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SeminarNeuroscience

Neural circuits underlying sleep structure and functions

Antoine Adamantidis
University of Bern
Jun 12, 2025

Sleep is an active state critical for processing emotional memories encoded during waking in both humans and animals. There is a remarkable overlap between the brain structures and circuits active during sleep, particularly rapid eye-movement (REM) sleep, and the those encoding emotions. Accordingly, disruptions in sleep quality or quantity, including REM sleep, are often associated with, and precede the onset of, nearly all affective psychiatric and mood disorders. In this context, a major biomedical challenge is to better understand the underlying mechanisms of the relationship between (REM) sleep and emotion encoding to improve treatments for mental health. This lecture will summarize our investigation of the cellular and circuit mechanisms underlying sleep architecture, sleep oscillations, and local brain dynamics across sleep-wake states using electrophysiological recordings combined with single-cell calcium imaging or optogenetics. The presentation will detail the discovery of a 'somato-dendritic decoupling'in prefrontal cortex pyramidal neurons underlying REM sleep-dependent stabilization of optimal emotional memory traces. This decoupling reflects a tonic inhibition at the somas of pyramidal cells, occurring simultaneously with a selective disinhibition of their dendritic arbors selectively during REM sleep. Recent findings on REM sleep-dependent subcortical inputs and neuromodulation of this decoupling will be discussed in the context of synaptic plasticity and the optimization of emotional responses in the maintenance of mental health.

SeminarNeuroscience

Cognitive maps as expectations learned across episodes – a model of the two dentate gyrus blades

Andrej Bicanski
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
Mar 11, 2025

How can the hippocampal system transition from episodic one-shot learning to a multi-shot learning regime and what is the utility of the resultant neural representations? This talk will explore the role of the dentate gyrus (DG) anatomy in this context. The canonical DG model suggests it performs pattern separation. More recent experimental results challenge this standard model, suggesting DG function is more complex and also supports the precise binding of objects and events to space and the integration of information across episodes. Very recent studies attribute pattern separation and pattern integration to anatomically distinct parts of the DG (the suprapyramidal blade vs the infrapyramidal blade). We propose a computational model that investigates this distinction. In the model the two processing streams (potentially localized in separate blades) contribute to the storage of distinct episodic memories, and the integration of information across episodes, respectively. The latter forms generalized expectations across episodes, eventually forming a cognitive map. We train the model with two data sets, MNIST and plausible entorhinal cortex inputs. The comparison between the two streams allows for the calculation of a prediction error, which can drive the storage of poorly predicted memories and the forgetting of well-predicted memories. We suggest that differential processing across the DG aids in the iterative construction of spatial cognitive maps to serve the generation of location-dependent expectations, while at the same time preserving episodic memory traces of idiosyncratic events.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Principles of Cognitive Control over Task Focus and Task

Tobias Egner
Duke University, USA
Sep 10, 2024

2024 BACN Mid-Career Prize Lecture Adaptive behavior requires the ability to focus on a current task and protect it from distraction (cognitive stability), and to rapidly switch tasks when circumstances change (cognitive flexibility). How people control task focus and switch-readiness has therefore been the target of burgeoning research literatures. Here, I review and integrate these literatures to derive a cognitive architecture and functional rules underlying the regulation of stability and flexibility. I propose that task focus and switch-readiness are supported by independent mechanisms whose strategic regulation is nevertheless governed by shared principles: both stability and flexibility are matched to anticipated challenges via an incremental, online learner that nudges control up or down based on the recent history of task demands (a recency heuristic), as well as via episodic reinstatement when the current context matches a past experience (a recognition heuristic).

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural mechanisms governing the learning and execution of avoidance behavior

Mario Penzo
National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, USA
Jun 18, 2024

The nervous system orchestrates adaptive behaviors by intricately coordinating responses to internal cues and environmental stimuli. This involves integrating sensory input, managing competing motivational states, and drawing on past experiences to anticipate future outcomes. While traditional models attribute this complexity to interactions between the mesocorticolimbic system and hypothalamic centers, the specific nodes of integration have remained elusive. Recent research, including our own, sheds light on the midline thalamus's overlooked role in this process. We propose that the midline thalamus integrates internal states with memory and emotional signals to guide adaptive behaviors. Our investigations into midline thalamic neuronal circuits have provided crucial insights into the neural mechanisms behind flexibility and adaptability. Understanding these processes is essential for deciphering human behavior and conditions marked by impaired motivation and emotional processing. Our research aims to contribute to this understanding, paving the way for targeted interventions and therapies to address such impairments.

