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FIRE-PF: Developing and Testing a Trauma-Informed Alcohol Intervention to Enhance Mental Health in Firefighters
PROJECT SUMMARY Alcohol use and hazardous drinking are ubiquitous among firefighters in the United states and is associated with significant physical and mental health risks for this population. Due to the nature of their work, firefighters experience substantially higher rates of trauma exposure and are subsequently at greater risk of developing specific mental health conditions compared to the general population, particularly trauma-related psychopathology (e.g., posttraumatic stress). Hazardous drinking and posttraumatic stress frequently co-occur among firefighters, leading to poorer health outcomes compared to either condition alone. Despite this elevated risk, firefighters often lack access to tailored, empirically supported interventions, and no existing mental health interventions address hazardous drinking in a trauma-informed framework for this at-risk population. Personalized feedback interventions (PFIs) are a promising approach that could address this gap. By delivering brief, patient-centered feedback on drinking behaviors and perceptions within the context of trauma and occupational stress, PFIs aim to reduce problematic drinking behaviors and stigma related to coping-orientated drinking and improve stress management strategies. PFIs can be brief, cost-effective, and easily disseminated in a format accessible to large groups, making them a strong candidate for use with firefighters who face critical barriers to engaging in traditional mental health programs. This innovative study aims to develop a single-session, trauma-informed, online PFI tailored specifically for firefighters, using a comprehensive, three-phase approach to address three primary aims. The Development Phase involves developing, adapting, and enhancing a trauma-informed PFI by gathering qualitative feedback from firefighters (N = 45) and using an iterative, rapid user-centered design approach to ensure the intervention is engaging for firefighters as well as relevant and aligned with fire service culture. The Evaluation Phase will assess the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary impact of the PFI in a mixed-methods longitudinal open trial with firefighters (N = 50), with a focus on the intervention's usability, delivery, and influence on drinking behaviors. The Implementation Planning Phase will involve qualitative and quantitative assessments with fire service leaders (N = 15) to identify implementation barriers and shape future research testing the implementation process for the intervention and inform future strategies for resource integration and fostering sustainable community partnerships. This proposal will equip Dr. Lebeaut with essential training for an independent research career, including training in (1) qualitative methodologies, (2) user-centered design, (3) developing, adapting, and enhancing trauma-informed alcohol interventions, and (4) developing collaborative relationships with community partners in the fire service. The proposed study will directly inform a future R01 to evaluate the intervention’s efficacy and scalability and support the development of a firefighter-focused research program.
HIV-1 Matrix and Envelope Protein Interactions
It is important to characterize how HIV-1 proteins fulfill their functions in order to develop new approaches for curtailing the AIDS epidemic. One of the remaining frontiers of HIV-1 research concerns the mechanisms by which the HIV-1 matrix (MA) and envelope (Env) proteins collaborate with each other to ensure the assembly of infectious viruses. The HIV-1 MA protein directs the delivery of precursor Gag (PrGag) proteins to the plasma membranes (PMs) of infected cells, and drives the formation of lipid raft-like, liquid ordered (Lo) membrane domains. This membrane reorganization attracts a number of proteins that favor lipid raft-type microdomains. Such proteins appear to assemble into virus particles as innocent bystanders, and this appears to be how Env proteins that carry cytoplasmic tail deletions (CT) can be incorporated into virions. In contrast, wild type (WT) Env proteins additionally require an interaction with MA proteins to assemble into viruses. This is most easily understood in the context of the lattice that MA proteins construct at the PMs of infected cells. In particular, multiple lines of evidence imply that the CTs of WT Env proteins are trapped by MA lattices in immature, assembling virus particles, and then are released after assembled viruses are processed into their mature forms. Despite a seeming consensus on the MA-Env interaction steps, there are a number of very significant unknowns. Using our recent and preliminary results as a foundation, and taking advantage of the unique expertise of our collaborators, we propose the characterization of WT and mutant MA lattices, and of interactions of MA and Env with each other, and with membrane lipids. Our results will help clarify how MA and Env cooperate; they will illuminate aspects of host cell protein-membrane interactions; and they will foster the development of new approaches to intefere with HIV-1 replication.
Communication and Hospice Online with Optimal Support and Engagement (CHOOSE)
Abstract Drawing upon the principles of social identity theory, existing literature, and our initial findings from family caregiver (FCG) online support groups (OSGs), our objective is to identify fundamental facilitator communication strategies that promote safe communication engage participants, and strengthen mechanisms of action (MOAs) within OSGs, ultimately enhancing health outcomes for hospice FCGs. Our pioneering initiative, Communication and Hospice Online with Optimal Support and Engagement (CHOOSE) is backed by compelling evidence highlighting the critical role of facilitator communication in reinforcing MOAs (a shared identity, social support, and social networks) in OSGs. Preliminary research underscores the transformative power of these MOAs in improving health outcomes for FCGs, yet current studies lack generalizability and statistical robustness. CHOOSE represents the first major, multisite, rigorously designed, and theoretically informed OSG intervention explicitly tailored for hospice FCGs of cancer patients. We aim to strengthen MOAs to enhance FCG well-being, reduce depression and anxiety, improve quality of life, and diminish loneliness. By advancing this critical research, we seek to provide a well-founded, evidence-based solution to the urgent needs of FCGs, making a significant impact on their health and well-being. We have outlined the following study aims: Aim 1. Determine the effect of the CHOOSE intervention on FCGs’ health outcomes compared to usual OSGs and usual hospice care. Aim 2. Examine direct and mediational relationships between CHOOSE participation, MOAs, and health outcomes. Aim 3. Explore the relationship between facilitator communication strategies and the FCG experience of the MOA to allow for future calibration of the intervention 1
Mentoring investigators in patient-oriented research on HIV and public health
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Despite marked progress in treatment and prevention, HIV remains a significant public health threat in the US and globally. Innovative strategies are needed to effectively deploy interventions and reduce HIV incidence, which requires a sustained and committed workforce. Dr. Dennis is an infectious disease physician and researcher at the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill, Division of Infectious Diseases. She seeks the protected time of the K24 award to ensure adequate time and effort to provide mentorship in patient- oriented HIV research focused on applied public health strategies. Dr. Dennis has a track record of performing high-quality patient-oriented research supported by independent funding. Her research bridges basic, clinical, and epidemiologic science by using HIV-1 molecular epidemiology and phylogenetics to understand HIV transmission at the population level and to use this information to direct prevention. She has expanded this work to optimize strategies to detect and respond to HIV networks using mixed-methods approaches. The overall goal of this work is to uncover the links between these sub-epidemics - which are overlapping sub- epidemics defined by risk groups, geography, social interaction - to facilitate the design of timely, effective interventions. The research specific aims are 1) Investigate HIV transmission networks using molecular epidemiology and phylodynamics (R01AI135970), 2) Evaluate uptake of HIV treatment and prevention services in public health with social network approaches (supported by R01AI169602), and 3) Pilot a network-based characterization of early syphilis infections to inform strategies to increase the uptake of injectable antiretrovirals for HIV treatment and prevention (supported by K24). With the support of the K24, she will leverage resources at UNC to support mentorship and professional development to strengthen new directions (implementation science, community-engaged research). Dr. Dennis is deeply committed to expanding her mentorship and dedicated to fostering diverse mentees with lived experiences that are critical for sustaining the HIV workforce. Dr. Dennis is Co-Director of the UNC Center for AIDS Research (CFAR) Scientific Working Group which focuses on Ending the HIV Epidemic efforts in North and South Carolina. She has strong institutional support and a multidisciplinary team of advisors, including the UNC CFAR, and is an advisor on the UNC T32 HIV/STI institutional training program. She has collaborated for the past 10 years with NC Division of Public Health and with multiple investigators and trainees at the UNC Gillings School of Public Health. She is active in the UNC Infectious Diseases Fellowship program, providing clinical and research mentorship to numerous ID fellows. Her clinical activity provides practical grounding and relevance in patient-oriented research. The K24 will provide 50% of Dr. Dennis’ salary and additional funds to support mentees’ research. The proposed research is timely and aligned with the National HIV/AIDS Strategy and will support the protected time needed to mentor the next-generation of investigators in HIV patient-oriented research.
TARGETING VAV1 SCAFFOLDING AND ENZYMATIC FUNCTIONS IN MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS VIA BRAIN-PENETRANT MOLECULAR GLUE DEGRADERS
Abstract Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a chronic autoimmune disease of the central nervous system (CNS) with significant unmet medical needs, as current therapies offer limited efficacy against neurodegeneration and can have considerable side effects. VAV1, a key signaling protein predominantly expressed in hematopoietic cells, plays a crucial role in T and B lymphocyte activation and is genetically and functionally validated as a therapeutic target in MS. This project proposes an innovative approach to target VAV1 through the development of brain-penetrant molecular glue (MG) degraders. Distinct from Proteolysis Targeting Chimeras (PROTACs) that require a high- affinity ligand for the target protein, molecular glues can mediate degradation by engaging specific protein surface features, such as loops, without the necessity of a dedicated binder. These degraders aim to induce the proteasomal degradation of VAV1, thereby ablating both its enzymatic and scaffolding functions, which are implicated in neuroinflammation. The research strategy involves three primary aims: 1) To optimize lead VAV1 molecular glue degraders for enhanced potency, brain penetration, and favorable pharmacokinetic properties using advanced computational modeling and medicinal chemistry. 2) To evaluate the in vivo efficacy of the optimized VAV1 degraders in preclinical mouse models of MS (Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis - EAE), assessing their ability to ameliorate disease severity, reduce CNS inflammation and demyelination, and engage VAV1 in the CNS. 3) To investigate the Structure-Activity Relationship (SAR) of a novel non-canonical VAV1 degron motif, aiming to expand the understanding of molecular glue-mediated degradation and enable the rational design of degraders for other challenging therapeutic targets. Successful completion of this project is expected to deliver preclinical candidate VAV1 degraders with the potential for a novel, effective, and safer treatment paradigm for MS. Furthermore, the insights gained into non-canonical degron recognition will significantly advance the field of targeted protein degradation, broadening the scope of "undruggable" targets for therapeutic intervention in various diseases.
