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24 curated items23 Seminars1 ePoster
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24 items · mars
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SeminarNeuroscience

sensorimotor control, mouvement, touch, EEG

Marieva Vlachou
Institut des Sciences du Mouvement Etienne Jules Marey, Aix-Marseille Université/CNRS, France
Dec 18, 2025

Traditionally, touch is associated with exteroception and is rarely considered a relevant sensory cue for controlling movements in space, unlike vision. We developed a technique to isolate and measure tactile involvement in controlling sliding finger movements over a surface. Young adults traced a 2D shape with their index finger under direct or mirror-reversed visual feedback to create a conflict between visual and somatosensory inputs. In this context, increased reliance on somatosensory input compromises movement accuracy. Based on the hypothesis that tactile cues contribute to guiding hand movements when in contact with a surface, we predicted poorer performance when the participants traced with their bare finger compared to when their tactile sensation was dampened by a smooth, rigid finger splint. The results supported this prediction. EEG source analyses revealed smaller current in the source-localized somatosensory cortex during sensory conflict when the finger directly touched the surface. This finding supports the hypothesis that, in response to mirror-reversed visual feedback, the central nervous system selectively gated task-irrelevant somatosensory inputs, thereby mitigating, though not entirely resolving, the visuo-somatosensory conflict. Together, our results emphasize touch’s involvement in movement control over a surface, challenging the notion that vision predominantly governs goal-directed hand or finger movements.

SeminarNeuroscience

Marsupial joeys illuminate the onset of neural activity patterns in the developing neocortex

Rodrigo Suarez
University of Queensland in Australia
Jul 1, 2024
SeminarNeuroscience

How can marsupials help us to understand neocortical evolution and plasticity?

Laura Fenlon
University of Queensland in Australia
Jun 30, 2024
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Virtual Brain Twins for Brain Medicine and Epilepsy

Viktor Jirsa
Aix Marseille Université - Inserm
Nov 7, 2023

Over the past decade we have demonstrated that the fusion of subject-specific structural information of the human brain with mathematical dynamic models allows building biologically realistic brain network models, which have a predictive value, beyond the explanatory power of each approach independently. The network nodes hold neural population models, which are derived using mean field techniques from statistical physics expressing ensemble activity via collective variables. Our hybrid approach fuses data-driven with forward-modeling-based techniques and has been successfully applied to explain healthy brain function and clinical translation including aging, stroke and epilepsy. Here we illustrate the workflow along the example of epilepsy: we reconstruct personalized connectivity matrices of human epileptic patients using Diffusion Tensor weighted Imaging (DTI). Subsets of brain regions generating seizures in patients with refractory partial epilepsy are referred to as the epileptogenic zone (EZ). During a seizure, paroxysmal activity is not restricted to the EZ, but may recruit other healthy brain regions and propagate activity through large brain networks. The identification of the EZ is crucial for the success of neurosurgery and presents one of the historically difficult questions in clinical neuroscience. The application of latest techniques in Bayesian inference and model inversion, in particular Hamiltonian Monte Carlo, allows the estimation of the EZ, including estimates of confidence and diagnostics of performance of the inference. The example of epilepsy nicely underwrites the predictive value of personalized large-scale brain network models. The workflow of end-to-end modeling is an integral part of the European neuroinformatics platform EBRAINS and enables neuroscientists worldwide to build and estimate personalized virtual brains.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Why is 7T MRI indispensable in epilepsy now?

Maxime Guye
CRMBM Aix Marseille University
Apr 25, 2023

Identifying a structural brain lesion on MRI is the most important factor that correlates with seizure freedom after surgery in patients suffering from drug-resistant focal epilepsy. By providing better image contrast and higher spatial resolution, structural MRI at 7 Tesla (7T) can lead to lesion detection in about 25% of patients presenting with negative MRI at lower fields. In addition to a better detection/delineation/phenotyping of epileptogenic lesions, higher signal at ultra-high field also facilitates more detailed analyses of several functional and molecular alterations of tissues, susceptible to detect epileptogenic properties even in absence of visible lesions. These advantages but also the technical challenges of 7T MRI in practice will be presented and discussed.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Meningeal macrophages protect against viral neuroinfection