SeminarNeuroscience

Exploring the cerebral mechanisms of acoustically-challenging speech comprehension - successes, failures and hope

Alexis Hervais-Adelman
University of Geneva
May 20, 2024

Comprehending speech under acoustically challenging conditions is an everyday task that we can often execute with ease. However, accomplishing this requires the engagement of cognitive resources, such as auditory attention and working memory. The mechanisms that contribute to the robustness of speech comprehension are of substantial interest in the context of hearing mild to moderate hearing impairment, in which affected individuals typically report specific difficulties in understanding speech in background noise. Although hearing aids can help to mitigate this, they do not represent a universal solution, thus, finding alternative interventions is necessary. Given that age-related hearing loss (“presbycusis”) is inevitable, developing new approaches is all the more important in the context of aging populations. Moreover, untreated hearing loss in middle age has been identified as the most significant potentially modifiable predictor of dementia in later life. I will present research that has used a multi-methodological approach (fMRI, EEG, MEG and non-invasive brain stimulation) to try to elucidate the mechanisms that comprise the cognitive “last mile” in speech acousticallychallenging speech comprehension and to find ways to enhance them.

SeminarNeuroscience

Thalamocortical feedback circuits selectively control pyramidal neuron excitability

Anthony Holtmaat
University of Geneva, Switzerland
Apr 9, 2024
SeminarNeuroscience

Roles of inhibition in stabilizing and shaping the response of cortical networks

Nicolas Brunel
Duke University
Apr 4, 2024

Inhibition has long been thought to stabilize the activity of cortical networks at low rates, and to shape significantly their response to sensory inputs. In this talk, I will describe three recent collaborative projects that shed light on these issues. (1) I will show how optogenetic excitation of inhibition neurons is consistent with cortex being inhibition stabilized even in the absence of sensory inputs, and how this data can constrain the coupling strengths of E-I cortical network models. (2) Recent analysis of the effects of optogenetic excitation of pyramidal cells in V1 of mice and monkeys shows that in some cases this optogenetic input reshuffles the firing rates of neurons of the network, leaving the distribution of rates unaffected. I will show how this surprising effect can be reproduced in sufficiently strongly coupled E-I networks. (3) Another puzzle has been to understand the respective roles of different inhibitory subtypes in network stabilization. Recent data reveal a novel, state dependent, paradoxical effect of weakening AMPAR mediated synaptic currents onto SST cells. Mathematical analysis of a network model with multiple inhibitory cell types shows that this effect tells us in which conditions SST cells are required for network stabilization.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Neural Mechanisms of Subsecond Temporal Encoding in Primary Visual Cortex

Samuel Post
University of California, Riverside
Nov 28, 2023

Subsecond timing underlies nearly all sensory and motor activities across species and is critical to survival. While subsecond temporal information has been found across cortical and subcortical regions, it is unclear if it is generated locally and intrinsically or if it is a read out of a centralized clock-like mechanism. Indeed, mechanisms of subsecond timing at the circuit level are largely obscure. Primary sensory areas are well-suited to address these question as they have early access to sensory information and provide minimal processing to it: if temporal information is found in these regions, it is likely to be generated intrinsically and locally. We test this hypothesis by training mice to perform an audio-visual temporal pattern sensory discrimination task as we use 2-photon calcium imaging, a technique capable of recording population level activity at single cell resolution, to record activity in primary visual cortex (V1). We have found significant changes in network dynamics through mice’s learning of the task from naive to middle to expert levels. Changes in network dynamics and behavioral performance are well accounted for by an intrinsic model of timing in which the trajectory of q network through high dimensional state space represents temporal sensory information. Conversely, while we found evidence of other temporal encoding models, such as oscillatory activity, we did not find that they accounted for increased performance but were in fact correlated with the intrinsic model itself. These results provide insight into how subsecond temporal information is encoded mechanistically at the circuit level.