Assessing the Efficacy of Mindfulness Apps
PROJECT SUMMARY: Rates of depression continue to rise and the mental health impact of COVID-19 has only accelerated trends. While mental health apps, specifically mindfulness apps, are not a panacea, they are popular tools that millions are turning to today for easy access, affordable, and low-stigma help. But increased reliance on mindfulness apps has not been supported by rigorous scientific evidence exemplified by few studies employing appropriate control conditions. Thus, this research is designed to focus on using 100% remote but robust methodology to assess the efficacy of mindfulness apps by applying a novel precision medicine framework. Our study first assesses the impact of the Digital Working Alliance by matching people with depression with a mindfulness app that may better support their personalized needs. We will compare those randomized to the to this matching condition to a digital placebo to better evaluate the efficacy of these mindfulness apps. For the first six weeks, participants will be asked to use the mindfulness app or digital placebo daily, and if not engaged, will receive reminders, allowing for the analysis of clinical outcomes during ideal usage patterns. For an additional six weeks, participants will be asked to use the app or digital placebo naturally, allowing for the elucidation of naturalistic usage patterns and evaluation if these usage patterns impact clinical outcomes. Across the entire study, we will capture smartphone-based digital phenotypes of behaviors (eg sleep, step, screen time), environments (eg home time, greenspace exposure), and symptoms (longitudinal ecological momentary assessment) to create personalized and predictive models of response that can be utilized to better understand factors impacting the efficacy of mindfulness apps, and in the future, better tailor apps to each person.
Behavioral, Implementation & Community Sciences Core
PROJECT SUMMARY: BEHAVIORAL, IMPLEMENTATION, AND COMMUNITY SCIENCES (BICS) CORE Like many US jurisdictions, New York City (NYC) is not on track to achieve 2030 End the Epidemic (EHE) 95- 95-95 goals. By the end of 2023, 95% of people with HIV (PWH) in NYC had been diagnosed with HIV, but only 88% of those were in HIV care, and of those, only 80% were virally suppressed. Further, in 2022, only 40% of individuals estimated to need PrEP were prescribed it. Highly efficacious biomedical HIV treatment and prevention interventions have the potential to end the HIV epidemic, but only if they are accessed and used. Yet, behavioral, social, and structural determinants of real-world adoption as well as population-level impact of HIV prevention, care, and treatment innovations have not been addressed adequately for individuals or communities. Meeting EHE goals will depend on behavioral, implementation, and community sciences research that identifies factors contributing to these outcomes, informs interventions to address them, and ensures that communities affected by HIV are engaged throughout the research process. The Behavioral, Implementation, and Community Sciences (BICS) Core will facilitate such rigorous, innovative research by Columbia University (CU) and Weill Cornell Medicine (WCM) investigators – particularly early career investigators (ECIs) and those new to HIV research – to help achieve EHE 2030 goals. The BICS Core will support the use of relevant theories, methods, and analytic approaches to advance the integration of context-specific behavioral, implementation, and community sciences perspectives across the research continuum – from basic research through scale-up and sustainment of evidence-based interventions. The Core has three Aims: (1) Behavioral science: To support CFAR users in developing, selecting, and integrating behavioral science methodologies across the research continuum; (2) Implementation science: To support CFAR users in designing and conducting implementation studies and related health services research and (3) Community science: To facilitate rigorous community-based participatory research across the research continuum to strengthen and sustain stakeholder engagement that will optimize research translation and impact. Led by Core Co-Directors Robert Remien and Bruce Schackman and Core Associate Directors Delivette Castor, Shashi Kapadia, and Justin Knox, the BICS Core will use multiple approaches to achieve each of these aims, including substantive scientific consultations on proposed or ongoing research; access to resources and tools; and seminars and educational activities that promote integration of these methods into EHE research. The Core, thus, will support CU-WCM CFAR investigators and outside collaborators – including ECIs and investigators new to HIV research – to advance local and national EHE goals.
Neural circuits for disinhibition in the cerebellum
ABSTRACT Our long-term goal is to understand how the cerebellum adapts and improves movements in response to motor errors. A critical component of this process is signaling from olivary climbing fibers that, by providing strong excitatory drive onto Purkinje cells, induces long-term synaptic plasticity to instantiate corrective adjustments in motor behavior. However, this signaling process is tightly regulated by molecular layer interneurons (MLIs). By strongly inhibiting Purkinje cells, MLIs oppose climbing fiber-driven excitation and gate the induction of corrective plasticity. Thus, for error-driven climbing fiber-induced plasticity and learning to occur effectively, Purkinje cells must undergo disinhibition through the suppression of MLI-mediated input. Notably, MLI ensembles are composed of several subtypes and have a highly structured interconnectivity and are responsive to convergent climbing fiber inputs, suggesting that climbing fiber synchrony- whose functional significance is poorly understood- can selectively engage MLI networks to alter the state of Purkinje cell inhibition. This engagement may balance inhibition and excitation of Purkinje cells during motor errors, creating a circuit mechanism conducive for the acquisition of adaptive learning. The objective of this proposal is to determine how distinct MLI circuits are organized to modulate Purkinje cell excitability through disinhibition in a context-dependent manner, enabling plasticity and learning in response to motor errors. We will employ functional recordings, circuit-targeted activity manipulations, and behavioral analysis to reveal how error-driven instructive signaling emerges from these circuits. In the first aim, we will use in vivo high-density electrophysiology to map functional interactions among MLIs, climbing fibers, and Purkinje cells in the flocculus during the vestibulo-ocular reflex. We will test whether, during motor errors, climbing fibers synchronize their firing to selectively engage disinhibition of Purkinje cells through MLI subtypes in adapting versus non-adapting contexts. In the second aim, we will combine acute slice recordings and molecular anatomy to define direct versus spillover climbing fiber synapses onto MLI subtypes. We will identify synaptic markers and measure climbing-fiber-evoked currents in MLI subtypes, revealing how structural connectivity supports rapid, subtype-specific circuit engagement. In the third aim, we will determine how long-range inputs to the inferior olive, specifically inhibitory projections from the vestibular nuclei, dynamically tune climbing fiber synchrony in vivo and thereby learning through differential engagement of disinhibitory MLI networks. Using functional recording and optogenetic manipulation during the vestibulo- ocular reflex performance, we will establish causal links between climbing fiber synchrony, MLI network state, and adaptive behavior. By fully understanding the logic of instructive signaling, emergent from cerebellar circuit organization and behavioral engagement, we will advance our knowledge of cerebellum-dependent learning processes and provide broader insights into the neural mechanisms of learning and adaptation more generally.
Biostatistics, Ethics, Data Management, Research Design and Community Engagement(BEDRoC) Core
Biostatistics, Ethics, Data Management, Research Design and Community Engagement (BEDRoC) Core Abstract The Biostatistics, Ethics, Data Management, Research Design and Community Engagement (BEDRoC) Core will promote and support aging with serious illness science for the Center for Aging with Serious Illness (CASI). BEDRoC will provide expertise in statistical design and analysis, research ethics, and community engagement for all components of CASI. The Core's services will support the Research Project Leaders (RPLs) and Pilot Project Leaders (PPLs) and build capacity for the broader Dartmouth Health aging research community to conduct rigorous, impactful research to inform and improve care delivery for older adults with serious illness. BEDRoC includes expertise in mixed methods approaches that feature both quantitative and qualitative research methods to provide a comprehensive understanding of the complex issues related to aging with serious illness, ethical approaches to consent in research trials, multidimensional quality of life measurement, and innovative modeling approaches to studying clinical decision making. BEDRoC faculty have actively collaborated in study planning with each RPL, serving as both mentors and experienced collaborators on the three different projects involving decision aids for patients considering carotid revascularization, a patient-reported outcome-directed referral intervention to improve referral rates to palliative care services, and a pilot trial for a virtual/home-based exercise and a weight management osteoarthritis treatment program in older patients with osteoarthritis and multimorbidity. The BEDRoC Core will further support CASI by establishing an innovative training curriculum with workshops, tutorials, resources, and services, offered locally to RPLs and PPLs and extended to regional and national investigators in the IDeA network. In addition to their primary individual project mentors, each RPL will receive training and guidance from BEDRoC leaders through co-mentoring and RPL-focused works-in-progress sessions. BEDRoC will also provide access to a comprehensive inventory of patient-reported outcomes instruments, which are crucial in geriatric research to provide validated measures of health status, quality of life and functional ability outcomes. BEDRoC will coordinate with the Administrative and Mentoring Core to integrate community advisors in guiding their activities in support of the RPLs. BEDRoC will also enable research collaboration with and within the larger Dartmouth and IDeA investigator communities. The BEDRoC Core will build capacity for aging research and disseminate new resources to RPLs and PPLs, including innovative solutions created through robust community engagement. These services, resources, and solutions will ensure all projects operate in a cohesive, complementary, and collaborative manner to study approaches to improving the health of older patients with serious illness.
Circulating extracellular vesicles as functional indicators of maternal mental and physical health in pregnancy and postpartum
Women with high levels of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are at significantly greater risk for negative health outcomes in pregnancy and postpartum, including gestational diabetes, PTB, and depressed mood. However, we still lack biomarkers or a sufficient understanding of causal mechanisms. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are one of the most dynamic and abundant biological signals secreted into maternal circulation, largely produced by the placenta – where levels increase 4-5-fold during pregnancy. Similarly, removal of the placenta at delivery produces a dramatic drop in maternal EV concentration. Across species, we and others have identified significant EV changes during pregnancy associated with homeostatic regulation, including glucose and glucocorticoid levels, supporting key roles for EVs in maternal health. However, longitudinal studies in human pregnancy and postpartum have not been conducted. We know little as to the mechanisms controlling EV secretion or the roles for EVs in maternal pregnancy and postpartum health. Our decade’s long work identified the X-linked gene, O-glycosyltransferase (OGT), in mouse and human placenta as a master gage of the maternal milieu, where OGT regulation of annexin A1 (AA1) is key to EV cargo loading and secretion from the placenta. We recently reported that placental OGT levels positively correlate with maternal EV concentration. How this association may contribute toward postpartum health, including regulating maternal stress physiology and mood in humans is not known. We hypothesize that increased ACEs, similar to stress in preclinical models, are negatively associated with a cell’s ability to secrete EVs important to maintain homeostasis in the face of the challenges of pregnancy and postpartum, producing an increasingly unhealthy state. Therefore, the goals of these proposed studies in both mice and humans are as follows: 1) To identify cellular mechanisms involved in EV secretion important to maternal health outcomes utilizing the placenta as a tool to genetically target OGT in mice and examine maternal homeostatic control related to EV concentration and composition during pregnancy; 2) To examine the functional ability for a dynamic elevation in maternal EV concentration to improve homeostatic regulation in pregnancy and postpartum using chemogenetic activation (DREADDs) of placenta trophoblast cells in pregnancy, and by EV transfer by tail vein injection postpartum; and 3) To examine in women changes in maternal EVs in a longitudinal pregnancy and postpartum study in association with maternal glucose and cortisol changes, we will examine markers of physical (glucose challenge test), HPA stress (hair cortisol & stress- stimulated salivary cortisol) and psychological (Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, Perceived Stress Scale) health across pregnancy and the postpartum period in 150 healthy women with varying degrees of exposure to ACEs as measured using the ACE Questionnaire (ACE-Q).
