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Medial Temporal Lobe

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medial temporal lobe

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with medial temporal lobe across World Wide.
15 curated items8 ePosters6 Seminars1 Position
Updated 1 day ago
15 items · medial temporal lobe
15 results
Position

Prof Jakob Macke

Chair of Machine Learning in Science, Excellence Cluster Machine Learning, Tübingen
Germany
Dec 5, 2025

How do neural circuits in the human brain recognize objects, persons and actions from complex visual stimuli? To address these questions, we will develop deep convolutional neural networks for modelling how neurons in high-level human brain areas respond to complex visual information. We will make use of a unique dataset of neurophysiological recordings of single-unit activity and field potentials recorded from the medial temporal lobe of epilepsy patients. Our tools will open up avenues for a range of new investigations in cognitive and clinical neuroscience, and may inspire new artificial vision systems. The position is part of a collaboration with the `Dynamic Vision and Learning’ Group at TU Munich (Prof. Dr. Laura Leal-Taixé) and the Cognitive and Clinical Neurophysiology Group at University Hospital Bonn (Prof. Dr. Dr. Mormann). Our group develop computational methods that help scientists interpret empirical data, with a focus on basic and clinical neuroscience research. We want to understand how neuronal networks in the brain process sensory information and control intelligent behaviour, and use this knowledge to develop methods for the diagnosis and therapy of neuronal dysfunction. More details at https://uni-tuebingen.de/en/196976

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural Representations of Abstract Cognitive Maps in Prefrontal Cortex and Medial Temporal Lobe

Janahan Selvanayagam
University of Oxford
Sep 10, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Single-neuron correlates of perception and memory in the human medial temporal lobe

Prof. Dr. Dr. Florian Mormann
University of Bonn, Germany
May 13, 2025

The human medial temporal lobe contains neurons that respond selectively to the semantic contents of a presented stimulus. These "concept cells" may respond to very different pictures of a given person and even to their written or spoken name. Their response latency is far longer than necessary for object recognition, they follow subjective, conscious perception, and they are found in brain regions that are crucial for declarative memory formation. It has thus been hypothesized that they may represent the semantic "building blocks" of episodic memories. In this talk I will present data from single unit recordings in the hippocampus, entorhinal cortex, parahippocampal cortex, and amygdala during paradigms involving object recognition and conscious perception as well as encoding of episodic memories in order to characterize the role of concept cells in these cognitive functions.

SeminarNeuroscience

Memory formation in hippocampal microcircuit

Andreakos Nikolaos
Visiting Scientist, School of Computer Science, University of Lincoln, Scientific Associate, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Feb 6, 2025

The centre of memory is the medial temporal lobe (MTL) and especially the hippocampus. In our research, a more flexible brain-inspired computational microcircuit of the CA1 region of the mammalian hippocampus was upgraded and used to examine how information retrieval could be affected under different conditions. Six models (1-6) were created by modulating different excitatory and inhibitory pathways. The results showed that the increase in the strength of the feedforward excitation was the most effective way to recall memories. In other words, that allows the system to access stored memories more accurately.

SeminarNeuroscience

Dynamic endocrine modulation of the nervous system

Emily Jabocs
US Santa Barbara Neuroscience
Apr 17, 2023

Sex hormones are powerful neuromodulators of learning and memory. In rodents and nonhuman primates estrogen and progesterone influence the central nervous system across a range of spatiotemporal scales. Yet, their influence on the structural and functional architecture of the human brain is largely unknown. Here, I highlight findings from a series of dense-sampling neuroimaging studies from my laboratory designed to probe the dynamic interplay between the nervous and endocrine systems. Individuals underwent brain imaging and venipuncture every 12-24 hours for 30 consecutive days. These procedures were carried out under freely cycling conditions and again under a pharmacological regimen that chronically suppresses sex hormone production. First, resting state fMRI evidence suggests that transient increases in estrogen drive robust increases in functional connectivity across the brain. Time-lagged methods from dynamical systems analysis further reveals that these transient changes in estrogen enhance within-network integration (i.e. global efficiency) in several large-scale brain networks, particularly Default Mode and Dorsal Attention Networks. Next, using high-resolution hippocampal subfield imaging, we found that intrinsic hormone fluctuations and exogenous hormone manipulations can rapidly and dynamically shape medial temporal lobe morphology. Together, these findings suggest that neuroendocrine factors influence the brain over short and protracted timescales.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A distinct subcircuit in medial entorhinal cortex mediates learning of interval timing behavior during immobility