SeminarNeuroscience

Trends in NeuroAI - SwiFT: Swin 4D fMRI Transformer

Junbeom Kwon
Nov 20, 2023

Trends in NeuroAI is a reading group hosted by the MedARC Neuroimaging & AI lab (https://medarc.ai/fmri). Title: SwiFT: Swin 4D fMRI Transformer Abstract: Modeling spatiotemporal brain dynamics from high-dimensional data, such as functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), is a formidable task in neuroscience. Existing approaches for fMRI analysis utilize hand-crafted features, but the process of feature extraction risks losing essential information in fMRI scans. To address this challenge, we present SwiFT (Swin 4D fMRI Transformer), a Swin Transformer architecture that can learn brain dynamics directly from fMRI volumes in a memory and computation-efficient manner. SwiFT achieves this by implementing a 4D window multi-head self-attention mechanism and absolute positional embeddings. We evaluate SwiFT using multiple large-scale resting-state fMRI datasets, including the Human Connectome Project (HCP), Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD), and UK Biobank (UKB) datasets, to predict sex, age, and cognitive intelligence. Our experimental outcomes reveal that SwiFT consistently outperforms recent state-of-the-art models. Furthermore, by leveraging its end-to-end learning capability, we show that contrastive loss-based self-supervised pre-training of SwiFT can enhance performance on downstream tasks. Additionally, we employ an explainable AI method to identify the brain regions associated with sex classification. To our knowledge, SwiFT is the first Swin Transformer architecture to process dimensional spatiotemporal brain functional data in an end-to-end fashion. Our work holds substantial potential in facilitating scalable learning of functional brain imaging in neuroscience research by reducing the hurdles associated with applying Transformer models to high-dimensional fMRI. Speaker: Junbeom Kwon is a research associate working in Prof. Jiook Cha’s lab at Seoul National University. Paper link: https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.05916

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Self as Processes (BACN Mid-career Prize Lecture 2023)

Jie Sui
University of Aberdeen, UK
Sep 12, 2023

An understanding of the self helps explain not only human thoughts, feelings, attitudes but also many aspects of everyday behaviour. This talk focuses on a viewpoint - self as processes. This viewpoint emphasizes the dynamics of the self that best connects with the development of the self over time and its realist orientation. We are combining psychological experiments and data mining to comprehend the stability and adaptability of the self across various populations. In this talk, I draw on evidence from experimental psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and machine learning approaches to demonstrate why and how self-association affects cognition and how it is modulated by various social experiences and situational factors

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Developmentally structured coactivity in the hippocampal trisynaptic loop

Roman Huszár
Buzsáki Lab, New York University
Apr 4, 2023

The hippocampus is a key player in learning and memory. Research into this brain structure has long emphasized its plasticity and flexibility, though recent reports have come to appreciate its remarkably stable firing patterns. How novel information incorporates itself into networks that maintain their ongoing dynamics remains an open question, largely due to a lack of experimental access points into network stability. Development may provide one such access point. To explore this hypothesis, we birthdated CA1 pyramidal neurons using in-utero electroporation and examined their functional features in freely moving, adult mice. We show that CA1 pyramidal neurons of the same embryonic birthdate exhibit prominent cofiring across different brain states, including behavior in the form of overlapping place fields. Spatial representations remapped across different environments in a manner that preserves the biased correlation patterns between same birthdate neurons. These features of CA1 activity could partially be explained by structured connectivity between pyramidal cells and local interneurons. These observations suggest the existence of developmentally installed circuit motifs that impose powerful constraints on the statistics of hippocampal output.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Analogical inference in mathematics: from epistemology to the classroom (and back)

Dr Francesco Nappo & Dr Nicolò Cangiotti
Politecnico di Milano
Feb 22, 2023

In this presentation, we will discuss adaptations of historical examples of mathematical research to bring out some of the intuitive judgments that accompany the working practice of mathematicians when reasoning by analogy. The main epistemological claim that we will aim to illustrate is that a central part of mathematical training consists in developing a quasi-perceptual capacity to distinguish superficial from deep analogies. We think of this capacity as an instance of Hadamard’s (1954) discriminating faculty of the mathematical mind, whereby one is led to distinguish between mere “hookings” (77) and “relay-results” (80): on the one hand, suggestions or ‘hints’, useful to raise questions but not to back up conjectures; on the other, more significant discoveries, which can be used as an evidentiary source in further mathematical inquiry. In the second part of the presentation, we will present some recent applications of this epistemological framework to mathematics education projects for middle and high schools in Italy.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Prefrontal top-down projections control context-dependent strategy selection

Olivier Gschwend
Medidee Services SA, (former postdoc at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
Dec 6, 2022