ATPase Chromatin Remodeling Complexes as Modulators of HIV-1 Latency and Therapeutic Targets
Abstract Significance: HIV persists in long-lived CD4⁺ T cell reservoirs despite suppressive ART, as integrated proviruses remain poised for reactivation. Chromatin remodeling is a central barrier to durable silencing, yet most studies have focused on SWI/SNF family members. The roles of non- SWI/SNF remodelers remain poorly defined, limiting our ability to rationally design host-directed “block-and-lock” cure strategies. Our unbiased shRNA screen of all 16 human remodeler ATPases identified EP400, CHD1, and CHD9 as repressors and INO80A, SMARCA5, and CHD2 as activators, establishing chromatin remodeling as a key determinant of HIV latency. Innovation: Our prior studies revealed that the p400 complex regulates HIV transcription through dual mechanisms: directly, by engaging Tat via the DMAP1 subunit to block Tat-TAR RNA interactions and restrict p-TEFb recruitment; and indirectly, by altering host transcriptional programs that control T cell activation states. Building on this mechanistic precedent and methodological platform, we now focus on INO80A, SMARCA5, CHD1, and CHD2, remodelers from distinct ATPase families that govern Tat-independent checkpoints at initiation, pause release, and elongation. Methodologically, we will apply TurboID-ChAP-MS (locus-specific proteomics), BEM-seq (single-nucleosome mapping), and degron-mediated acute depletion with ATPase-dead rescue to interrogate remodeler function with unprecedented resolution. Approach: Aim 1 will define the ATPase requirement and transcriptional checkpoints regulated by INO80A, SMARCA5, CHD1, and CHD2 using degron/CRISPR perturbations, ChIP-seq, nascent RNA profiling, and nucleosome mapping. Aim 2 will characterize remodeler-specific complexes and Tat dependence at the HIV promoter via TurboID proximity labeling integrated with chromatin affinity purification-mass spectrometry. Aim 3 will test combinatorial perturbations in Jurkat and primary CD4⁺ T cell latency models, including ART-suppressed donor cells, to identify synergistic “block-and-lock” strategies that enforce durable proviral silencing. Impact: By defining remodeler-specific mechanisms at discrete transcriptional checkpoints and leveraging their enzymatic, druggable activities, this work will establish chromatin remodeling as a therapeutic axis for durable HIV suppression and functional cure.
Development of an at-home weight-shifting balance game with musical biofeedback for older adults
Reducing fall risk is a dire societal need that requires interventions that over-prepare individuals to perform maneuvers important to daily mobility. Falling is often caused by improper weight shifting, and interventions that focus on developing weight-shifting abilities have shown improvements in clinical balance outcomes, including reduced fall incidence. Interventions that combine challenges to the cognitive and motor systems may be necessary to reduce fall-risk. Our central hypothesis is that leveraging gamification and “musical biofeedback” will improve balance abilities through practicing weight-shifting skills with increased cognitive and physical demands. Musical biofeedback conveys biological sensor data from the participant through specific musical sound parameters in real-time. Of particular interest in the proposal is the applicability to use musical biofeedback to train weight-shifting skills in a musical game. The goal is to develop a wearable sensor system that can be used at-home to practice and develop balance skills, while supporting cognitive engagement and motivation to adhere to exercise goals. To start, we are focusing on older adult end-users who typically have home exercise programs focused on weight-shifting. However, in the future, many other populations can benefit from this technology. In this Trailblazer award, the PI is leveraging her background in studying complex human maneuvers, developing musical biofeedback for older adults, and in algorithm development for mHealth sensors. The transdisciplinary team includes expertise in engineering, gamified rehabilitation technologies, home exercise programs, psychology of aging, and music. In the proposed research, our goals are to evaluate responses to the musical biofeedback game (Aim 1), validate the mHealth sensor system (Aim 2), and phenotype the gameplay behavior of fallers vs. non-fallers (Aim 3), relative to their baseline characteristics (Sub-Aim 3). Our long-term goal is for a variety of people to improve their balance control patterns while supporting and building their self-efficacy. We envision users, including older adults, training with musical biofeedback to safely (and enjoyably) prepare themselves to ambulate in their community – improving and preserving their mobility. The proposed research will pioneer using an emerging clinical technology – musical biofeedback – to train balance during weight-shifting tasks. The proposed research innovates how musical biofeedback, gamification, and focusing on weight-shifting and turns in balance training can be leveraged to challenge cognitive and physical body systems in fall-risk populations. By developing new therapy options and better understanding responses relative to baseline characteristics, this research improves clinical practices to reduce fall risk and deepens our understanding of dynamic balance control. Finally, the results of the proposed research will have translational impacts to help other fall-risk groups.
From Evidence to Scale: Implementation Science and Simulation Modeling to Transform HIV-Hypertension Care Integration
Project Summary As HIV programs mature, cardiovascular disease (CVD) is becoming a leading contributor to morbidity and mortality. Integration of HIV and CVD prevention, with a focus on hypertension–the most prevalent and impactful modifiable CVD risk factor, presents an opportunity to build more robust primary health systems that improve health outcomes and advance health system sustainability–a key priority for the U.S. PEPFAR program. Using an expanded version of the HIV Synthesis microsimulation model—which incorporates hypertension and CVD outcomes—and data from the NHLBI-funded HLB-SIMPLe consortium’s cluster randomized trials in six African countries, we will evaluate the health effects, cost-effectiveness, and scalability of implementation strategies to promote HIV-hypertension integration to improve health outcomes for people with and without HIV under a range of health system constraints. Our first aim is to develop and validate an additional layer to HIV Synthesis model that accounts for health system constraints and implementation strategies for integration of HIV and hypertension care. This will include parameterization using data from the WHO Health System Building Blocks framework and empiric data from trials in the HLB-SIMPLe consortium. Our second aim is to evaluate the health effects and cost-effectiveness of implementation strategies for HIV-hypertension integration to identify the most effective and scalable approaches for settings with varying health system constraints representative of conditions in west, east, and southern Africa. Analyses will include scenarios targeting people with HIV and scaling up to the broader population. Our third aim focuses on engaging policymakers and program managers to promote uptake of findings through dissemination workshops and interactive modeling tools, with tailored model outputs to specific health system contexts. Using qualitative interviews with policymakers, we will use the Weiss schema for conceptualizing research utilization to assess model impact on decision-making. We will use the Translational Science Benefits Model, to capture, classify and conceptualize the clinical, policy, economic, and operational impacts and identify barriers and facilitators to use in country programs focused on HIV, hypertension, and related NCDs. The overarching project goal is to inform evidence-based, cost-effective implementation strategies for integrating NCD care into HIV platforms, improving population health outcomes in Africa and advancing implementation science through generalizable knowledge about the intersection of implementation strategies, health system strength, and service integration.
SUPPORT SERVICES FOR THE PREVENTION AND TREATMENT THROUGH A COMPREHENSIVE CARE CONTINUUM FOR HIV-AFFECTED ADOLESCENTS IN RESOURCE CONSTRAINED SETTINGS IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE NETWORK
Support Services for the Prevention and Treatment through a Comprehensive Care Continuum for HIV-affected Adolescents in Resource Constrained Settings Implementation Science Network (PATC3H-IN) (UG1/UM2) Program The Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) requires support for logistical and operational coordination, website and communication management, analytic and data management, infrastructure for emerging research, regulatory, and monitoring of research activities for the Prevention and Treatment through a Comprehensive Care Continuum for HIV-affected Adolescents in Resource Constrained Settings Implementation Science Network (PATC3H-IN) (UG1/UM2) Program. The NICHD and partner NIH Institutes anticipate funding 8 PATC3H-IN UG1 awards in Asia and throughout sub-Saharan Africa in 2023 through a cooperative agreement mechanism for interventions of high public health significance: The prevention of new HIV infections among adolescents at risk, and the identification of, linkage to and retention in care of, and long-term viral suppression among youth living with HIV in low-to-middle income countries with high HIV burden. The PATC3H-IN network will expand and/or improve on successes achieved by its predecessor, PATC3H, to new geographic settings and/or risk populations and stimulate much needed implementation science (IS) research in the prevention of new HIV infections among adolescents at risk and the identification of, and linkage and retention to care of and long-term viral suppression among youth living with HIV in low-to-middle income countries (LMICs). PATC3H-IN will establish a network of investigators with multidisciplinary expertise on the youth-specific PHCC and in IS research, whose mission will be to evaluate promising prevention innovations contextually and developmentally tailored for HIV uninfected at-risk youth, and treatment and care interventions for youth living with HIV which have demonstrated efficacy and/or effectiveness in adolescent or adult populations and to translate them into public health practices. The structure of PATC3H-IN will consist of multiple interdependent functional components: (1) Five Clinical Research Centers (CRC) awarded through the UG1 grant mechanism; (2) one Implementation Science Coordinating Center (ISCC) to be awarded through a UM2 grant mechanism in 2024; and (3) a Scientific Leadership Committee (SLC). The CRCs will conduct clinical research and clinical trials, including implementation, effectiveness, and hybrid implementation-effectiveness studies at their 8-or more participating Clinical Research Performance Sites (CRPS). The ISCC will establish infrastructure to support research education and capacity building across PATC3H-IN, as well as infrastructure for stakeholder engagement in and dissemination of findings from PATC3H-IN and advanced statistical modeling support across PATC3H-IN. The ISCC will also provide infrastructure for conducting foundational research to support the work of clinical sites, including possible modeling studies and translation projects, as well as national surveys, and/or systematic collection and analysis of relevant policies and laws. Lastly, the SLC will be responsible for PATC3H-IN governance, oversight, and coordination, and will develop and implement the network research agenda, convening working groups as needed, prioritizing emerging research projects, efficiently managing the development of clinical protocols, implementing and completing clinical trials, and ensuring timely publication and communication of results.
