TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
10Total items
6Seminars
4ePosters

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Cognitive experience alters cortical involvement in navigation decisions

Charlotte Arlt
Harvard
Apr 22, 2022

The neural correlates of decision-making have been investigated extensively, and recent work aims to identify under what conditions cortex is actually necessary for making accurate decisions. We discovered that mice with distinct cognitive experiences, beyond sensory and motor learning, use different cortical areas and neural activity patterns to solve the same task, revealing past learning as a critical determinant of whether cortex is necessary for decision tasks. We used optogenetics and calcium imaging to study the necessity and neural activity of multiple cortical areas in mice with different training histories. Posterior parietal cortex and retrosplenial cortex were mostly dispensable for accurate performance of a simple navigation-based visual discrimination task. In contrast, these areas were essential for the same simple task when mice were previously trained on complex tasks with delay periods or association switches. Multi-area calcium imaging showed that, in mice with complex-task experience, single-neuron activity had higher selectivity and neuron-neuron correlations were weaker, leading to codes with higher task information. Therefore, past experience is a key factor in determining whether cortical areas have a causal role in decision tasks.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

How does the metabolically-expensive mammalian brain adapt to food scarcity?

Zahid Padamsey
Rochefort lab, University of Edinburgh
Feb 23, 2022

Information processing is energetically expensive. In the mammalian brain, it is unclear how information coding and energy usage are regulated during food scarcity. I addressed this in the visual cortex of awake mice using whole-cell recordings and two-photon imaging to monitor layer 2/3 neuronal activity and ATP usage. I found that food restriction reduced synaptic ATP usage by 29% through a decrease in AMPA receptor conductance. Neuronal excitability was nonetheless preserved by a compensatory increase in input resistance and a depolarized resting membrane potential. Consequently, neurons spiked at similar rates as controls, but spent less ATP on underlying excitatory currents. This energy-saving strategy had a cost since it amplified the variability of visually-evoked subthreshold responses, leading to a 32% broadening in orientation tuning and impaired fine visual discrimination. This reduction in coding precision was associated with reduced levels of the fat mass-regulated hormone leptin and was restored by exogenous leptin supplementation. These findings reveal novel mechanisms that dynamically regulate energy usage and coding precision in neocortex.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Large-scale approaches for distributed circuits underlying visual decision-making

Nick Steinmetz
University of Washington
Oct 11, 2021

Mammalian vision and visually-guided behavior relies on neurons distributed across diverse brain regions. In this talk I will describe our efforts to create tools that allow us to measure activity from these distributed circuits - Neuropixels probes for large-scale electrophysiology - and our findings from studies deploying these tools to study visual detection and discrimination in mice.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Neocortex saves energy by reducing coding precision during food scarcity

Nathalie Rochefort
University of Edinburgh
Sep 27, 2021

Information processing is energetically expensive. In the mammalian brain, it is unclear how information coding and energy usage are regulated during food scarcity. We addressed this in the visual cortex of awake mice using whole-cell patch clamp recordings and two-photon imaging to monitor layer 2/3 neuronal activity and ATP usage. We found that food restriction resulted in energy savings through a decrease in AMPA receptor conductance, reducing synaptic ATP usage by 29%. Neuronal excitability was nonetheless preserved by a compensatory increase in input resistance and a depolarized resting membrane potential. Consequently, neurons spiked at similar rates as controls, but spent less ATP on underlying excitatory currents. This energy-saving strategy had a cost since it amplified the variability of visually-evoked subthreshold responses, leading to a 32% broadening in orientation tuning and impaired fine visual discrimination. These findings reveal novel mechanisms that dynamically regulate energy usage and coding precision in neocortex.

