TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
5Total items
3Seminars
2ePosters

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

The Brain’s Constraints on Human Number Concepts

Andreas Nieder
University of Tübingen
May 26, 2021

Although animals can estimate numerical quantities, true counting and arithmetic abilities are unique to humans and are inextricably linked to symbolic competence. However, our unprecedented numerical skills are deeply rooted in our neuronal heritage as primates and vertebrates. I argue that numerical competence in humans is the result of three neural constraints. First, I propose that the neuronal mechanisms of quantity estimation are part of our evolutionary heritage and can be witnessed across primate and vertebrate phylogeny. Second, I suggest that a basic understanding of number, what numerical quantity means, is innately wired into the brain and gives rise to an intuitive number sense, or number instinct. Third and finally, I argue that symbolic counting and arithmetic in humans is rooted in an evolutionarily and ontogenetically primeval neural system for non-symbolic number representations. These three neural constraints jointly determine the basic processing of number concepts in the human mind.

SeminarNeuroscience

Human Single-Neuron recordings reveal neuronal mechanisms of Working Memory

Jan Kamiński
Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology
Mar 17, 2021

Working memory (WM) is a fundamental human cognitive capacity that allows us to maintain and manipulate information stored for a short period of time in an active form. Thanks to a unique opportunity to record activity of neurons in humans during epilepsy monitoring we could test neuronal mechanisms of this cognitive capacity. We showed that firing rate of image selective neurons in Medial Temporal Lobe persists through maintenance periods of working memory task. This activity was behaviorally relevant and formed attractors in its state-space. Furthermore, we showed that firing rate of those neurons phase lock to ongoing slow-frequency oscillations. The properties of phase locking are dependent on memory content and load. During high memory loads, the phase of the oscillatory activity to which neurons phase lock provides information about memory content not available in the firing rate of the neurons.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural systems for vocal perception

Catherine Perrodin
Institute of Behavioural Neuroscience, University College London
Jan 12, 2021

For social animals, successfully communicating with others is essential for interactions and survival. My research aims to answer a central question on the neuronal basis of this ability, from the perspective of the listener: how do our brains enable us to communicate with each other? My work develops nonhuman animal models to study the behavioural and neuronal mechanisms underlying the perception of vocal patterns. I will start by providing an overview of my past research characterizing the neuronal-level substrates of voice processing along the primate temporal lobe. I will then focus on my current work on vocal perception in mice, in which I utilize natural male-female courtship behaviour to evaluate the acoustic dimensions extracted by listeners from ultrasonic sequences. I will then talk about ongoing work investigating the neuronal substrates supporting the perception of behaviourally relevant acoustic cues from mouse vocal sequences.

ePosterNeuroscience

Neuronal mechanisms of visuo-tactile integration in mouse associative cortices

Maëlle Guyoton, Giulio Matteucci, Lucile Favero, Sami El-Boustani
ePosterNeuroscience

Molecular and neuronal mechanisms of behavioural integration in the extended amygdala

Federica Fermani, Simon Chang, Steffen Schneider, Lianyuan Huang, Mackenzie W. Mathis, Jan M. Deussing, Na Cai

FENS Forum 2024

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