Structure-Based Development of Nucleotide-Competing Inhibitors Against HIV-1 and LINE-1 Reverse Transcriptases
PROJECT SUMMARY Reverse transcriptases (RTs) from retroviruses and endogenous retroelements are essential polymerases that catalyze RNA- and DNA-dependent DNA synthesis. Nucleoside inhibitors (NIs) remain central to HIV-1 therapy and are also used against other viral infections and in cancer, but toxicity, limited selectivity, pharmacokinetic (PK) liabilities, and the emergence of drug resistance highlight the need for alternative RT inhibitor mechanisms. In contrast to NIs, nucleotide-competing inhibitors (NCIs) block the polymerase active site without requiring incorporation into nucleic acids. Structural studies by PI Ruiz have defined the NCI mechanism of action for HIV- 1 RT and revealed conserved binding modules shared across multiple polymerase families. These advances now enable rational discovery of improved NCIs. LINE-1 (L1) ORF2 RT is an emerging therapeutic target in cancer, autoimmunity, and aging, yet NIs are the only inhibitors known to act against L1 RT. Notably, the NCI-binding region is structurally similar between HIV-1 RT and L1 RT, suggesting that NCI recognition principles may extend across these two biologically distinct polymerases. This R21 seeks to establish proof-of-concept for NCI development against both enzymes. Aim 1 will discover and structurally optimize NCIs targeting HIV-1 RT by combining binding modules from known NCI chemotypes and determining their biochemical activity and co-crystal structures. Aim 2 will determine whether HIV-1 RT NCI principles translate to L1 RT by solving L1 RT/nucleic acid/NCI structures, evaluating enzymatic inhibition, and applying AI-based structure prediction and generative design to propose L1-specific NCI candidates. Cellular retrotransposition assays will test mechanism of action. Aim 3 will develop a fragment library tailored to protein–nucleic acid interfaces and perform fragment screening of HIV-1 and L1 RT/nucleic acid complexes to identify additional chemotypes that engage the NCI binding region. Successful completion will yield NCI scaffolds and mechanistic insights applicable to HIV-1 RT and L1 RT, define structural principles governing NCI recognition across two evolutionarily related polymerases, and establish new avenues for RT inhibitor development. The PI is highly qualified to lead this work, with extensive expertise in RT structural biology, drug design, and fragment-based discovery.
Enteric virus-induced innate immune responses in oral tolerance
Project Summary The human gut must constantly balance between defending against harmful microbe, including virus infections, and tolerating harmless substances, like food. One important immune process called oral tolerance helps prevent the immune system from overreacting to dietary proteins such as gluten. When this tolerance breaks down, known as loss of oral tolerance (LOT), it can lead to celiac disease, where the body mounts an immune attack against gluten. Viruses that infect the gut, known as enteric viruses, can disturb the intestinal immune homeostasis and contribute to gastrointestinal diseases. Our research has found that one such virus, the Type 1 Lang (T1L) strain of reovirus, capable of infecting human and mice, can induce LOT to gluten. We discovered that T1L triggers a type of inflammatory cell death called necroptosis in intestinal epithelial cells. This cell death sends danger signals to dendritic cells (DCs) presenting dietary antigens, including gluten to T cells. These signals appear to shift DCs from a tolerance-promoting mode to one that drives inflammation and gluten-specific TH1 responses, a hallmark of celiac disease. We believe this process begins when the virus produces a specific form of RNA called Z-RNA, which is sensed by a host protein called ZBP1, triggering necroptosis and inflammation. Our research aims to understand this pathway in detail. Aim 1 will investigate how ZBP1 detects viral Z-RNA and induces necroptosis in intestinal epithelial cells. Aim 2 will examine how this necroptosis leads to LOT and will test whether blocking or engaging the pathway can prevent or induce inflammatory dietary antigen-specific TH1 immune responses. By revealing how a common virus can break oral tolerance and trigger inflammation, this study could lead to new ways to prevent or treat autoimmune and food-related disease such as celiac disease.
Targeting the fibrogenic ECM as an alternative approach to treating IPF
Project Abstract Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and, more broadly, progressive pulmonary fibrosis are wound healing disorders whose hallmark is unorganized and unchecked extracellular matrix (ECM) deposition leading to scarring/stiffening of the lung interstitium. A highly complex, multicellular process, the generation of scar itself is primarily a function of activated fibroblasts with contributions from multiple subpopulations and non-fibroblastic cells. Myofibroblasts, the contractile cohort of activated fibroblasts, physically perturb (i.e. stretch) the local ECM microenvironment, which we have recently shown triggers site-specific, stretch-dependent conformational changes within the ECM protein fibronectin. We have previously demonstrated that a specific stretch-induced conformational change in the critical receptor binding domain of fibronectin triggers a cellular “integrin switch”, a stark change in the ECM receptors used by cells to engage fibronectin. This integrin switch is sufficient to drive activation of naïve lung fibroblasts, acquisition of mesenchymal characteristics in alveolar epithelial cells, and pathogenic remodeling of vascular structures. In this proposal we hypothesize that fibronectin displays a stretch- dependent conformational change specifically in regions of active lung fibrogenesis and that this conformational change disrupts homeostatic integrin binding dynamics in fibroblasts, leading to their acquisition of a pro-fibrogenic phenotype and transcriptional program. We address this hypothesis in a systematic way through three proposed aims. The first aim focuses on quantifying the presence and spatial localization of the stretch-induced conformational change within a cohort of lung fibrosis patient tissue samples, determining if it represents a consistent marker of active fibrogenic regions and elucidation of critical microenvironmental signatures that further expand our understanding of the impact of fibronectin's integrin switch in driving disease. In the second aim we will begin to unravel the molecular mechanism explaining how the integrin switch that emerges because of the stretch-induced conformational change drives fibroblast activation and fibrogenic gene programs using both idealized in vitro culture systems as well as ex vivo human disease tissue models. Finally, in the third aim we will explore the therapeutic potential of binding and blocking this specific stretch-induced conformation of fibronectin using a promising new and potential antibody drug in both in vivo and ex vivo models of disease.
Memory Decoding Journal Club: Reconstructing a new hippocampal engram for systems reconsolidation and remote memory updating
Join us for the Memory Decoding Journal Club, a collaboration between the Carboncopies Foundation and BPF Aspirational Neuroscience. This month, we're diving into a groundbreaking paper: 'Reconstructing a new hippocampal engram for systems reconsolidation and remote memory updating' by Bo Lei, Bilin Kang, Yuejun Hao, Haoyu Yang, Zihan Zhong, Zihan Zhai, and Yi Zhong from Tsinghua University, Beijing Academy of Artificial Intelligence, IDG/McGovern Institute of Brain Research, and Peking Union Medical College. Dr. Randal Koene will guide us through an engaging discussion on these exciting findings and their implications for neuroscience and memory research.
Decision and Behavior
This webinar addressed computational perspectives on how animals and humans make decisions, spanning normative, descriptive, and mechanistic models. Sam Gershman (Harvard) presented a capacity-limited reinforcement learning framework in which policies are compressed under an information bottleneck constraint. This approach predicts pervasive perseveration, stimulus‐independent “default” actions, and trade-offs between complexity and reward. Such policy compression reconciles observed action stochasticity and response time patterns with an optimal balance between learning capacity and performance. Jonathan Pillow (Princeton) discussed flexible descriptive models for tracking time-varying policies in animals. He introduced dynamic Generalized Linear Models (Sidetrack) and hidden Markov models (GLM-HMMs) that capture day-to-day and trial-to-trial fluctuations in choice behavior, including abrupt switches between “engaged” and “disengaged” states. These models provide new insights into how animals’ strategies evolve under learning. Finally, Kenji Doya (OIST) highlighted the importance of unifying reinforcement learning with Bayesian inference, exploring how cortical-basal ganglia networks might implement model-based and model-free strategies. He also described Japan’s Brain/MINDS 2.0 and Digital Brain initiatives, aiming to integrate multimodal data and computational principles into cohesive “digital brains.”
Exploring the cerebral mechanisms of acoustically-challenging speech comprehension - successes, failures and hope
Comprehending speech under acoustically challenging conditions is an everyday task that we can often execute with ease. However, accomplishing this requires the engagement of cognitive resources, such as auditory attention and working memory. The mechanisms that contribute to the robustness of speech comprehension are of substantial interest in the context of hearing mild to moderate hearing impairment, in which affected individuals typically report specific difficulties in understanding speech in background noise. Although hearing aids can help to mitigate this, they do not represent a universal solution, thus, finding alternative interventions is necessary. Given that age-related hearing loss (“presbycusis”) is inevitable, developing new approaches is all the more important in the context of aging populations. Moreover, untreated hearing loss in middle age has been identified as the most significant potentially modifiable predictor of dementia in later life. I will present research that has used a multi-methodological approach (fMRI, EEG, MEG and non-invasive brain stimulation) to try to elucidate the mechanisms that comprise the cognitive “last mile” in speech acousticallychallenging speech comprehension and to find ways to enhance them.
Movements and engagement during decision-making
When experts are immersed in a task, a natural assumption is that their brains prioritize task-related activity. Accordingly, most efforts to understand neural activity during well-learned tasks focus on cognitive computations and task-related movements. Surprisingly, we observed that during decision-making, the cortex-wide activity of multiple cell types is dominated by movements, especially “uninstructed movements”, that are spontaneously expressed. These observations argue that animals execute expert decisions while performing richly varied, uninstructed movements that profoundly shape neural activity. To understand the relationship between these movements and decision-making, we examined the movements more closely. We tested whether the magnitude or the timing of the movements was correlated with decision-making performance. To do this, we partitioned movements into two groups: task-aligned movements that were well predicted by task events (such as the onset of the sensory stimulus or choice) and task independent movement (TIM) that occurred independently of task events. TIM had a reliable, inverse correlation with performance in head-restrained mice and freely moving rats. This hinted that the timing of spontaneous movements could indicate periods of disengagement. To confirm this, we compared TIM to the latent behavioral states recovered by a hidden Markov model with Bernoulli generalized linear model observations (GLM-HMM) and found these, again, to be inversely correlated. Finally, we examined the impact of these behavioral states on neural activity. Surprisingly, we found that the same movement impacts neural activity more strongly when animals are disengaged. An intriguing possibility is that these larger movement signals disrupt cognitive computations, leading to poor decision-making performance. Taken together, these observations argue that movements and cognitionare closely intertwined, even during expert decision-making.
Use of brain imaging data to improve prescriptions of psychotropic drugs - Examples of ketamine in depression and antipsychotics in schizophrenia
The use of molecular imaging, particularly PET and SPECT, has significantly transformed the treatment of schizophrenia with antipsychotic drugs since the late 1980s. It has offered insights into the links between drug target engagement, clinical effects, and side effects. A therapeutic window for receptor occupancy is established for antipsychotics, yet there is a divergence of opinions regarding the importance of blood levels, with many downplaying their significance. As a result, the role of therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) as a personalized therapy tool is often underrated. Since molecular imaging of antipsychotics has focused almost entirely on D2-like dopamine receptors and their potential to control positive symptoms, negative symptoms and cognitive deficits are hardly or not at all investigated. Alternative methods have been introduced, i.e. to investigate the correlation between approximated receptor occupancies from blood levels and cognitive measures. Within the domain of antidepressants, and specifically regarding ketamine's efficacy in depression treatment, there is limited comprehension of the association between plasma concentrations and target engagement. The measurement of AMPA receptors in the human brain has added a new level of comprehension regarding ketamine's antidepressant effects. To ensure precise prescription of psychotropic drugs, it is vital to have a nuanced understanding of how molecular and clinical effects interact. Clinician scientists are assigned with the task of integrating these indispensable pharmacological insights into practice, thereby ensuring a rational and effective approach to the treatment of mental health disorders, signaling a new era of personalized drug therapy mechanisms that promote neuronal plasticity not only under pathological conditions, but also in the healthy aging brain.
