TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
6Total items
4ePosters
2Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Local sleep regulation and its implications for cognition and brain plasticity

Giulio Bernardi
IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca, Italy
Dec 7, 2020

Sleep has been classically described as an all-or-nothing global phenomenon. However, a growing body of evidence indicates that typical sleep hallmarks, such as slow waves and spindles, occur and are regulated locally. I will present here evidence indicating that slow waves, in particular, may be related with, and offer a read-out of, local and long-range brain connectivity. In fact, slow waves do not only track changes related to both experience-dependent plasticity and brain maturation during development, but also appear to be actively involved in the fine regulation of brain plasticity and in the removal of metabolic wastes. I will also show that, consistent with a local regulation of sleep, slow waves can often occur locally during wakefulness, with an incidence that varies as a function of time spent awake and of previous rest. These waking slow waves are associated with impaired performance during cognitive tasks and may contribute to explain attention lapses and errors commonly associated with insufficient sleep.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Sensing Light for Sight and Physiological Control

Michael Tri Do
Harvard Medical School and Boston Children's Hospital
Aug 11, 2020

Organisms sense light for purposes that range from recognizing objects to synchronizing activity with environmental cycles. What mechanisms serve these diverse tasks? This seminar will examine the specializations of two cell types. First are the foveal cone photoreceptors. These neurons are used by primates to see far greater detail than other mammals, which lack them. How do the biophysical properties of foveal cones support high-acuity vision? Second are the melanopsin retinal ganglion cells, which are conserved among mammals and essential for processes that include regulation of the circadian clock, sleep, and hormone levels. How do these neurons encode light, and is encoding customized for animals of different niches? In pursuing these questions, a broad goal is to learn how various levels of biological organization are shaped to behavioural needs.

ePosterNeuroscience

Impact of Alzheimer’s disease on non-visual light perception, suprachiasmatic nucleus connectivity, and sleep regulation

Hugo Calligaro, Michael TY Lam, Brian Khov, Keun-Young Kim, Wonkyu K Ju, Mark H Ellisman, Satchidananda Panda

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Involvement of striato-pallidal DARPP32 in sleep regulation

Clarissa A. Pisanò, Emanuela Santini, Gilberto Fisone
ePosterNeuroscience

A Role for Orexin in REM Sleep Regulation

Gianandrea Broglia, Mehdi Tafti, Mojtaba Bandarabadi
ePosterNeuroscience

Sleep regulation by the cortical projections to the preoptic nucleus

Mathilde Chouvaeff, Thierry Gallopin, Karim Benchenane

sleep regulation coverage

6 items

ePoster4
Seminar2

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