TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
7Total items
4ePosters
3Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Information Dynamics in the Hippocampus and Cortex and their alterations in epilepsy

Wesley Clawson
Tufts University
Sep 17, 2021

Neurological disorders share common high-level alterations, such as cognitive deficits, anxiety, and depression. This raises the possibility of fundamental alterations in the way information conveyed by neural firing is maintained and dispatched in the diseased brain. Using experimental epilepsy as a model of neurological disorder we tested the hypothesis of altered information processing, analyzing how neurons in the hippocampus and the entorhinal cortex store and exchange information during slow and theta oscillations. We equate the storage and sharing of information to low level, or primitive, information processing at the algorithmic level, the theoretical intermediate level between structure and function. We find that these low-level processes are organized into substates during brain states marked by theta and slow oscillations. Their internal composition and organization through time are disrupted in epilepsy, losing brain state-specificity, and shifting towards a regime of disorder in a brain region dependent manner. We propose that the alteration of information processing at an algorithmic level may be a mechanism behind the emergent and widespread co-morbidities associated with epilepsy, and perhaps other disorders.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

An in-silico framework to study the cholinergic modulation of the neocortex

Cristina Colangelo
EPFL, Blue Brain Project
Jun 30, 2021

Neuromodulators control information processing in cortical microcircuits by regulating the cellular and synaptic physiology of neurons. Computational models and detailed simulations of neocortical microcircuitry offer a unifying framework to analyze the role of neuromodulators on network activity. In the present study, to get a deeper insight in the organization of the cortical neuropil for modeling purposes, we quantify the fiber length per cortical volume and the density of varicosities for catecholaminergic, serotonergic and cholinergic systems using immunocytochemical staining and stereological techniques. The data obtained are integrated into a biologically detailed digital reconstruction of the rodent neocortex (Markram et al, 2015) in order to model the influence of modulatory systems on the activity of the somatosensory cortex neocortical column. Simulations of ascending modulation of network activity in our model predict the effects of increasing levels of neuromodulators on diverse neuron types and synapses and reveal a spectrum of activity states. Low levels of neuromodulation drive microcircuit activity into slow oscillations and network synchrony, whereas high neuromodulator concentrations govern fast oscillations and network asynchrony. The models and simulations thus provide a unifying in silico framework to study the role of neuromodulators in reconfiguring network activity.

SeminarNeuroscience

How sleep remodels the brain

Gina Poe
University of California, Los Angeles
Jul 23, 2020

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.

ePosterNeuroscience

Spatiotemporal patterns of adaptation-induced slow oscillations in a whole-brain model of slow-wave sleep

Caglar Cakan, Cristiana Dimulescu, Liliia Khakimova, Daniela Obst, Agnes Flöel, Klaus Obermayer

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Characterization of slow oscillations and spindles during sleep from the juvenile to the peri-adolescent developmental stage in rats

Julia Fechner, María P. Contreras, Candela Zorzo Vallina, Jan Born, Marion Inostroza
ePosterNeuroscience

Control of cortical slow oscillations and epileptiform discharges by photoswitchable type 1 muscarinic ligands

Jose Manuel Sánchez-Sánchez, Almudena Barbero-Castillo, Fabio Riefolo, Rosalba Sortino, Marta Forcella, Luca Agnetta, Miquel Bosch, Michael Decker, Pau Gorostiza, Maria V. Sanchez-Vives
ePosterNeuroscience

Enhancing scalp sleep slow oscillations and sleep spindles through targeted closed-loop auditory stimulation based on in-ear EEG electrodes

David Henao-Herreño, Miguel G. Navarrete, José Y. Juez, Hugo Dinh, Rodrigo Gómez, Mario A. Valderrama, Michel Le Van Quyen

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