How Intermittent Bioenergetic Challenges Enhance Brain and Body Health
Humans and other animals evolved in habitats fraught with a range of environmental challenges to their bodies and brains. Accordingly, cells and organ systems possess adaptive stress-responsive signaling pathways that enable them to not only withstand environmental challenges, but also to prepare for future challenges and function more efficiently. These phylogenetically conserved processes are the foundation of the hormesis principle in which repeated exposures to low to moderate amounts of an environmental challenge improve cellular and organismal fitness. Here I describe cellular and molecular mechanisms by which cells in the brain and body respond to intermittent fasting and exercise in ways that enhance performance and counteract aging and disease processes. Switching back and forth between adaptive stress response (during fasting and exercise) and growth and plasticity (eating, resting, sleeping) modes enhances the performance and resilience of various organ systems. While pharmacological interventions that engage a particular hormetic mechanism are being developed, it seems unlikely that any will prove superior to fasting and exercise.
Learning by Analogy in Mathematics
Analogies between old and new concepts are common during classroom instruction. While previous studies of transfer focus on how features of initial learning guide later transfer to new problem solving, less is known about how to best support analogical transfer from previous learning while children are engaged in new learning episodes. Such research may have important implications for teaching and learning in mathematics, which often includes analogies between old and new information. Some existing research promotes supporting learners' explicit connections across old and new information within an analogy. In this talk, I will present evidence that instructors can invite implicit analogical reasoning through warm-up activities designed to activate relevant prior knowledge. Warm-up activities "close the transfer space" between old and new learning without additional direct instruction.
Designing the BEARS (Both Ears) Virtual Reality Training Package to Improve Spatial Hearing in Young People with Bilateral Cochlear Implant
Results: the main areas which were modified based on participatory feedback were the variety of immersive scenarios to cover a range of ages and interests, the number of levels of complexity to ensure small improvements were measured, the feedback and reward schemes to ensure positive reinforcement, and specific provision for participants with balance issues, who had difficulties when using head-mounted displays. The effectiveness of the finalised BEARS suite will be evaluated in a large-scale clinical trial. We have added in additional login options for other members of the family and based on patient feedback we have improved the accompanying reward schemes. Conclusions: Through participatory design we have developed a training package (BEARS) for young people with bilateral cochlear implants. The training games are appropriate for use by the study population and ultimately should lead to patients taking control of their own management and reducing the reliance upon outpatient-based rehabilitation programmes. Virtual reality training provides a more relevant and engaging approach to rehabilitation for young people.
Decision Making and the Brain
In this talk, we will examine human behavior from the perspective of the choices we make every day. We will study the role of the brain in enabling these decisions and discuss some simple computational models of decision making and the neural basis. Towards the end, we will have a short, interactive session to engage in some easy decisions that will help us discover our own biases.
Learning from others, helping others learn: Cognitive foundations of distinctively human social learning
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.
Learning binds novel inputs into functional synaptic clusters via spinogenesis
Learning is known to induce the formation of new dendritic spines, but despite decades of effort, the functional properties of new spines in vivo remain unknown. Here, using a combination of longitudinal in vivo 2-photon imaging of the glutamate reporter, iGluSnFR, and correlated electron microscopy (CLEM) of dendritic spines on the apical dendrites of L2/3 excitatory neurons in the motor cortex during motor learning, we describe a framework of new spines' formation, survival, and resulting function. Specifically, our data indicate that the potentiation of a subset of clustered, pre-existing spines showing task-related activity in early sessions of learning creates a micro-environment of plasticity within dendrites, wherein multiple filopodia sample the nearby neuropil, form connections with pre-existing boutons connected to allodendritic spines, and are then selected for survival based on co-activity with nearby task-related spines. Thus, the formation and survival of new spines is determined by the functional micro-environment of dendrites. After formation, new spines show preferential co-activation with nearby task-related spines. This synchronous activity is more specific to movements than activation of the individual spines in isolation, and further, is coincident with movements that are more similar to the learned pattern. Thus, new spines functionally engage with their parent clusters to signal the learned movement. Finally, by reconstructing the axons associated with new spines, we found that they synapse with axons previously unrepresented in these dendritic domains, suggesting that the strong local co-activity structure exhibited by new spines is likely not due to axon sharing. Thus, learning involves the binding of new information streams into functional synaptic clusters to subserve the learned behavior.
Metabolic spikes: from rogue electrons to Parkinson's
Conventionally, neurons are thought to be cellular units that process synaptic inputs into synaptic spikes. However, it is well known that neurons can also spike spontaneously and display a rich repertoire of firing properties with no apparent functional relevance e.g. in in vitro cortical slice preparations. In this talk, I will propose a hypothesis according to which intrinsic excitability in neurons may be a survival mechanism to minimize toxic byproducts of the cell’s energy metabolism. In neurons, this toxicity can arise when mitochondrial ATP production stalls due to limited ADP. Under these conditions, electrons deviate from the electron transport chain to produce reactive oxygen species, disrupting many cellular processes and challenging cell survival. To mitigate this, neurons may engage in ADP-producing metabolic spikes. I will explore the validity of this hypothesis using computational models that illustrate the implications of synaptic and metabolic spiking, especially in the context of substantia nigra pars compacta dopaminergic neurons and their degeneration in Parkinson's disease.
Apathy and Anhedonia in Adult and Adolescent Cannabis Users and Controls Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic Lockdown
COVID-19 lockdown measures have caused severe disruptions to work and education and prevented people from engaging in many rewarding activities. Cannabis users may be especially vulnerable, having been previously shown to have higher levels of apathy and anhedonia than non-users. In this survey study, we measured apathy and anhedonia, before and after lockdown measures were implemented, in n = 256 adult and n = 200 adolescent cannabis users and n = 170 adult and n = 172 adolescent controls. Scores on the Apathy Evaluation Scale (AES) and Snaith-Hamilton Pleasure Scale (SHAPS) were investigated with mixed-measures ANCOVA, with factors user group, age group, and time, controlling for depression, anxiety, and other drug use. Adolescent cannabis users had significantly higher SHAPS scores before lockdown, indicative of greater anhedonia, compared with adolescent controls (P = .03, η p2 = .013). Contrastingly, adult users had significantly lower scores on both the SHAPS (P < .001, η p2 = .030) and AES (P < .001, η p2 = .048) after lockdown compared with adult controls. Scores on both scales increased during lockdown across groups, and this increase was significantly smaller for cannabis users (AES: P = .001, η p2 = .014; SHAPS: P = .01, η p2 = .008). Exploratory analyses revealed that dependent cannabis users had significantly higher scores overall (AES: P < .001, η p2 = .037; SHAPS: P < .001, η p2 = .029) and a larger increase in scores (AES: P = .04, η p2 =.010; SHAPS: P = .04, η p2 = .010), compared with non-dependent users. Our results suggest that adolescents and adults have differential associations between cannabis use as well as apathy and anhedonia. Within users, dependence may be associated with higher levels of apathy and anhedonia regardless of age and a greater increase in levels during the COVID-19 lockdown.
Neural circuits for novel choices and for choice speed and accuracy changes in macaques
While most experimental tasks aim at isolating simple cognitive processes to study their neural bases, naturalistic behaviour is often complex and multidimensional. I will present two studies revealing previously uncharacterised neural circuits for decision-making in macaques. This was possible thanks to innovative experimental tasks eliciting sophisticated behaviour, bridging the human and non-human primate research traditions. Firstly, I will describe a specialised medial frontal circuit for novel choice in macaques. Traditionally, monkeys receive extensive training before neural data can be acquired, while a hallmark of human cognition is the ability to act in novel situations. I will show how this medial frontal circuit can combine the values of multiple attributes for each available novel item on-the-fly to enable efficient novel choices. This integration process is associated with a hexagonal symmetry pattern in the BOLD response, consistent with a grid-like representation of the space of all available options. We prove the causal role played by this circuit by showing that focussed transcranial ultrasound neuromodulation impairs optimal choice based on attribute integration and forces the subjects to default to a simpler heuristic decision strategy. Secondly, I will present an ongoing project addressing the neural mechanisms driving behaviour shifts during an evidence accumulation task that requires subjects to trade speed for accuracy. While perceptual decision-making in general has been thoroughly studied, both cognitively and neurally, the reasons why speed and/or accuracy are adjusted, and the associated neural mechanisms, have received little attention. We describe two orthogonal dimensions in which behaviour can vary (traditional speed-accuracy trade-off and efficiency) and we uncover independent neural circuits concerned with changes in strategy and fluctuations in the engagement level. The former involves the frontopolar cortex, while the latter is associated with the insula and a network of subcortical structures including the habenula.
Interpersonal synchrony of body/brain, Solo & Team Flow
Flow is defined as an altered state of consciousness with excessive attention and enormous sense of pleasure, when engaged in a challenging task, first postulated by a psychologist, the late M. Csikszentmihayli. The main focus of this talk will be “Team Flow,” but there were two lines of previous studies in our laboratory as its background. First is inter-body and inter-brain coordination/synchrony between individuals. Considering various rhythmic echoing/synchronization phenomena in animal behavior, it could be regarded as the biological, sub-symbolic and implicit origin of social interactions. The second line of precursor research is on the state of Solo Flow in game playing. We employed attenuation of AEP (Auditory Evoked Potential) to task-irrelevant sound probes as an objective-neural indicator of such a Flow status, and found that; 1) Mutual link between the ACC & the TP is critical, and 2) overall, top-down influence is enhanced while bottom-up causality is attenuated. Having these as the background, I will present our latest study of Team Flow in game playing. We found that; 3) the neural correlates of Team Flow is distinctively different from those of Solo Flow nor of non-flow social, 4) the left medial temporal cortex seems to form an integrative node for Team Flow, receiving input related to Solo Flow state from the right PFC and input related to social state from the right IFC, and 5) Intra-brain (dis)similarity of brain activity well predicts (dis)similarity of skills/cognition as well as affinity for inter-brain coherence.