Jim Heys
University of Utah, USA
Mar 22, 2021

Over 60 years of research has established that medial temporal lobe structures, including the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex, are necessary for the formation of episodic memories (i.e. memories of specific personal events that occur in spatial and temporal context). While prior work to establish the neural mechanisms underlying episodic memory has largely focused on questions related spatial context, recently we have begun to investigate how these brain structures could be involved in encoding aspects of temporal context. In particular, we have focused on how medial entorhinal cortex, a structure well known for its role in spatial memory, may also be involved in encoding interval time. To answer this question we have developed an instrumental paradigm for head-fixed mice that requires both immobile interval timing and locomotion-dependent navigation behavior. By combining this behavioral paradigm with large-scale cellular resolution functional imaging and optogenetic-mediated inactivation, our results suggest that MEC is required for learning of interval timing behavior and that interval timing could be mediated through regular, sequential neural activity of a distinct subpopulation of neurons in MEC that encode elapsed time during periods of immobility (Heys and Dombeck, 2018; Heys et al, 2020; Issa et al., 2020). In this talk, I will discuss these findings and discuss our on-going work to investigate the principles underlying the role of medial temporal lobe structures in timing behavior and episodic memory.

SeminarNeuroscience

Human Single-Neuron recordings reveal neuronal mechanisms of Working Memory

Jan Kamiński
Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology
Mar 16, 2021

Working memory (WM) is a fundamental human cognitive capacity that allows us to maintain and manipulate information stored for a short period of time in an active form. Thanks to a unique opportunity to record activity of neurons in humans during epilepsy monitoring we could test neuronal mechanisms of this cognitive capacity. We showed that firing rate of image selective neurons in Medial Temporal Lobe persists through maintenance periods of working memory task. This activity was behaviorally relevant and formed attractors in its state-space. Furthermore, we showed that firing rate of those neurons phase lock to ongoing slow-frequency oscillations. The properties of phase locking are dependent on memory content and load. During high memory loads, the phase of the oscillatory activity to which neurons phase lock provides information about memory content not available in the firing rate of the neurons.

ePoster

The role of gamma oscillations in stimulus encoding during a sequential memory task in the human Medial Temporal Lobe

Muthu Jeyanthi Prakash, Johannes Niediek, Thomas Reber, Valerie Borger, Rainer Surges, Florian Mormann, Stefanie Liebe

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

DREADD-based manipulation of hippocampal astrocyte Gq signalling in a chronic mouse model of medial temporal lobe epilepsy

Dimitri De Bundel, Yana Van Den Herrewegen, Surajit Sahu, Marcus Dyer, Liam Nestor, Ann Van Eeckaut, Ilse Smolders

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Evidence for involvement of an mTORopathic hippocampal DG/CA3 connectopathy in the etiology and cognitive comorbidities of medial temporal lobe epilepsy

Farzad Khanipour, Karol Sadowski, Adam Gorlewicz, Ewelina Knapska

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Functions of the medial temporal lobe in memory and navigation of conceptual spaces

Elias Rau, Nora Herweg, Rebekka Heinen, Nikolai Axmacher

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Human single neurons in the medial temporal lobe encode inferred relational structures

Simon Ruch, Gert Dehnen, Valeri Borger, Rainer Surges, Florian Mormann, Thomas P. Reber

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Passive versus active novelty detection: How volition shapes olfactory representations in the medial temporal lobe

Eleonore Schiltz, Cardinaels Lara, Haesler Sebastian

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Replay of letter strings by single neurons in medial temporal lobe and auditory cortex EEG during verbal working memory maintenance

Filippo Costa, Maathuis Wouter, Vasileios Dimakopoulos, Debora Ledergerber, Johannes Sarnthein

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Single-unit responses to dynamic salient negative faces in the human medial temporal lobe

Alina Kiseleva, Eva van Gelder, Hennric Jockeit, Johannes Sarntehein, Lukas Imbach, Debora Ledergerber

FENS Forum 2024