The rules governing behavior often vary with behavioral contexts. As a result, an action rewarded in one context may be discouraged in another. Animals and humans are capable of switching between behavioral strategies under different contexts and acting adaptively according to the variable rules, a flexibility that is thought to be mediated by the prefrontal cortex (PFC). However, how the PFC orchestrates the context-dependent switch of strategies remains unclear. Here we show that pathway-specific projection neurons in the medial PFC (mPFC) differentially contribute to context-instructed strategy selection. In mice trained in a decision-making task in which a previously established rule and a newly learned rule are associated with distinct contexts, the activity of mPFC neurons projecting to the dorsomedial striatum (mPFC-DMS) encodes the contexts and further represents decision strategies conforming to the old and new rules. Moreover, mPFC-DMS neuron activity is required for the context-instructed strategy selection. In contrast, the activity of mPFC neurons projecting to the ventral midline thalamus (mPFC-VMT) does not discriminate between the contexts, and represents the old rule even if mice have adopted the new one. Furthermore, these neurons act to prevent the strategy switch under the new rule. Our results suggest that mPFC-DMS neurons promote flexible strategy selection guided by contexts, whereas mPFC-VMT neurons favor fixed strategy selection by preserving old rules.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Bridging the gap from research to clinical decision making in epilepsy neuromodulation; How to become an integral part of the functional neurosurgery team as a radiologist

Erik H. Middlebrooks, MD & Alexandre Boutet, MD, PhD
Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, USA / University of Toronto, Canada
Nov 29, 2022

On Wednesday, November 30th, at noon ET / 6PM CET, we will host Alexandre Boutet and Erik H. Middlebrooks. Alexandre Boutet, MD, PhD, is a neuroradiology fellow at the University of Toronto, and will tell us about “How to become an integral part of the functional neurosurgery team as a radiologist”. Erik H. Middlebrooks, MD, is a Professor and Consultant of Neuroradiology and Neurosurgery and the Neuroradiology Program Director at Mayo Clinic. Beside his scientific presentation about “Bridging the Gap from Research to Clinical Decision Making in Epilepsy Neuromodulation”, he will also give us a glimpse at the “Person behind the science”. The talks will be followed by a shared discussion. You can register via talks.stimulatingbrains.org to receive the (free) Zoom link!

SeminarNeuroscience

Gut food cravings? How gut signals control appetite and metabolism

Kim Rewitz
University of Copenhagen
Nov 21, 2022

Gut-derived signals regulate metabolism, appetite, and behaviors important for mental health. We have performed a large-scale multidimensional screen to identify gut hormones and nutrient-sensing mechanisms in the intestine that regulate metabolism and behavior in the fruit fly Drosophila. We identified several gut hormones that affect fecundity, stress responses, metabolism, feeding, and sleep behaviors, many of which seem to act sex-specifically. We show that in response to nutrient intake, the enteroendocrine cells (EECs) of the adult Drosophila midgut release hormones that act via inter-organ relays to coordinate metabolism and feeding decisions. These findings suggest that crosstalk between the gut and other tissues regulates food choice according to metabolic needs, providing insight into how that intestine processes nutritional inputs and into the gut-derived signals that relay information regulating nutrient-specific hungers to maintain metabolic homeostasis.

SeminarNeuroscience

Mapping learning and decision-making algorithms onto brain circuitry

Ilana Witten
Princeton
Nov 17, 2022

In the first half of my talk, I will discuss our recent work on the midbrain dopamine system. The hypothesis that midbrain dopamine neurons broadcast an error signal for the prediction of reward is among the great successes of computational neuroscience. However, our recent results contradict a core aspect of this theory: that the neurons uniformly convey a scalar, global signal. I will review this work, as well as our new efforts to update models of the neural basis of reinforcement learning with our data. In the second half of my talk, I will discuss our recent findings of state-dependent decision-making mechanisms in the striatum.

SeminarNeuroscience

It’s All About Motion: Functional organization of the multisensory motion system at 7T

Anna Gaglianese
Laboratory for Investigative Neurophysiology, CHUV, Lausanne & The Sense Innovation and Research Center, Lausanne and Sion, Switzerland
Nov 14, 2022

The human middle temporal complex (hMT+) has a crucial biological relevance for the processing and detection of direction and speed of motion in visual stimuli. In both humans and monkeys, it has been extensively investigated in terms of its retinotopic properties and selectivity for direction of moving stimuli; however, only in recent years there has been an increasing interest in how neurons in MT encode the speed of motion. In this talk, I will explore the proposed mechanism of speed encoding questioning whether hMT+ neuronal populations encode the stimulus speed directly, or whether they separate motion into its spatial and temporal components. I will characterize how neuronal populations in hMT+ encode the speed of moving visual stimuli using electrocorticography ECoG and 7T fMRI. I will illustrate that the neuronal populations measured in hMT+ are not directly tuned to stimulus speed, but instead encode speed through separate and independent spatial and temporal frequency tuning. Finally, I will suggest that this mechanism may play a role in evaluating multisensory responses for visual, tactile and auditory stimuli in hMT+.