Rejane Rua
Aix Marseille Université, Inserm
Jan 16, 2023

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2022.10.005

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Motor contribution to auditory temporal predictions

Benjamin Morillon
Aix Marseille Univ, Inserm, INS, Institut de Neurosciences des Systèmes
Dec 13, 2022

Temporal predictions are fundamental instruments for facilitating sensory selection, allowing humans to exploit regularities in the world. Recent evidence indicates that the motor system instantiates predictive timing mechanisms, helping to synchronize temporal fluctuations of attention with the timing of events in a task-relevant stream, thus facilitating sensory selection. Accordingly, in the auditory domain auditory-motor interactions are observed during perception of speech and music, two temporally structured sensory streams. I will present a behavioral and neurophysiological account for this theory and will detail the parameters governing the emergence of this auditory-motor coupling, through a set of behavioral and magnetoencephalography (MEG) experiments.

SeminarNeuroscience

‘The functional nano-architecture of axonal actin’

Christophe Leterrier
Neuropathophysiology Institute (INP), University of Marseille
Nov 30, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

A multimodal perspective on learning to read

Felipe Fernandes Pedago
Aix, Marseille University, France
Nov 28, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

Learning-to-read and dyslexia: a cross-language computational perspective

Johannes Ziegler
Aix-Marseille University & CNRS
Sep 26, 2022

How do children learn to read in different countries? How do deficits in various components of the reading network affect learning outcomes? What are the consequences of such deficits in different languages? In this talk, I will present a full-blown developmentally plausible computational model of reading acquisition that has been implemented in English, French, Italian and German. The model can simulate individual learning trajectories and intervention outcomes on the basis of three component skills: orthography, phonology, and vocabulary. I will use the model to show how cross-language differences affect the learning-to-read process in different languages and to investigate to what extent similar deficits will produce similar or different manifestations of dyslexia in different languages.

SeminarNeuroscience

Untitled Seminar

Guillermina Lopez-Bendito, Spain and Rodrigo Suarez, Australia
Jun 28, 2022

G. Lopez-Bendito, Spain: “Spontaneous Activity in the Specification and Plasticity of Sensory Circuits”; R. Suarez , Australia: “Marsupials illuminate brain wiring”

SeminarNeuroscience

Visualising time in the human brain

Jennifer Coull
LNC, Aix, Marseille Université & CNRS
May 16, 2022

We all have a sense of time. Yet it is a particularly intangible sensation. So how is our “sense” of time represented in the brain? Functional neuroimaging studies have consistently identified a network of regions, including Supplementary Motor Area and basal ganglia, that are activated when participants make judgements about the duration of currently unfolding events. In parallel, left parietal cortex and cerebellum are activated when participants predict when future events are likely to occur. These structures are activated by temporal processing even when task goals are purely perceptual. So why should the perception of time be represented in regions of the brain that have more traditionally been implicated in motor function? One possibility is that we learn about time through action. In other words, action could provide the functional scaffolding for learning about time in childhood, explaining why it has come to be represented in motor circuits of the adult brain.

SeminarNeuroscience

‘How development sculpts hippocampal circuits’

Rosa Cossart
Institute of Mediterranean Neurobiology (INMED), affiliated to INSERM and Aix-Marseille University
Mar 30, 2022
SeminarPhysics of Life

Elastically limited liquid-liquid phase separation within cells

Pierre Ronceray
Aix-Marseille University
Jul 22, 2021
SeminarPhysics of Life

Molecular to cellular mechanics probed by high-speed force microscopy

Felix Rico
Aix-Marseille University
Jun 17, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

Untitled Seminar

Leah Krubitzer
University of California, Davis
May 5, 2021

Leah Krubitzer is a Distinguished Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of California, Davis. Her graduate work focused on the evolution of visual cortex in primates, and she extended her research in Australia to include monotremes and marsupials. She has worked on the brains of over 45 different mammals. Her current research focuses on the impact of early experience and how culture impacts brain development. She also examines the evolution of sensory motor networks involved in manual dexterity, reaching and grasping in mammals. She received a MacArthur award for her work on evolution.