Neural Codes for Natural Behaviors in Flying Bats
This talk will focus on the importance of using natural behaviors in neuroscience research – the “Natural Neuroscience” approach. I will illustrate this point by describing studies of neural codes for spatial behaviors and social behaviors, in flying bats – using wireless neurophysiology methods that we developed – and will highlight new neuronal representations that we discovered in animals navigating through 3D spaces, or in very large-scale environments, or engaged in social interactions. In particular, I will discuss: (1) A multi-scale neural code for very large environments, which we discovered in bats flying in a 200-meter long tunnel. This new type of neural code is fundamentally different from spatial codes reported in small environments – and we show theoretically that it is superior for representing very large spaces. (2) Rapid modulation of position × distance coding in the hippocampus during collision-avoidance behavior between two flying bats. This result provides a dramatic illustration of the extreme dynamism of the neural code. (3) Local-but-not-global order in 3D grid cells – a surprising experimental finding, which can be explained by a simple physics-inspired model, which successfully describes both 3D and 2D grids. These results strongly argue against many of the classical, geometrically-based models of grid cells. (4) I will also briefly describe new results on the social representation of other individuals in the hippocampus, in a highly social multi-animal setting. The lecture will propose that neuroscience experiments – in bats, rodents, monkeys or humans – should be conducted under evermore naturalistic conditions.
Distance-tuned neurons drive specialized path integration calculations in medial entorhinal cortex
During navigation, animals estimate their position using path integration and landmarks, engaging many brain areas. Whether these areas follow specialized or universal cue integration principles remains incompletely understood. We combine electrophysiology with virtual reality to quantify cue integration across thousands of neurons in three navigation-relevant areas: primary visual cortex (V1), retrosplenial cortex (RSC), and medial entorhinal cortex (MEC). Compared with V1 and RSC, path integration influences position estimates more in MEC, and conflicts between path integration and landmarks trigger remapping more readily. Whereas MEC codes position prospectively, V1 codes position retrospectively, and RSC is intermediate between the two. Lowered visual contrast increases the influence of path integration on position estimates only in MEC. These properties are most pronounced in a population of MEC neurons, overlapping with grid cells, tuned to distance run in darkness. These results demonstrate the specialized role that path integration plays in MEC compared with other navigation-relevant cortical areas.
CrossTalk: Conversations at the Intersection of Science and Art
Anjan Chatterjee is a Professor of Neurology, Psychology, and Architecture and the founding Director of the Penn Center for Neuroaesthetics. His research explores the field of neuroaesthetics: how our brain experiences and responds to art. Lucas Kelly is a renowned visual artist, with work featured across several solo and group exhibitions, most notably in the survey of abstract painting “The Painted World” at PS1 Museum of Modern Art. As the inaugural Artist in Residence for the Penn Center for Neuroaesthetics, Lucas has collaborated with Anjan on a forthcoming exhibition, considering the emotions involved in aesthetic engagement informed by research. This event will feature a moderated conversation between Anjan and Lucas, discussing topics at the intersection of neuroscience and experience of visual art.
Understanding the Assessment of Spatial Neglect and its Treatment Using Prism Adaptation Training
Spatial neglect is a syndrome that is most frequently associated with damage to the right hemisphere, although damage to the left hemisphere can also result in signs of spatial neglect. It is characterised by absent or deficient awareness of the contralesional side of space. The screening and diagnosis of spatial neglect lacks a universal gold standard, but is usually achieved by using various modes of assessment. Spatial neglect is also difficult to treat, although prism adaptation training (PAT) has in the past reportedly showed some promise. This seminar will include highlights from a series of studies designed to identify knowledge gaps, and will suggest ways in which these can be bridged. The first study was conducted to identify and quantify clinicians’ use of assessment tools for spatial neglect, finding that several different tools are in use, but that there is an emerging consensus and appetite for harmonisation. The second study included PAT, and sought to uncover whether PAT can improve engagement in recommended therapy in order to improve the outcomes of stroke survivors with spatial neglect. The final study, a systematic review and meta-analysis, sought to investigate the scientific efficacy (rather than clinical effectiveness) of PAT, identifying several knowledge gaps in the existing literature and a need for a new approach in the study of PAT in the clinical setting.
Communicating (Neuro)Science
In recent years, communicating one’s research to audiences outside of academia has grown in importance and time commitment for many researchers. Science Slams or University Open Days reliably draw large crowds, and the potential of social media to amplify any message has made it possible to reach interested recipients without the traditional press as a middleman. In this presentation, I will provide insights into science communication from my perspective as a neuroscience researcher, who enjoys spreading the word about how amazing insect brains are. We will have a look at the What?, Why? and How? of science communication. What do we generally mean by the term, and what forms can it take? Why should – or must – we engage in it? And how can we best achieve our aims with it? I will provide an overview of the current communication landscape, some food for (critical) thought, and many practical tips that help me when preparing to share my science with a wider audience.
A reward-learning framework of knowledge acquisition
Recent years have seen a considerable surge of research on interest-based engagement, examining how and why people are engaged in activities without relying on extrinsic rewards. However, the field of inquiry has been somewhat segregated into three different research traditions which have been developed relatively independently --- research on curiosity, interest, and trait curiosity/interest. The current talk sets out an integrative perspective; the reward-learning framework of knowledge acquisition. This conceptual framework takes on the basic premise of existing reward-learning models of information seeking: that knowledge acquisition serves as an inherent reward, which reinforces people’s information-seeking behavior through a reward-learning process. However, the framework reveals how the knowledge-acquisition process is sustained and boosted over a long period of time in real-life settings, allowing us to integrate the different research traditions within reward-learning models. The framework also characterizes the knowledge-acquisition process with four distinct features that are not present in the reward-learning process with extrinsic rewards --- (1) cumulativeness, (2) selectivity, (3) vulnerability, and (4) under-appreciation. The talk describes some evidence from our lab supporting these claims.
A reward-learning framework of knowledge acquisition: How we can integrate the concepts of curiosity, interest, and intrinsic-extrinsic rewards
Recent years have seen a considerable surge of research on interest-based engagement, examining how and why people are engaged in activities without relying on extrinsic rewards. However, the field of inquiry has been somewhat segregated into three different research traditions which have been developed relatively independently -- research on curiosity, interest, and trait curiosity/interest. The current talk sets out an integrative perspective; the reward-learning framework of knowledge acquisition. This conceptual framework takes on the basic premise of existing reward-learning models of information seeking: that knowledge acquisition serves as an inherent reward, which reinforces people’s information-seeking behavior through a reward-learning process. However, the framework reveals how the knowledge-acquisition process is sustained and boosted over a long period of time in real-life settings, allowing us to integrate the different research traditions within reward-learning models. The framework also characterizes the knowledge-acquisition process with four distinct features that are not present in the reward-learning process with extrinsic rewards -- (1) cumulativeness, (2) selectivity, (3) vulnerability, and (4) under-appreciation. The talk describes some evidence from our lab supporting these claims.
Causal coupling between neural activity, metabolism, and behavior across the Drosophila brain
Coordinated activity across networks of neurons is a hallmark of both resting and active behavioral states in many species, including worms, flies, fish, mice and humans. These global patterns alter energy metabolism in the brain over seconds to hours, making oxygen consumption and glucose uptake widely used proxies of neural activity. However, whether changes in neural activity are causally related to changes in metabolic flux in intact circuits on the sub-second timescales associated with behavior, is unclear. Moreover, it is unclear whether differences between rest and action are associated with spatiotemporally structured changes in neuronal energy metabolism at the subcellular level. My work combines two-photon microscopy across the fruit fly brain with sensors that allow simultaneous measurements of neural activity and metabolic flux, across both resting and active behavioral states. It demonstrates that neural activity drives changes in metabolic flux, creating a tight coupling between these signals that can be measured across large-scale brain networks. Further, using local optogenetic perturbation, I show that even transient increases in neural activity result in rapid and persistent increases in cytosolic ATP, suggesting that neuronal metabolism predictively allocates resources to meet the energy demands of future neural activity. Finally, these studies reveal that the initiation of even minimal behavioral movements causes large-scale changes in the pattern of neural activity and energy metabolism, revealing unexpectedly widespread engagement of the central brain.
Regenerative Neuroimmunology - a stem cell perspective
There are currently no approved therapies to slow down the accumulation of neurological disability that occurs independently of relapses in multiple sclerosis (MS). International agencies are engaging to expedite the development of novel strategies capable of modifying disease progression, abrogating persistent CNS inflammation, and support degenerating axons in people with progressive MS. Understanding why regeneration fails in the progressive MS brain and developing new regenerative approaches is a key priority for the Pluchino Lab. In particular, we aim to elucidate how the immune system, in particular its cells called myeloid cells, affects brain structure and function under normal healthy conditions and in disease. Our objective is to find how myeloid cells communicate with the central nervous system and affect tissue healing and functional recovery by stimulating mechanisms of brain plasticity mechanisms such as the generation of new nerve cells and the reduction of scar formation. Applying combination of state-of-the-art omic technologies, and molecular approaches to study murine and human disease models of inflammation and neurodegeneration, we aim to develop experimental molecular medicines, including those with stem cells and gene therapy vectors, which slow down the accumulation of irreversible disabilities and improve functional recovery after progressive multiple sclerosis, stroke and traumatic injuries. By understanding the mechanisms of intercellular (neuro-immune) signalling, diseases of the brain and spinal cord may be treated more effectively, and significant neuroprotection may be achieved with new tailored molecular therapeutics.
Smart perception?: Gestalt grouping, perceptual averaging, and memory capacity
It seems we see the world in full detail. However, the eye is not a camera nor is the brain a computer. Incredible metabolic constraints render us unable to encode more than a fraction of information available in each glance. Instead, our illusion of stable and complete perception is accomplished by parsimonious representation relying on natural order inherent in the surrounding environment. I will begin by discussing previous behavioral work from our lab demonstrating one such strategy by which the visual system represents average properties of Gestalt-grouped sets of individual objects, warping individual object representations toward the Gestalt-defined mean. I will then discuss on-going work using a behavioral index of averaging Gestalt-grouped information established in our previous work in conjunction with an ERP-index of VSTM capacity (the CDA) to measure whether the Gestalt-grouping and perceptual averaging strategy acts to boost memory capacity above the classic “four-item” limit. Finally, I will outline our pre-registered study to determine whether this perceptual strategy is indeed engaged in a “smart” manner under normal circumstances, or compromises fidelity for capacity by perceptually-averaging in trials with only four items that could otherwise be individually represented.
Workshop: Spatial Brain Dynamics
Traditionally, the term dynamics means changes in a system evolving over time. However, in the brain action potentials propagate along axons to induce postsynaptic currents with different delays at many sites simultaneously. This fundamental computational mechanism evolves spatially to engage the neuron populations involved in brain functions. To identify and understand the spatial processing in brains, this workshop will focus on the spatial principles of brain dynamics that determine how action potentials and membrane currents propagate in the networks of neurons that brains are made of. We will focus on non-artificial dynamics, which excludes in vitro dynamics, interference, electrical and optogenetic stimulations of brains in vivo. Recent non-artificial studies of spatial brain dynamics can actually explain how sensory, motor and internal brain functions evolve. The purpose of this workshop is to discuss these recent results and identify common principles of spatial brain dynamics.
