TopicNeuro

magnetic field

4 ePosters2 Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Low intensity rTMS: age dependent effects, and mechanisms underlying neural plasticity

Ann Lohof
Sorbonne Université, Institut de Biologie Paris Seine
Sep 19, 2025

Neuroplasticity is essential for the establishment and strengthening of neural circuits. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is commonly used to modulate cortical excitability and shows promise in the treatment of some neurological disorders. Low intensity magnetic stimulation (LI-rTMS), which does not directly elicit action potentials in the stimulated neurons, have also shown some therapeutic effects, and it is important to determine the biological mechanisms underlying the effects of these low intensity magnetic fields, such as would occur in the regions surrounding the central high-intensity focus of rTMS. Our team has used a focal low-intensity (10mT) magnetic stimulation approach to address some of these questions and to identify cellular mechanisms. I will present several studies from our laboratory, addressing (1) effects of LIrTMS on neuronal activity and excitability ; and (2) neuronal morphology and post-lesion repair. The ensemble of our results indicate that the effects of LI-rTMS depend upon the stimulation pattern, the age of the animal, and the presence of cellular magnetoreceptors.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Australian Bogong moths use a true stellar compass for long-distance navigation at night

Eric Warrant
University of Lund
Apr 19, 2021

Each spring, billions of Bogong moths escape hot conditions in different regions of southeast Australia by migrating over 1000 km to a limited number of cool caves in the Australian Alps, historically used for aestivating over the summer. At the beginning of autumn the same individuals make a return migration to their breeding grounds to reproduce and die. To steer migration Bogong moths sense the Earth’s magnetic field and correlate its directional information with visual cues. In this presentation, we will show that a critically important visual cue is the distribution of starlight within the austral night sky. By tethering spring and autumn migratory moths in a flight simulator, we found that under natural dorsally-projected night skies, and in a nulled magnetic field (disabling the magnetic sense), moths flew in their seasonally appropriate migratory directions, turning in the opposite direction when the night sky was rotated 180°. Visual interneurons in the moth’s optic lobe and central brain responded vigorously to identical sky rotations. Migrating Bogong moths thus use the starry night sky as a true compass to distinguish geographic cardinal directions, the first invertebrate known to do so. These stellar cues are likely reinforced by the Earth’s magnetic field to create a robust compass mechanism for long-distance nocturnal navigation.

ePosterNeuroscience

Evaluation of the neuromodulatory effects of transcranial static magnetic field stimulation (tSMS) using TMS-evoked potentials (TEPs)

Sumiya Shibata, Hideaki Onishi, Tatsuya Mima

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Static magnetic fields to treat refractory epilepsy in humans

Casto Rivadulla Fernandez, Catia Martinez-Barjas, Teresa Lema-Facal, Francisco Javier López-González, Eduardo Suarez, Concepción Paz, Javier Cudeiro

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Transcriptional response of primary hippocampal neurons following exposure to radiofrequency electromagnetic fields

Ibtissam Echchgadda, Jody Cantu, Joseph Butterworth, Jason Payne

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Triple transcranial static magnetic field stimulation system can suppress the neural activity in the lumbar spinal cord

Haruki Hoshi, Sumiya Shibata, Tatsuya Mima, Hideaki Onishi

FENS Forum 2024

magnetic field coverage

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