SeminarNeuroscience

All optical interrogation of developing GABAergic circuits in vivo

Rosa Cossart
Mediterranean Neurobiology Institute, Faculté de Médecine, Aix-Marseille Université, Marseille, France
Mar 16, 2021

The developmental journey of cortical interneurons encounters several activity-dependent milestones. During the early postnatal period in developing mice, GABAergic neurons are transient preferential recipients of thalamic inputs and undergo activity-dependent migration arrest, wiring and programmed cell-death. But cortical GABAergic neurons are also specified by very early developmental programs. For example, the earliest born GABAergic neurons develop into hub cells coordinating spontaneous activity in hippocampal slices. Despite their importance for the emergence of sensory experience, their role in coordinating network dynamics, and the role of activity in their integration into cortical networks, the collective in vivo dynamics of GABAergic neurons during the neonatal postnatal period remain unknown. Here, I will present data related to the coordinated activity between GABAergic cells of the mouse barrel cortex and hippocampus in non-anesthetized pups using the recent development of all optical methods to record and manipulate neuronal activity in vivo. I will show that the functional structure of developing GABAergic circuits is remarkably patterned, with segregated assemblies of prospective parvalbumin neurons and highly connected hub cells, both shaped by sensory-dependent processes.

SeminarNeuroscience

The birth of hippocampal memory circuits

Rosa Cossart
Inmed, Marseille - France
Jan 10, 2021
SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

TBC

Marco Cosentino-Lagomarsino
Marco Cosentino-Lagomarsino (IFOM Foundation / University of Milan, Italy)
Sep 21, 2020
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Circadian/Multidien Molecular Oscillations and Rhythmicity of Epilepsy

Christophe Bernard
Aix-Marseille Université
Sep 15, 2020

The occurrence of seizures at specific times of the day has been consistently observed for centuries in individuals with epilepsy. Electrophysiological recordings provide evidence that seizures have a higher probability of occurring at a given time during the night and day cycle in individuals with epilepsy – the seizure rush hour. Which mechanisms underly such circadian rhythmicity of seizures? Why don’t they occur every day at the same time? Which mechanisms may underly their occurrence outside the rush hour? I shall present a hypothesis: MORE - Molecular Oscillations and Rhythmicity of Epilepsy, a conceptual framework to study and understand the mechanisms underlying the circadian rhythmicity of seizures and their probabilistic nature. The core of the hypothesis is the existence of circa 24h oscillations of gene and protein expression throughout the body in different cells and organs. The orchestrated molecular oscillations control the rhythmicity of numerous body events, such as feeding and sleep. The concept developed here is that molecular oscillations may favor seizure genesis at preferred times, generating the condition for a seizure rush hour. However, the condition is not sufficient, as other factors are necessary for a seizure to occur. Studying these molecular oscillations may help us understand seizure genesis mechanisms and find new therapeutic targets and predictive biomarkers. The MORE hypothesis can be generalized to comorbidities and the slower multidien (week/month period) rhythmicity of seizures.

SeminarNeuroscience

Misplaced and misconnected: circuit-level defects in malformations of cortical development

Jean-Bernard Manent
Mediterranean Institute of Neurobiology - INMED, Marseille, France
Jul 13, 2020

During histogenesis of the cerebral cortex, a proper laminar placement of defined numbers of specific cellular types is necessary to ensure proper functional connectivity patterns. There is a wide range of cortical malformations causing epilepsy and intellectual disability in humans, characterized with various degrees of neuronal misplacement, aberrant circuit organization or abnormal folding patterns. Although progress in human neurogenetics and brain imaging techniques have considerably advanced the identification of their causative genes, the pathophysiological mechanisms associated with defective cerebral cortex development remain poorly understood. In my presentation, I will outline some of our recent works in rodent models illustrating how misplaced neurons forming grey matter heterotopia, a cortical malformation subtype, interfere with the proper development of cortical circuits, and induce both local and distant circuitry changes associated with the subsequent emergence of epilepsy.

ePoster

Marsupial dunnarts have the smallest visual cortex yet reported to have orientation preference maps

Jason Jung, Michael Sternbach, Zoe Rowe Stawyskyj, Fred Wolf, Michael R Ibbotson

FENS Forum 2024