Networks for multi-sensory attention and working memory
Converging evidence from fMRI and EEG shows that audtiory spatial attention engages the same fronto-parietal network associated with visuo-spatial attention. This network is distinct from an auditory-biased processing network that includes other frontal regions; this second network is can be recruited when observers extract rhythmic information from visual inputs. We recently used a dual-task paradigm to examine whether this "division of labor" between a visuo-spatial network and an auditory-rhythmic network can be observed in a working memory paradigm. We varied the sensory modality (visual vs. auditory) and information domain (spatial or rhythmic) that observers had to store in working memory, while also performing an intervening task. Behavior, pupilometry, and EEG results show a complex interaction across the working memory and intervening tasks, consistent with two cognitive control networks managing auditory and visual inputs based on the kind of information being processed.
Workshop: Spatial Brain Dynamics
Traditionally, the term dynamics means changes in a system evolving over time. However, in the brain action potentials propagate along axons to induce postsynaptic currents with different delays at many sites simultaneously. This fundamental computational mechanism evolves spatially to engage the neuron populations involved in brain functions. To identify and understand the spatial processing in brains, this workshop will focus on the spatial principles of brain dynamics that determine how action potentials and membrane currents propagate in the networks of neurons that brains are made of. We will focus on non-artificial dynamics, which excludes in vitro dynamics, interference, electrical and optogenetic stimulations of brains in vivo. Recent non-artificial studies of spatial brain dynamics can actually explain how sensory, motor and internal brain functions evolve. The purpose of this workshop is to discuss these recent results and identify common principles of spatial brain dynamics.
Workshop: Spatial Brain Dynamics
Traditionally, the term dynamics means changes in a system evolving over time. However, in the brain action potentials propagate along axons to induce postsynaptic currents with different delays at many sites simultaneously. This fundamental computational mechanism evolves spatially to engage the neuron populations involved in brain functions. To identify and understand the spatial processing in brains, this workshop will focus on the spatial principles of brain dynamics that determine how action potentials and membrane currents propagate in the networks of neurons that brains are made of. We will focus on non-artificial dynamics, which excludes in vitro dynamics, interference, electrical and optogenetic stimulations of brains in vivo. Recent non-artificial studies of spatial brain dynamics can actually explain how sensory, motor and internal brain functions evolve. The purpose of this workshop is to discuss these recent results and identify common principles of spatial brain dynamics.
Structure-mapping in Human Learning
Across species, humans are uniquely able to acquire deep relational systems of the kind needed for mathematics, science, and human language. Analogical comparison processes are a major contributor to this ability. Analogical comparison engages a structure-mapping process (Gentner, 1983) that fosters learning in at least three ways: first, it highlights common relational systems and thereby promotes abstraction; second, it promotes inferences from known situations to less familiar situations; and, third, it reveals potentially important differences between examples. In short, structure-mapping is a domain-general learning process by which abstract, portable knowledge can arise from experience. It is operative from early infancy on, and is critical to the rapid learning we see in human children. Although structure-mapping processes are present pre-linguistically, their scope is greatly amplified by language. Analogical processes are instrumental in learning relational language, and the reverse is also true: relational language acts to preserve relational abstractions and render them accessible for future learning and reasoning. Although structure-mapping processes are present pre-linguistically, their scope is greatly amplified by language. Analogical processes are instrumental in learning relational language, and the reverse is also true: relational language acts to preserve relational abstractions and render them accessible for future learning and reasoning.
Understanding sensorimotor control at global and local scales
The brain is remarkably flexible, and appears to instantly reconfigure its processing depending on what’s needed to solve a task at hand: fMRI studies indicate that distal brain areas appear to fluidly couple and decouple with one another depending on behavioral context. But the structural architecture of the brain is comprised of long-range axonal projections that are relatively fixed by adulthood. How does the global dynamism evident in fMRI recordings manifest at a cellular level? To bridge the gap between the activity of single neurons and cortex-wide networks, we correlated electrophysiological recordings of individual neurons in primary visual (V1) and retrosplenial (RSP) associational cortex with activity across dorsal cortex, recorded simultaneously using widefield calcium imaging. We found that individual neurons in both cortical areas independently engaged in different distributed cortical networks depending on the animal’s behavioral state, suggesting that locomotion puts cortex into a more sensory driven mode relevant for navigation.
The shared predictive roots of motor control and beat-based timing
fMRI results have shown that the supplementary motor area (SMA) and the basal ganglia, most often discussed in their roles in generating action, are engaged by beat-based timing even in the absence of movement. Some have argued that the motor system is “recruited” by beat-based timing tasks due to the presence of motor-like timescales, but a deeper understanding of the roles of these motor structures is lacking. Reviewing a body of motor neurophysiology literature and drawing on the “active inference” framework, I argue that we can see the motor and timing functions of these brain areas as examples of dynamic sub-second prediction informed by sensory event timing. I hypothesize that in both cases, sub-second dynamics in SMA predict the progress of a temporal process outside the brain, and direct pathway activation in basal ganglia selects temporal and sensory predictions for the upcoming interval -- the only difference is that in motor processes, these predictions are made manifest through motor effectors. If we can unify our understanding of beat-based timing and motor control, we can draw on the substantial motor neuroscience literature to make conceptual leaps forward in the study of predictive timing and musical rhythm.
Mice alternate between discrete strategies during perceptual decision-making
Classical models of perceptual decision-making assume that animals use a single, consistent strategy to integrate sensory evidence and form decisions during an experiment. In this talk, I aim to convince you that this common view is incorrect. I will show results from applying a latent variable framework, the “GLM-HMM”, to hundreds of thousands of trials of mouse choice data. Our analysis reveals that mice don’t lapse. Instead, mice switch back and forth between engaged and disengaged behavior within a single session, and each mode of behavior lasts tens to hundreds of trials.
Ways to think about the brain
Historically, research on the brain has been working its way in from the outside world, hoping that such systematic exploration will take us some day to the middle and on through the middle to the output. Ever since the time of Aristotle, philosophers and scientists have assumed that the brain (or, more precisely, the mind) is initially a blank slate filled up gradually with experience in an outside-in manner. An alternative, brain-centric view, the one I am promoting, is that self-organized brain networks induce a vast repertoire of preformed neuronal patterns. While interacting with the world, some of these initially ‘nonsensical’ patterns acquire behavioral significance or meaning. Thus, experience is primarily a process of matching preexisting neuronal dynamics to events in the world. I suggest that perpetually active, internal dynamic is the source of cognition, a neuronal operation disengaged from immediate senses.
Social transmission of maternal behavior
Maternal care is profoundly important for mammalian survival, and in many species requires the contribution of non-biological parents, or alloparents. In the absence of partum and post-partum related hormonal changes, alloparents acquire maternal skills from experience, by yet unknown mechanisms. One critical molecular signal for maternal behavior is oxytocin, a hormone centrally released by hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN). Do experiences that induce maternal behavior act by engaging PVN oxytocin neurons? To answer this, we used virgin female mice, animals that in the wild live in colonies with experienced mothers and their pups, helping with pup care. We replicated this setup in the lab, and we continuously monitored homecage behavior of virgin mice co-housed for days with a mother and litter, synchronized with recordings from virgin PVN cells, including from oxytocin neurons. Mothers engaged virgins in maternal care in part by shepherding virgins towards the nest, ensuring their proximity to pups, and in part by self-generating pup retrieval episodes, demonstrating maternal behavior to virgins. The frequency of shepherding and of dam retrievals correlates with virgin's subsequent ability to retrieve pups, a quintessential mouse maternal skill. These social interactions activated virgin PVN and gated behaviorally-relevant cortical plasticity for pup vocalizations. Thus, rodents can acquire maternal behavior by social transmission, and our results describe a mechanism for adapting brains of adult caregivers to infant needs via endogenous oxytocin.
Reward processing in psychosis: adding meanings to the findings
Much of our daily behavior is driven by rewards. The ability to learn to pursue rewarding experiences is, in fact, an essential metric of mental health. Conversely, reduced capacity to engage in adaptive goal-oriented behavior is the hallmark of apathy, and present in the psychotic disorder. The search for its underlying mechanisms has resulted in findings of profound impairments in learning from rewards and the associated blunted activation in key reward areas of the brain of patients with psychosis. An emerging research field has been relying on digital phenotyping tools and ecological momentary assessments (EMA) that map patients’ current mood, behavior and context in the flow of their daily lives. Using these tools, we have started to see a different picture of apathy, one that is exquisitely driven by the environment. For one, reward sensitivity appears to be blunted by stressors, and exposure to undue chronic stress in the daily life may result in apathy in those predisposed to psychosis. Secondly, even patients with psychosis who exhibit clinically elevated levels of apathy are perfectly capable of seeking out and enjoying social interactions in their daily life, if their environment allows them to do so. The use of digital phenotyping tools in combination with neuroimaging of apathy not only allows us to add meanings to the neurobiological findings, but could also help design rational interventions.
Becoming Human: A Theory of Ontogeny
Humans are biologically adapted for cultural life in ways that other primates are not. Humans have unique motivations and cognitive skills for sharing emotions, experience, and collaborative actions (shared intentionality). These motivations and skills first emerge in human ontogeny at around one year of age, as infants begin to participate with other persons in various kinds of collaborative and joint attentional activities, including linguistic communication. Our nearest primate relatives understand important aspects of intentional action - especially in competitive situations - but they do not seem to have the motivations and cognitive skills necessary to engage in activities involving collaboration, shared intentionality, and, in general, things cultural.
Time is of the essence: active sensing in natural vision reveals novel mechanisms of perception
n natural vision, active vision refers to the changes in visual input resulting from self-initiated eye movements. In this talk, I will present studies that show that the stimulus-related activity during active vision differs substantially from that occurring during classical flashed-stimuli paradigms. Our results uncover novel and efficient mechanisms that improve visual perception. In a general way, the nervous system appears to engage in sensory modulation mechanisms, precisely timed to self-initiated stimulus changes, thus coordinating neural activity across different cortical areas and serving as a general mechanism for the global coordination of visual perception.
Development of the social brain in adolescence and effects of social distancing
Adolescence is a period of life characterised by heightened sensitivity to social stimuli, an increased need for peer interaction and peer acceptance, and development of the social brain. Lockdown and social distancing measures intended to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 are reducing the opportunity to engage in face-to-face social interaction with peers. The consequences of social distancing on human social brain and social cognitive development are unknown, but animal research has shown that social deprivation and isolation have unique effects on brain and behaviour in adolescence compared with other stages of life. It is possible that social distancing might have a disproportionate effect on an age group for whom peer interaction is a vital aspect of development.