SeminarNeuroscience

Physiomic Analysis of the Human L2&3 Pyramidal Neuron Network

Franz Mittermaier
Charité Berlin, Germany
Nov 9, 2022

Talk & Tutorial

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Behavioral Timescale Synaptic Plasticity (BTSP) for biologically plausible credit assignment across multiple layers via top-down gating of dendritic plasticity

A. Galloni
Rutgers
Nov 8, 2022

A central problem in biological learning is how information about the outcome of a decision or behavior can be used to reliably guide learning across distributed neural circuits while obeying biological constraints. This “credit assignment” problem is commonly solved in artificial neural networks through supervised gradient descent and the backpropagation algorithm. In contrast, biological learning is typically modelled using unsupervised Hebbian learning rules. While these rules only use local information to update synaptic weights, and are sometimes combined with weight constraints to reflect a diversity of excitatory (only positive weights) and inhibitory (only negative weights) cell types, they do not prescribe a clear mechanism for how to coordinate learning across multiple layers and propagate error information accurately across the network. In recent years, several groups have drawn inspiration from the known dendritic non-linearities of pyramidal neurons to propose new learning rules and network architectures that enable biologically plausible multi-layer learning by processing error information in segregated dendrites. Meanwhile, recent experimental results from the hippocampus have revealed a new form of plasticity—Behavioral Timescale Synaptic Plasticity (BTSP)—in which large dendritic depolarizations rapidly reshape synaptic weights and stimulus selectivity with as little as a single stimulus presentation (“one-shot learning”). Here we explore the implications of this new learning rule through a biologically plausible implementation in a rate neuron network. We demonstrate that regulation of dendritic spiking and BTSP by top-down feedback signals can effectively coordinate plasticity across multiple network layers in a simple pattern recognition task. By analyzing hidden feature representations and weight trajectories during learning, we show the differences between networks trained with standard backpropagation, Hebbian learning rules, and BTSP.

SeminarNeuroscience

Chandelier cells shine a light on the emergence of GABAergic circuits in the cortex

Juan Burrone
King’s College London
Sep 27, 2022

GABAergic interneurons are chiefly responsible for controlling the activity of local circuits in the cortex. Chandelier cells (ChCs) are a type of GABAergic interneuron that control the output of hundreds of neighbouring pyramidal cells through axo-axonic synapses which target the axon initial segment (AIS). Despite their importance in modulating circuit activity, our knowledge of the development and function of axo-axonic synapses remains elusive. We have investigated the emergence and plasticity of axo-axonic synapses in layer 2/3 of the somatosensory cortex (S1) and found that ChCs follow what appear to be homeostatic rules when forming synapses with pyramidal neurons. We are currently implementing in vivo techniques to image the process of axo-axonic synapse formation during development and uncover the dynamics of synaptogenesis and pruning at the AIS. In addition, we are using an all-optical approach to both activate and measure the activity of chandelier cells and their postsynaptic partners in the primary visual cortex (V1) and somatosensory cortex (S1) in mice, also during development. We aim to provide a structural and functional description of the emergence and plasticity of a GABAergic synapse type in the cortex.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Hierarchical transformation of visual event timing representations in the human brain: response dynamics in early visual cortex and timing-tuned responses in association cortices

