TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
21Total items
14ePosters
7Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Inducing short to medium neuroplastic effects with Transcranial Ultrasound Stimulation

Elsa Fouragnan
Brain Research and Imaging Centre, University of Plymouth
Nov 30, 2023

Sound waves can be used to modify brain activity safely and transiently with unprecedented precision even deep in the brain - unlike traditional brain stimulation methods. In a series of studies in humans and non-human primates, I will show that Transcranial Ultrasound Stimulation (TUS) can have medium- to long-lasting effects. Multiple read-outs allow us to conclude that TUS can perturb neuronal tissues up to 2h after intervention, including changes in local and distributed brain network configurations, behavioural changes, task-related neuronal changes and chemical changes in the sonicated focal volume. Combined with multiple neuroimaging techniques (resting state functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging [rsfMRI], Spectroscopy [MRS] and task-related fMRI changes), this talk will focus on recent human TUS studies.

SeminarNeuroscience

Dynamic endocrine modulation of the nervous system

Emily Jabocs
US Santa Barbara Neuroscience
Apr 18, 2023

Sex hormones are powerful neuromodulators of learning and memory. In rodents and nonhuman primates estrogen and progesterone influence the central nervous system across a range of spatiotemporal scales. Yet, their influence on the structural and functional architecture of the human brain is largely unknown. Here, I highlight findings from a series of dense-sampling neuroimaging studies from my laboratory designed to probe the dynamic interplay between the nervous and endocrine systems. Individuals underwent brain imaging and venipuncture every 12-24 hours for 30 consecutive days. These procedures were carried out under freely cycling conditions and again under a pharmacological regimen that chronically suppresses sex hormone production. First, resting state fMRI evidence suggests that transient increases in estrogen drive robust increases in functional connectivity across the brain. Time-lagged methods from dynamical systems analysis further reveals that these transient changes in estrogen enhance within-network integration (i.e. global efficiency) in several large-scale brain networks, particularly Default Mode and Dorsal Attention Networks. Next, using high-resolution hippocampal subfield imaging, we found that intrinsic hormone fluctuations and exogenous hormone manipulations can rapidly and dynamically shape medial temporal lobe morphology. Together, these findings suggest that neuroendocrine factors influence the brain over short and protracted timescales.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Brain dynamics and flexible behaviors

Lucina Uddin
Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California, Los Angeles
Mar 16, 2022

Executive control processes and flexible behaviors rely on the integrity of, and dynamic interactions between, large-scale functional brain networks. The right insular cortex is a critical component of a salience/midcingulo-insular network that is thought to mediate interactions between brain networks involved in externally oriented (central executive/lateral frontoparietal network) and internally oriented (default mode/medial frontoparietal network) processes. How these brain systems reconfigure with development is a critical question for cognitive neuroscience, with implications for neurodevelopmental pathologies affecting brain connectivity. I will describe studies examining how brain network dynamics support flexible behaviors in typical and atypical development, presenting evidence suggesting a unique role for the dorsal anterior insular from studies of meta-analytic connectivity modeling, dynamic functional connectivity, and structural connectivity. These findings from adults, typically developing children, and children with autism suggest that structural and functional maturation of insular pathways is a critical component of the process by which human brain networks mature to support complex, flexible cognitive processes throughout the lifespan.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Generative models of brain function: Inference, networks, and mechanisms

Adeel Razi
Monash University
Nov 26, 2021

This talk will focus on the generative modelling of resting state time series or endogenous neuronal activity. I will survey developments in modelling distributed neuronal fluctuations – spectral dynamic causal modelling (DCM) for functional MRI – and how this modelling rests upon functional connectivity. The dynamics of brain connectivity has recently attracted a lot of attention among brain mappers. I will also show a novel method to identify dynamic effective connectivity using spectral DCM. Further, I will summarise the development of the next generation of DCMs towards large-scale, whole-brain schemes which are computationally inexpensive, to the other extreme of the development using more sophisticated and biophysically detailed generative models based on the canonical microcircuits.

SeminarNeuroscience

Spontaneous activity competes with externally evoked responses in sensory cortex

Golan Karvat
Diester lab, University of Freiburg, Germany
Nov 25, 2021

The interaction between spontaneously and externally evoked neuronal activity is fundamental for a functional brain. Increasing evidence suggests that bursts of high-power oscillations in the 15-30 Hz beta-band represent activation of resting state networks and can mask perception of external cues. Yet demonstration of the effect of beta power modulation on perception in real-time is missing, and little is known about the underlying mechanism. In this talk I will present the methods we developed to fill this gap together with our recent results. We used a closed-loop stimulus-intensity adjustment system based on online burst-occupancy analyses in rats involved in a forepaw vibrotactile detection task. We found that the masking influence of burst-occupancy on perception can be counterbalanced in real-time by adjusting the vibration amplitude. Offline analysis of firing-rates and local field potentials across cortical layers and frequency bands confirmed that beta-power in the somatosensory cortex anticorrelated with sensory evoked responses. Mechanistically, bursts in all bands were accompanied by transient synchronization of cell assemblies, but only beta-bursts were followed by a reduction of firing-rate. Our closed loop approach reveals that spontaneous beta-bursts reflect a dynamic state that competes with external stimuli.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Challenge and Opportunities of Mapping Cortical Layer Activity and Connectivity with fMRI

Peter Bandettini
NIMH
Jul 9, 2021

In this talk I outline the technical challenges and current solutions to layer fMRI. Specifically, I describe our acquisition strategies for maximizing resolution, spatial coverage, time efficiency as well as, perhaps most importantly, vascular specificity. Novel applications from our group, including mapping feedforward and feedback connections to M1 during task and sensory input modulation and S1 during a sensory prediction task are be shown. Layer specific activity in dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex during a working memory task is also demonstrated. Additionally, I’ll show preliminary work on mapping whole brain layer-specific resting state connectivity and hierarchy.