SeminarNeuroscience

Circuit dysfunction and sensory processing in Fragile X Syndrome

Carlos Portera-Cailliau
UCLA
Jun 23, 2020

To uncover the circuit-level alterations that underlie atypical sensory processing associated with autism, we have adopted a symptom-to-circuit approach in theFmr1-/- mouse model of Fragile X syndrome (FXS). Using a go/no-go task and in vivo 2-photon calcium imaging, we find that impaired visual discrimination in Fmr1-/- mice correlates with marked deficits in orientation tuning of principal neurons in primary visual cortex, and a decrease in the activity of parvalbumin (PV) interneurons. Restoring visually evoked activity in PV cells in Fmr1-/- mice with a chemogenetic (DREADD) strategy was sufficient to rescue their behavioural performance. Strikingly, human subjects with FXS exhibit similar impairments in visual discrimination as Fmr1-/- mice. These results suggest that manipulating inhibition may help sensory processing in FXS. More recently, we find that the ability of Fmr1-/- mice to perform the visual discrimination task is also drastically impaired in the presence of visual or auditory distractors, suggesting that sensory hypersensitivity may affect perceptual learning in autism.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Playing the piano with the cortex: role of neuronal ensembles and pattern completion in perception

Rafael Yuste
Columbia University
May 12, 2020

The design of neural circuits, with large numbers of neurons interconnected in vast networks, strongly suggest that they are specifically build to generate emergent functional properties (1). To explore this hypothesis, we have developed two-photon holographic methods to selective image and manipulate the activity of neuronal populations in 3D in vivo (2). Using them we find that groups of synchronous neurons (neuronal ensembles) dominate the evoked and spontaneous activity of mouse primary visual cortex (3). Ensembles can be optogenetically imprinted for several days and some of their neurons trigger the entire ensemble (4). By activating these pattern completion cells in ensembles involved in visual discrimination paradigms, we can bi-directionally alter behavioural choices (5). Our results demonstrate that ensembles are necessary and sufficient for visual perception and are consistent with the possibility that neuronal ensembles are the functional building blocks of cortical circuits. 1. R. Yuste, From the neuron doctrine to neural networks. Nat Rev Neurosci 16, 487-497 (2015). 2. L. Carrillo-Reid, W. Yang, J. E. Kang Miller, D. S. Peterka, R. Yuste, Imaging and Optically Manipulating Neuronal Ensembles. Annu Rev Biophys, 46: 271-293 (2017). 3. J. E. Miller, I. Ayzenshtat, L. Carrillo-Reid, R. Yuste, Visual stimuli recruit intrinsically generated cortical ensembles. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 111, E4053-4061 (2014). 4. L. Carrillo-Reid, W. Yang, Y. Bando, D. S. Peterka, R. Yuste, Imprinting and recalling cortical ensembles. Science 353, 691-694 (2016). 5. L. Carrillo-Reid, S. Han, W. Yang, A. Akrouh, R. Yuste, (2019). Controlling visually-guided behaviour by holographic recalling of cortical ensembles. Cell 178, 447-457. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2019.05.045.

ePosterNeuroscience

Broadband visual stimuli engage new neuronal populations in the mouse visual cortex and facilitate visual discrimination

Elisabeta Balla, Christopher Wiesbrock, Jenice Linde, Björn Kampa
ePosterNeuroscience

Dendritic signaling in cortical pyramidal cells during visual discrimination

Borbála Kertész, Eszter Báthory, Zoltán Szadai, Martin Stacho, Lídia Popara, Tamás Tompa, Katalin Ócsai, Gergely Szalay, István M. Takács, Andrius Plauska, Linda Sulcz-Judák, Gergely Katona, Balázs Rózsa
ePosterNeuroscience

Brain-state dependent deficit in visual discrimination in a mouse model of SYNGAP1-related intellectual disability and autism

Danai Katsanevaki, Nathalie Dupuy, Sam Booker, Nina Kudryashova, Damien Wright, Aisling Kenny, Zihao Chen, Pippa Howitt, Steffen Schneider, Mackenzie Mathis, Andrew Stanfield, Peter Kind, Nathalie Rochefort

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Learning-dependent functional increase in connectivity among the posterior striatum, lateral geniculate nucleus, and visual cortex in the visual discrimination task

Sai Tanimoto, Shigeyoshi Fujisawa

FENS Forum 2024

visual discrimination coverage

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ePoster4

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