Evi Hendrikx
Utrecht University
Sep 27, 2022

Quantifying the timing (duration and frequency) of brief visual events is vital to human perception, multisensory integration and action planning. For example, this allows us to follow and interact with the precise timing of speech and sports. Here we investigate how visual event timing is represented and transformed across the brain’s hierarchy: from sensory processing areas, through multisensory integration areas, to frontal action planning areas. We hypothesized that the dynamics of neural responses to sensory events in sensory processing areas allows derivation of event timing representations. This would allow higher-level processes such as multisensory integration and action planning to use sensory timing information, without the need for specialized central pacemakers or processes. Using 7T fMRI and neural model-based analyses, we found responses that monotonically increase in amplitude with visual event duration and frequency, becoming increasingly clear from primary visual cortex to lateral occipital visual field maps. Beginning in area MT/V5, we found a gradual transition from monotonic to tuned responses, with response amplitudes peaking at different event timings in different recording sites. While monotonic response components were limited to the retinotopic location of the visual stimulus, timing-tuned response components were independent of the recording sites' preferred visual field positions. These tuned responses formed a network of topographically organized timing maps in superior parietal, postcentral and frontal areas. From anterior to posterior timing maps, multiple events were increasingly integrated, response selectivity narrowed, and responses focused increasingly on the middle of the presented timing range. These results suggest that responses to event timing are transformed from the human brain’s sensory areas to the association cortices, with the event’s temporal properties being increasingly abstracted from the response dynamics and locations of early sensory processing. The resulting abstracted representation of event timing is then propagated through areas implicated in multisensory integration and action planning.

SeminarNeuroscience

Development and evolution of neuronal connectivity

Alain Chédotal
Vision Institute, Paris, France
Sep 27, 2022

In most animal species including humans, commissural axons connect neurons on the left and right side of the nervous system. In humans, abnormal axon midline crossing during development causes a whole range of neurological disorders ranging from congenital mirror movements, horizontal gaze palsy, scoliosis or binocular vision deficits. The mechanisms which guide axons across the CNS midline were thought to be evolutionary conserved but our recent results suggesting that they differ across vertebrates.  I will discuss the evolution of visual projection laterality during vertebrate evolution.  In most vertebrates, camera-style eyes contain retinal ganglion cell (RGC) neurons projecting to visual centers on both sides of the brain. However, in fish, RGCs are thought to only innervate the contralateral side. Using 3D imaging and tissue clearing we found that bilateral visual projections exist in non-teleost fishes. We also found that the developmental program specifying visual system laterality differs between fishes and mammals. We are currently using various strategies to discover genes controlling the development of visual projections. I will also present ongoing work using 3D imaging techniques to study the development of the visual system in human embryo.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Extrinsic control and intrinsic computation in the hippocampal CA1 network

Ipshita Zutshi
Buzsáki Lab, NYU
Jul 5, 2022

A key issue in understanding circuit operations is the extent to which neuronal spiking reflects local computation or responses to upstream inputs. Several studies have lesioned or silenced inputs to area CA1 of the hippocampus - either area CA3 or the entorhinal cortex and examined the effect on CA1 pyramidal cells. However, the types of the reported physiological impairments vary widely, primarily because simultaneous manipulations of these redundant inputs have never been performed. In this study, I combined optogenetic silencing of unilateral and bilateral mEC, of the local CA1 region, and performed bilateral pharmacogenetic silencing of CA3. I combined this with high spatial resolution extracellular recordings along the CA1-dentate axis. Silencing the medial entorhinal largely abolished extracellular theta and gamma currents in CA1, without affecting firing rates. In contrast, CA3 and local CA1 silencing strongly decreased firing of CA1 neurons without affecting theta currents. Each perturbation reconfigured the CA1 spatial map. Yet, the ability of the CA1 circuit to support place field activity persisted, maintaining the same fraction of spatially tuned place fields. In contrast to these results, unilateral mEC manipulations that were ineffective in impacting place cells during awake behavior were found to alter sharp-wave ripple sequences activated during sleep. Thus, intrinsic excitatory-inhibitory circuits within CA1 can generate neuronal assemblies in the absence of external inputs, although external synaptic inputs are critical to reconfigure (remap) neuronal assemblies in a brain-state dependent manner.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

How Children Discover Mathematical Structure through Relational Mapping

Kelly Mix
University of Maryland
Jun 29, 2022

A core question in human development is how we bring meaning to conventional symbols. This question is deeply connected to understanding how children learn mathematics—a symbol system with unique vocabularies, syntaxes, and written forms. In this talk, I will present findings from a program of research focused on children’s acquisition of place value symbols (i.e., multidigit number meanings). The base-10 symbol system presents a variety of obstacles to children, particularly in English. Children who cannot overcome these obstacles face years of struggle as they progress through the mathematics curriculum of the upper elementary and middle school grades. Through a combination of longitudinal, cross-sectional, and pretest-training-posttest approaches, I aim to illuminate relational learning mechanisms by which children sometimes succeed in mastering the place value system, as well as instructional techniques we might use to help those who do not.

