van Albada

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Dynamic causal communication channels between neocortical areas

Mitra Javadzadeh,Joaquin Rapela,Maneesh Sahani,Sonja B. Hofer

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Flexible inter-areal computations through low-rank communication subspaces

Joao Barbosa,Srdjan Ostojic

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Flexible inter-areal computations through low-rank communication subspaces

Joao Barbosa,Srdjan Ostojic

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Mechanistic modeling of Drosophila neural population codes in natural social communication

Rich Pang,Christa Baker,Diego Pacheco,Jonathan Pillow,Mala Murthy

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Mechanistic modeling of Drosophila neural population codes in natural social communication

Rich Pang,Christa Baker,Diego Pacheco,Jonathan Pillow,Mala Murthy

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Modeling multi-region neural communication during decision making with recurrent switching dynamical systems

Orren Karniol-Tambour,David Zoltowski,Lucas Pinto,Efthymia Diamanti,David W. Tank,Carlos D. Brody,Jonathan Pillow

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Modeling multi-region neural communication during decision making with recurrent switching dynamical systems

Orren Karniol-Tambour,David Zoltowski,Lucas Pinto,Efthymia Diamanti,David W. Tank,Carlos D. Brody,Jonathan Pillow

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Selective V1-to-V4 communication of attended stimuli mediated by attentional effects in V1

Christini Katsanevaki,André Moraes Bastos,Hayriye Cagnan,Conrado Arturo Bosman,Karl John Friston,Pascal Fries

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Selective V1-to-V4 communication of attended stimuli mediated by attentional effects in V1

Christini Katsanevaki,André Moraes Bastos,Hayriye Cagnan,Conrado Arturo Bosman,Karl John Friston,Pascal Fries

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Social cues modulate circuit dynamics to control the choice between communication signals in flies

Afshin Khalili,Elsa Steinfath,Kimia Alizadeh,Adrian Palacios Muñoz,Jan Clemens

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Social cues modulate circuit dynamics to control the choice between communication signals in flies

Afshin Khalili,Elsa Steinfath,Kimia Alizadeh,Adrian Palacios Muñoz,Jan Clemens

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Coherence influences the dimensionality of communication subspaces

Shivang Rawat, David Heeger, Stefano Martiniani

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Discrete communication mediates effective regularization in recurrent neural networks

Jan Philipp Bauer, Jonathan Kadmon, Moritz Helias

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Inferring neural codes from natural behavior in fruit fly social communication

Rich Pang, Albert Lin, Christa Baker, William Bialek, Mala Murthy, Jonathan W. Pillow

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Population encoding and decoding of frontal cortex during natural communication in marmosets

Jingwen Li, Mikio Aoi, Vladimir Jovanovic, Cory Miller

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Brain state and visual stimulation differentially modulate inter-layer communication subspace in V1

Yuxuan Xue, Mitchell Morton, Anirvan Nandy, Monika Jadi

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Computation Within and Beyond the Brain - Uncovering Brain-Body-Wide Communication Networks through Imaging Cellular Activity of All Cells in a Vertebrate

Virginia Ruetten, Wei Zheng, Paul Tillberg, Guoqiang Yu, Maneesh Sahani, Misha Ahrens

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Neural subspace communication across motor cortices is organized via traveling waves

Hammad Khan, Om Kolhe, Meisam Habibimatin, Eduard Tanase, Krishna Jayant

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Overcoming non-identifiability issues in brain-wide communication models

Belle Liu, Jacob Sacks, Matthew Golub

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Beyond borders: Unveiling brain-periphery communication through the secretome

Romina Gisonno, Franco Luis Lombino, Gaia Novarino

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Characterization of astroglia-noradrenergic neuron communication in the locus coeruleus

Wei-Chen Hung, Hsiu-Wen Yang, Ming-Yuan Min

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Chemogenetic activation of Gq in microglia leads to deficits in synaptic plasticity and neuronal communication

Marie-Luise Brehme, Oana Constantin, Zhen Yuan, Fabio Morellini, Thomas Oertner

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Communication between the hippocampus, nucleus accumbens, and ventral tegmental area during learning and memory

Raphael Brito, Linda Kokou, Maxime Linard, Anna Aldanondo, Sara Simula, Ralitsa Todorova, Marco Pompili, Michaël Zugaro

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Communication through social touch in autism spectrum condition

Flavia Esposito, Håkan Olausson, Per Gustafsson, Rebecca Boehme, Sarah McIntyre

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Communication between the suprachiasmatic nucleus and the subparaventricular zone of the hypothalamus

Francesca Raffin, Oscar Ramirez Plascencia, Roberto De Luca, Patrick M. Fuller, Gerardo R. Biella, Elda Arrigoni

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Effect of glyphosate at acceptable daily intake dose on astrocytes-neurons communication

Debora Comai, Antonia Gurgone, Vita Cardinale, Giuseppe Chiantia, Luca Munaron, Maurizio Zibetti, Maurizio Giustetto

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Use of high-tech eye gaze augmentative and alternative communication system to enhance communication and quality of life in multiple sclerosis: A single case study

Sakshi Pal

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Hippocampus-cortex communication and global brain hemodynamics during hippocampal ripples observed with functional ultrasound imaging

Antoine Bergel, Marta Matei, Sophie Pezet, Adrien Peyrache, Karim Benchenane, Mickaël Tanter

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Inter-brain synchronization in face-to-face and online group communication

Kohei Sakaki, Ryuta Kawashima

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Locked-up lingo: Unveiling spatial separation-induced vocal communication in mice

Daniel Breslav, Virginia Baatz, Johanna Kube, Ursula Koch, Thorsten Becker

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

A MATLAB-based deep learning tool for fast call classification and interaction in vocal communication

Kathrin Kugler, Antoni Woss, Jimmy Lapierre, Uwe Firzlaff

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

An obesity-associated switch in vagal gut-brain communication modulates feeding behavior

Leonie Cabot, Juliet Erlenbeck-Dinkelmann, Diba Borgmann, Lara Kern, Thomas Wunderlich, Henning Fenselau

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Physical activity sensitizes vagal gut-brain communication underlying feeding control

Diba Borgmann, Dylan Belmont-Rausch, Leonie Cabot, Paula Sanchis Tortosa, Cansu Tokgöz, Heiko Backes, Claus Brandt, Bente Klarlund Pedersen, Tune H Pers, Henning Fenselau

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Role of the cerebello-prefrontal communication in the temporal prediction of events

Pierre Le Cabec, Federica Lareno-Faccini, Mathieu Pasquet, Dominique Ciocca, Anne Giersch

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

The role of the X-linked cyclin dependent kinase like 5 (CDKL5) gene in extracellular vesicle-mediated cell-to-cell communication

Antonia Gurgone, Vita Cardinale, Debora Comai, Giuseppe Chiantia, Riccardo Pizzo, Francesca Anselmi, Andrea Lauria, Salvatore Oliviero, Maurizio Giustetto

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Twitch-related cerebro-cerebellar communication in sleeping mice

Staf Bauer, Chris De Zeeuw, Cathrin Canto

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Unveiling the role of callosal axons mediating the interhemispheric communication of the barrel cortex

Alicia Alonso-Andres, Roberto Montanari, Javier Alegre-Cortés, Jorge Cabrera-Moreno, Ismael Navarro, Cristina García-Frigola, María Sáez, Ramón Reig

FENS Forum 2024

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