Virus-like intercellular communication in the nervous system
The neuronal gene Arc is essential for long-lasting information storage in the mammalian brain and mediates various forms of synaptic plasticity. We recently discovered that Arc self-assembles into virus-like capsids that encapsulate RNA. Endogenous Arc protein is released from neurons in extracellular vesicles that mediate the transfer of Arc mRNA into new target cells. Evolutionary analysis indicates that Arc is derived from a vertebrate lineage of Ty3/gypsy retrotransposons, which are also ancestral to retroviruses such as HIV. These findings suggest that Gag retroelements have been repurposed during evolution to mediate intercellular communication in the nervous system that may underlie cognition and memory.
A sense of time in human evolution
What psychological mechanisms do primates use to engage in self-control, and what is the ultimate function of these skills? I will argue that a suite of decision-making capacities, including choices about the timing of benefits, evolved in the context of foraging behaviors and vary with ecological complexity across species. Then, I will examine how these foraging capacities can be generalized to solve novel problems posing temporal costs that are important for humans, such as cooking food, and can therefore underpin evolutionary transitions in behavior. Finally, I will present work testing the hypothesis that a limited future time horizon constrains the expression of other complex abilities in nonhumans, explaining the emergence of human-unique forms of social cognition and behavior.
Analogies, Games and the Learning of Mathematics
Research on analogical processing and reasoning has provided strong evidence that the use of adequate educational analogies has strong and positive effects on the learning of mathematics. In this talk I will show some experimental results suggesting that analogies based on spatial representations might be particularly effective to improve mathematics learning. Since fostering mathematics learning also involves addressing psychosocial factors such as the development of mathematical anxiety, providing social incentives to learn, and fostering engagement and motivation, I will argue that one area to explore with great potential to improve math learning is applying analogical research in the development of learning games aimed to improve math learning. Finally, I will show some early prototypes of an educational project devoted to developing games designed to foster the learning of early mathematics in kindergarten children.
The geometry of abstraction in hippocampus and pre-frontal cortex
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.
Motor BMIs for probing sensorimotor control and parsing distributed learning
Brain-machine interfaces (BMIs) change how the brain sends and receives information from the environment, opening new ways to probe brain function. For instance, motor BMIs allow us to precisely define and manipulate the sensorimotor loop which has enabled new insights into motor control and learning. In this talk, I’ll first present an example study where sensory-motor loop manipulations in BMI allowed us to probe feed-forward and feedback control mechanisms in ways that are not possible in the natural motor system. This study shed light on sensorimotor processing, and in turn led to state-of-the-art neural interface performance. I’ll then survey recent work that highlights the likelihood that BMIs, much like natural motor learning, engages multiple distributed learning mechanisms that can be carefully interrogated with BMI.
Motor Cortical Control of Vocal Interactions in a Neotropical Singing Mouse
Using sounds for social interactions is common across many taxa. Humans engaged in conversation, for example, take rapid turns to go back and forth. This ability to act upon sensory information to generate a desired motor output is a fundamental feature of animal behavior. How the brain enables such flexible sensorimotor transformations, for example during vocal interactions, is a central question in neuroscience. Seeking a rodent model to fill this niche, we are investigating neural mechanisms of vocal interaction in Alston’s singing mouse (Scotinomys teguina) – a neotropical rodent native to the cloud forests of Central America. We discovered sub-second temporal coordination of advertisement songs (counter-singing) between males of this species – a behavior that requires the rapid modification of motor outputs in response to auditory cues. We leveraged this natural behavior to probe the neural mechanisms that generate and allow fast and flexible vocal communication. Using causal manipulations, we recently showed that an orofacial motor cortical area (OMC) in this rodent is required for vocal interactions (Okobi*, Banerjee* et. al, 2019). Subsequently, in electrophysiological recordings, I find neurons in OMC that track initiation, termination and relative timing of songs. Interestingly, persistent neural dynamics during song progression stretches or compresses on every trial to match the total song duration (Banerjee et al, in preparation). These results demonstrate robust cortical control of vocal timing in a rodent and upends the current dogma that motor cortical control of vocal output is evolutionarily restricted to the primate lineage.
Panorama de tecnologías abiertas para ciencia y educación en América Latina
Open science hardware (OSH) as a concept usually refers to artifacts, but also to a practice, a discipline and a collective of people pushing for open access to the design of science tools. Since 2016, the Global Open Science Hardware (GOSH) movement gathers actors from academia, education, the private sector and civic organisations to advocate for OSH to be ubiquitous by 2025. In Latin America, GOSH advocates have fundraised and gathered around the development of annual "residencies" for building hardware for science and education. The community is currently defining its regional strategy and identifying other regional actors working on science and technology democratization. In this presentation I will give an overview of the open hardware movement for science, with a focus on the activities and strategy of the Latin American chapter and concrete ways to engage.
Neuroscience tools for the 99%: On the low-fi development of high-tech lab gear for hands-on neuroscience labs and exploratory research
The public has a fascination with the brain, but little attention is given to neuroscience education prior to graduate studies in brain-related fields. One reason may be the lack of low cost and engaging teaching materials. To address this, we have developed a suite of open-source tools which are appropriate for amateurs and for use in high school, undergraduate, and graduate level educational and research programs. This lecture will provide an overview of our mission to re-engineer research-grade lab equipment using first principles and will highlight basic principles of neuroscience in a "DIY" fashion: neurophysiology, functional electrical stimulation, micro-stimulation effect on animal behavior, neuropharmacology, even neuroprosthesis and optogenetics! Finally, with faculty academic positions becoming a scarce resource, I will discuss an alternative academic career path: entrepreneurship. It is possible to be an academic, do research, publish papers, present at conferences and train students all outside the traditional university setting. I will close by discussing my career path from graduate student to PI/CEO of a startup neuroscience company.
Brain-Body Music Interfaces for Creativity, Education and Well-being
The Georgia Tech Brain Music Lab is a community gathered around a unique facility combining EEG and other physiological measurement techniques with new music technologies. Their mission is to engage in research and creative practice that brings health and well-being. This talk will present an overview of the activities at the Brain Music Lab, including sonification of physiological signals, acoustic design for health and well-being, therapeutic applications of musical stimulation, and brain-body music performance.
Food Mind Control: Regulation of Sensory Behaviors by Gut-Brain Signaling
How does the presence or absence of food shape and prioritize behavioral decisions? When is food more than just food? As in other animals, prolonged food deprivation dramatically alters sensory behaviors in C. elegans. For instance, it has been known since the mid-1970s that hungry worms no longer respond to temperature changes in their environment, but the underlying mechanisms have been unclear. I will describe unpublished work showing that insulin signaling from the gut regulates thermosensory behaviors as a function of feeding state by engaging a modulatory sensorimotor circuit that gates the output of the core thermosensory network. C. elegans is associated with, and consumes, diverse bacteria in the wild. I will also discuss a recent story in which we find that in addition to providing nutrition, a bacterial strain in the worm gut alters the hosts’ olfactory behavior and drives food choice decisions by producing a neurotransmitter that targets the hosts’ sensory neurons. These results add to our growing body of knowledge of how signaling from the gut modulates peripheral and central neuron properties and drives sensory behavioral plasticity.
How sleep remodels the brain
50 years ago it was found that sleep somehow made memories better and more permanent, but neither sleep nor memory researchers knew enough about sleep and memory to devise robust, effective tests. Today the fields of sleep and memory have grown and what is now understood is astounding. Still, great mysteries remain. What is the functional difference between the subtly different slow oscillation vs the slow wave of sleep and do they really have opposite memory consolidation effects? How do short spindles (e.g. <0.5 s as in schizophrenia) differ in function from longer ones and are longer spindles key to integrating new memories with old? Is the nesting of slow oscillations together with sleep spindles and hippocampal ripples necessary? What happens if all else is fine but the neurochemical environment is altered? Does sleep become maladaptive and “cement” memories into the hippocampal warehouse where they are assembled, together with all of their emotional baggage? Does maladaptive sleep underlie post-traumatic stress disorder and other stress-related disorders? How do we optimize sleep characteristics for top emotional and cognitive function? State of the art findings and current hypotheses will be presented.
Accurate Engagement of the Drosophila Central-Complex Compass During Head-Fixed Path-Constrained Navigation
COSYNE 2022
Engagement of the respiratory CPG for songbird vocalizations
COSYNE 2022
Flexible decision-making engages generalizable spiraling dynamical motifs in prefrontal cortex
COSYNE 2025
Sparse neural engagement in connectome-based reservoir computing networks
COSYNE 2025
Antidepressant actions of ketamine engage cellular mechanisms of endoplasmic reticulum stress by the eIF2α pathway
Associations of depressive symptomatology, social engagement and support, and lifestyle behaviors among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic men with chronic conditions in the United States
Broadband visual stimuli engage new neuronal populations in the mouse visual cortex and facilitate visual discrimination
Engagement and strategy: complementary neural circuits for self-driven speed and accuracy changes in macaques
Male mice engaging differently in emotional eating present distinct plasmatic and neurological profiles
Neurocomputational mechanisms engaged in detecting cooperative and competitive intentions of others
Predictive processing of tactile sensory information in mice engaged in a locomotion task
Second-Order Fear Conditioning Engages Epigenetic Mechanisms in the Amygdala and Primary Sensory Cortices
Strategies that activate the soothing and threat system during a body image stressor are associated with intentions to engage in disordered eating behaviour among women
Barrel-septa response identity in the somatosensory cortex of mice is regulated by progressive engagement of SST+ interneurons via ELFN1
FENS Forum 2024
Behavioural hypersensitivity to CO2 is associated with increased engagement of the insula in subjects with high trait anxiety
FENS Forum 2024
Developmental and temporal dynamics in cognitive control engagement during explicit learning
FENS Forum 2024
Engagement of basal amygdala-nucleus accumbens neurons in the processing of rewarding or aversive social stimuli
FENS Forum 2024
Engaging the delayed non-match to position task in rats as a test of inflammatory-induced cognitive impairment and model to assess pro-cognitive anti-inflammatory agents
FENS Forum 2024
Global brain c-Fos mapping reveals differences in brain network engagement during navigation using different visual cue classes
FENS Forum 2024
Improving perceptual learning efficiency with brief memory reactivations engages distinct neural mechanisms
FENS Forum 2024
Individual differences in spatial working memory strategies differentially reflected in the engagement of control and default brain networks
FENS Forum 2024
Interactions between sensory and motor systems: Corticocerebellar circuits and task engagement
FENS Forum 2024
Neonatal white matter microstructure predicts attention disengagement from fearful faces at 8 months
FENS Forum 2024
Nigroincertal activation engages lateral habenula and periaqueductal gray
FENS Forum 2024
The parabrachial nucleus recruits ventral tegmental area to convey negative emotions and disengage instrumental food seeking
FENS Forum 2024
Predictive processing of tactile sensory information in mice engaged in a locomotion task
FENS Forum 2024
Pupil dynamics preceding switches in task engagement
FENS Forum 2024
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