SeminarNeuroscience

Adaptive neural network classifier for decoding finger movements

Alexey Zabolotniy
HSE University
Jun 1, 2022

While non-invasive Brain-to-Computer interface can accurately classify the lateralization of hand moments, the distinction of fingers activation in the same hand is limited by their local and overlapping representation in the motor cortex. In particular, the low signal-to-noise ratio restrains the opportunity to identify meaningful patterns in a supervised fashion. Here we combined Magnetoencephalography (MEG) recordings with advanced decoding strategy to classify finger movements at single trial level. We recorded eight subjects performing a serial reaction time task, where they pressed four buttons with left and right index and middle fingers. We evaluated the classification performance of hand and finger movements with increasingly complex approaches: supervised common spatial patterns and logistic regression (CSP + LR) and unsupervised linear finite convolutional neural network (LF-CNN). The right vs left fingers classification performance was accurate above 90% for all methods. However, the classification of the single finger provided the following accuracy: CSP+SVM : – 68 ± 7%, LF-CNN : 71 ± 10%. CNN methods allowed the inspection of spatial and spectral patterns, which reflected activity in the motor cortex in the theta and alpha ranges. Thus, we have shown that the use of CNN in decoding MEG single trials with low signal to noise ratio is a promising approach that, in turn, could be extended to a manifold of problems in clinical and cognitive neuroscience.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

What the fly’s eye tells the fly’s brain…and beyond

Gwyneth Card
Janelia Research Campus, HHMI
May 31, 2022

Fly Escape Behaviors: Flexible and Modular We have identified a set of escape maneuvers performed by a fly when confronted by a looming object. These escape responses can be divided into distinct behavioral modules. Some of the modules are very stereotyped, as when the fly rapidly extends its middle legs to jump off the ground. Other modules are more complex and require the fly to combine information about both the location of the threat and its own body posture. In response to an approaching object, a fly chooses some varying subset of these behaviors to perform. We would like to understand the neural process by which a fly chooses when to perform a given escape behavior. Beyond an appealing set of behaviors, this system has two other distinct advantages for probing neural circuitry. First, the fly will perform escape behaviors even when tethered such that its head is fixed and neural activity can be imaged or monitored using electrophysiology. Second, using Drosophila as an experimental animal makes available a rich suite of genetic tools to activate, silence, or image small numbers of cells potentially involved in the behaviors. Neural Circuits for Escape Until recently, visually induced escape responses have been considered a hardwired reflex in Drosophila. White-eyed flies with deficient visual pigment will perform a stereotyped middle-leg jump in response to a light-off stimulus, and this reflexive response is known to be coordinated by the well-studied giant fiber (GF) pathway. The GFs are a pair of electrically connected, large-diameter interneurons that traverse the cervical connective. A single GF spike results in a stereotyped pattern of muscle potentials on both sides of the body that extends the fly's middle pair of legs and starts the flight motor. Recently, we have found that a fly escaping a looming object displays many more behaviors than just leg extension. Most of these behaviors could not possibly be coordinated by the known anatomy of the GF pathway. Response to a looming threat thus appears to involve activation of numerous different neural pathways, which the fly may decide if and when to employ. Our goal is to identify the descending pathways involved in coordinating these escape behaviors as well as the central brain circuits, if any, that govern their activation. Automated Single-Fly Screening We have developed a new kind of high-throughput genetic screen to automatically capture fly escape sequences and quantify individual behaviors. We use this system to perform a high-throughput genetic silencing screen to identify cell types of interest. Automation permits analysis at the level of individual fly movements, while retaining the capacity to screen through thousands of GAL4 promoter lines. Single-fly behavioral analysis is essential to detect more subtle changes in behavior during the silencing screen, and thus to identify more specific components of the contributing circuits than previously possible when screening populations of flies. Our goal is to identify candidate neurons involved in coordination and choice of escape behaviors. Measuring Neural Activity During Behavior We use whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology to determine the functional roles of any identified candidate neurons. Flies perform escape behaviors even when their head and thorax are immobilized for physiological recording. This allows us to link a neuron's responses directly to an action.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The neural basis of flexible semantic cognition (BACN Mid-career Prize Lecture 2022)

Elizabeth Jefferies
Department of Psychology, University of York, UK
May 24, 2022

