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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Rodents to Investigate the Neural Basis of Audiovisual Temporal Processing and Perception

Ashley Schormans

Dr

BrainsCAN, Western University, Canada.

Schedule
Wednesday, September 27, 2023

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Schedule

Wednesday, September 27, 2023

12:00 AM America/New_York

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Host: Timing Research Forum

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

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Host

Timing Research Forum

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

To form a coherent perception of the world around us, we are constantly processing and integrating sensory information from multiple modalities. In fact, when auditory and visual stimuli occur within ~100 ms of each other, individuals tend to perceive the stimuli as a single event, even though they occurred separately. In recent years, our lab, and others, have developed rat models of audiovisual temporal perception using behavioural tasks such as temporal order judgments (TOJs) and synchrony judgments (SJs). While these rodent models demonstrate metrics that are consistent with humans (e.g., perceived simultaneity, temporal acuity), we have sought to confirm whether rodents demonstrate the hallmarks of audiovisual temporal perception, such as predictable shifts in their perception based on experience and sensitivity to alterations in neurochemistry. Ultimately, our findings indicate that rats serve as an excellent model to study the neural mechanisms underlying audiovisual temporal perception, which to date remains relativity unknown. Using our validated translational audiovisual behavioural tasks, in combination with optogenetics, neuropharmacology and in vivo electrophysiology, we aim to uncover the mechanisms by which inhibitory neurotransmission and top-down circuits finely control ones’ perception. This research will significantly advance our understanding of the neuronal circuitry underlying audiovisual temporal perception, and will be the first to establish the role of interneurons in regulating the synchronized neural activity that is thought to contribute to the precise binding of audiovisual stimuli.

Topics

audiovisual temporal processingcortical plasticityhearing lossinhibitory neurotransmissioninterneuronsmultisensory processingneuropharmacologyoptogeneticssensory integrationsensory perceptionsynchrony judgmentstemporal order judgments

About the Speaker

Ashley Schormans

Dr

BrainsCAN, Western University, Canada.

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

scholar.google.ca/citations

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