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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

“Circuit mechanisms for flexible behaviors”

Takaki Komiyama,

Prof

UC San Diego

Schedule
Thursday, April 8, 2021

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Schedule

Thursday, April 8, 2021

8:00 PM Europe/Zurich

Host: Ad hoc

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Meeting Password

495715

Use this password when joining the live session

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Ad hoc

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

Animals constantly modify their behavior through experience. Flexible behavior is key to our ability to adapt to the ever-changing environment. My laboratory is interested in studying the activity of neuronal ensembles in behaving animals, and how it changes with learning. We have recently set up a paradigm where mice learn to associate sensory information (two different odors) to motor outputs (lick vs no-lick) under head-fixation. We combined this with two-photon calcium imaging, which can monitor the activity of a microcircuit of many tens of neurons simultaneously from a small area of the brain. Imaging the motor cortex during the learning of this task revealed neurons with diverse task-related response types. Intriguingly, different response types were spatially intermingled; even immediately adjacent neurons often had very different response types. As the mouse learned the task under the microscope, the activity coupling of neurons with similar response types specifically increased, even though they are intermingled with neurons with dissimilar response types. This suggests that intermingled subnetworks of functionally-related neurons form in a learning-related way, an observation that became possible with our cutting-edge technique combining imaging and behavior. We are working to extend this study. How plastic are neuronal microcircuits during other forms of learning? How plastic are they in other parts of the brain? What are the cellular and molecular mechanisms of the microcircuit plasticity? Are the observed activity and plasticity required for learning? How does the activity of identified individual neurons change over days to weeks? We are asking these questions, combining a variety of techniques including in vivo two-photon imaging, optogenetics, electrophysiology, genetics and behavior.

Topics

behaviouralcalcium imagingelectrophysiological techniquesflexible behaviourgeneticimaginglearningmicrocircuit plasticitymotor cortexneuronal ensemblesoptogeneticssensory informationtask-related response types

About the Speaker

Takaki Komiyama,

Prof

UC San Diego

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

labs.biology.ucsd.edu/komiyama/html/Home.html

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