SeminarNeuroscience

Precision and Temporal Stability of Directionality Inferences from Group Iterative Multiple Model Estimation (GIMME) Brain Network Models

Alexander Weigard
University of Michigan
Mar 30, 2021

The Group Iterative Multiple Model Estimation (GIMME) framework has emerged as a promising method for characterizing connections between brain regions in functional neuroimaging data. Two of the most appealing features of this framework are its ability to estimate the directionality of connections between network nodes and its ability to determine whether those connections apply to everyone in a sample (group-level) or just to one person (individual-level). However, there are outstanding questions about the validity and stability of these estimates, including: 1) how recovery of connection directionality is affected by features of data sets such as scan length and autoregressive effects, which may be strong in some imaging modalities (resting state fMRI, fNIRS) but weaker in others (task fMRI); and 2) whether inferences about directionality at the group and individual levels are stable across time. This talk will provide an overview of the GIMME framework and describe relevant results from a large-scale simulation study that assesses directionality recovery under various conditions and a separate project that investigates the temporal stability of GIMME’s inferences in the Human Connectome Project data set. Analyses from these projects demonstrate that estimates of directionality are most precise when autoregressive and cross-lagged relations in the data are relatively strong, and that inferences about the directionality of group-level connections, specifically, appear to be stable across time. Implications of these findings for the interpretation of directional connectivity estimates in different types of neuroimaging data will be discussed.

ePosterNeuroscience

Unpacking Resting State Dynamics in Hallucination-Prone Individuals Using a Hidden Semi-Markov Model

Hanna S. Honcamp, Suvarnalata Xanthate Duggirala, Aland Astudillo, Michael Schwartze, Wael El-Deredy, Therese Van Amelsvoort, David Linden, Sonja A. Kotz
ePosterNeuroscience

"Why" resting state functional connectivity must be restlessly dynamic?

Simachew Mengiste, Demian Battaglia

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Genetic correlates of intra- and interhemispheric resting state functional language connectivity

Jitse Amelink

Neuromatch 5

ePosterNeuroscience

Unifying structured activity, travelling waves, and optogenetic perturbation during resting state in a single large-scale V1 model

Tibor Rozsa, Rémy Cagnol, Ján Antolík

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Data-driven EEG theta and alpha components are associated with subjective experience during resting state

Povilas Tarailis, Inga Griskova-Bulanova
ePosterNeuroscience

Impact of cognitive training in Resting State Networks in the TgF344-AD rat model

Guadalupe Soria, Emma Muñoz-Moreno, Xavier López-Gil, Federico Varriano, Raúl Tudela
ePosterNeuroscience

Neuronal and hemodynamic resting state activity during acute hypoxia using calcium and intrinsic optical imaging in mice

Marleen Bakker, Ismaël Djerourou, Samuel Belanger, Frédéric Lesage, Matthieu Vanni
ePosterNeuroscience

Resting state functional connectivity networks in twins with autism: Towards the Turkish Longitudinal Neuroimaging Autism Project (TURK-NAP) using the ABİDE Database

Basak Alpas
ePosterNeuroscience

Unified spiking model of structured activity and travelling sparse waves in the resting state of the primary visual cortex

Tibor Rózsa, Rémy Cagnol, Ján Antolík
ePosterNeuroscience

VoxelBoxPlus - A novel tool for dynamic network localization of brain functional activity in Dementia using resting state-fMRI: implications on detection, treatment, and management

Rimjhim Agrawal, Akshay Kumaar M, Vatsala Nema, Dilip Rajeswari, Ruchi Sharma, Sahana Hegde, Laina Emmanuel, Ranganayaki Sathyanarayanan
ePosterNeuroscience

The effects of associative learning on neuronal activity and functional connections in the mouse brain resting state networks

Ksenia Toropova, Olga Ivashkina, Anna Ivanova, Konstantin Anokhin

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Linking the microarchitecture of neurotransmitter systems to large-scale MEG resting state networks

Felix Siebenhühner, J Matias Palva, Satu Palva

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Meta-analyses of brain structural and resting state functional alterations in subjective cognitive decline

Adina Mincic

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Relationships between resting state brain networks and cognition across psychosis, depression, and clinical high-risk for psychosis

Dilara Steenken, Madalina Buciuman, David Popovic, Shalaila Haas, Linda Antonucci, Lana Kambeitz-Ilankovic, Anne Ruef, Stefan Borgwardt, Joseph Kambeitz, Christos Pantelis, Rebekka Lencer, Alessandro Bertolino, Paolo Brambilla, Rachel Upthegrove, Stephan J. Wood, Peter Falkai, Anita Riecher-Rössler, Stephan Ruhrmann, Frauke Schultze-Lutter, Eva Meisenzahl, Jarmo Hietala, Raimo K. Salokangas, Nikolaos Koutsouleris

FENS Forum 2024

resting state coverage

21 items

ePoster14
Seminar7

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