Semantic cognition brings meaning to our world – it allows us to make sense of what we see and hear, and to produce adaptive thoughts and behaviour. Since we have a wealth of information about any given concept, our store of knowledge is not sufficient for successful semantic cognition; we also need mechanisms that can steer the information that we retrieve so it suits the context or our current goals. This talk traces the neural networks that underpin this flexibility in semantic cognition. It draws on evidence from multiple methods (neuropsychology, neuroimaging, neural stimulation) to show that two interacting heteromodal networks underpin different aspects of flexibility. Regions including anterior temporal cortex and left angular gyrus respond more strongly when semantic retrieval follows highly-related concepts or multiple convergent cues; the multivariate responses in these regions correspond to context-dependent aspects of meaning. A second network centred on left inferior frontal gyrus and left posterior middle temporal gyrus is associated with controlled semantic retrieval, responding more strongly when weak associations are required or there is more competition between concepts. This semantic control network is linked to creativity and also captures context-dependent aspects of meaning; however, this network specifically shows more similar multivariate responses across trials when association strength is weak, reflecting a common controlled retrieval state when more unusual associations are the focus. Evidence from neuropsychology, fMRI and TMS suggests that this semantic control network is distinct from multiple-demand cortex which supports executive control across domains, although challenging semantic tasks recruit both networks. The semantic control network is juxtaposed between regions of default mode network that might be sufficient for the retrieval of strong semantic relationships and multiple-demand regions in the left hemisphere, suggesting that the large-scale organisation of flexible semantic cognition can be understood in terms of cortical gradients that capture systematic functional transitions that are repeated in temporal, parietal and frontal cortex.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Clinical neuroscience and the heart-brain axis (BACN Mid-career Prize Lecture 2021)

Sarah Garfinkel
Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, UCL
May 23, 2022

Cognitive and emotional processes are shaped by the dynamic integration of brain and body. A major channel of interoceptive information comes from the heart, where phasic signals are conveyed to the brain to indicate how fast and strong the heart is beating. This talk will discuss how interoceptive processes operate across conscious and unconscious levels to influence emotion and memory. The interoceptive channel is disrupted in distinct ways in individuals with autism and anxiety. Selective interoceptive disturbance is related to symptomatology including dissociation and the transdiagnostic expression of anxiety. Interoceptive training can reduce anxiety, with enhanced interoceptive precision associated with greater insula connectivity following targeted interoceptive feedback. The discrete cardiac effects on emotion and cognition have broad relevance to clinical neuroscience, with implications for peripheral treatment targets and behavioural interventions.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A draft connectome for ganglion cell types of the mouse retina

David Berson
Brown University
May 15, 2022

The visual system of the brain is highly parallel in its architecture. This is clearly evident in the outputs of the retina, which arise from neurons called ganglion cells. Work in our lab has shown that mammalian retinas contain more than a dozen distinct types of ganglion cells. Each type appears to filter the retinal image in a unique way and to relay this processed signal to a specific set of targets in the brain. My students and I are working to understand the meaning of this parallel organization through electrophysiological and anatomical studies. We record from light-responsive ganglion cells in vitro using the whole-cell patch method. This allows us to correlate directly the visual response properties, intrinsic electrical behavior, synaptic pharmacology, dendritic morphology and axonal projections of single neurons. Other methods used in the lab include neuroanatomical tracing techniques, single-unit recording and immunohistochemistry. We seek to specify the total number of ganglion cell types, the distinguishing characteristics of each type, and the intraretinal mechanisms (structural, electrical, and synaptic) that shape their stimulus selectivities. Recent work in the lab has identified a bizarre new ganglion cell type that is also a photoreceptor, capable of responding to light even when it is synaptically uncoupled from conventional (rod and cone) photoreceptors. These ganglion cells appear to play a key role in resetting the biological clock. It is just this sort of link, between a specific cell type and a well-defined behavioral or perceptual function, that we seek to establish for the full range of ganglion cell types. My research concerns the structural and functional organization of retinal ganglion cells, the output cells of the retina whose axons make up the optic nerve. Ganglion cells exhibit great diversity both in their morphology and in their responses to light stimuli. On this basis, they are divisible into a large number of types (>15). Each ganglion-cell type appears to send its outputs to a specific set of central visual nuclei. This suggests that ganglion cell heterogeneity has evolved to provide each visual center in the brain with pre-processed representations of the visual scene tailored to its specific functional requirements. Though the outline of this story has been appreciated for some time, it has received little systematic exploration. My laboratory is addressing in parallel three sets of related questions: 1) How many types of ganglion cells are there in a typical mammalian retina and what are their structural and functional characteristics? 2) What combination of synaptic networks and intrinsic membrane properties are responsible for the characteristic light responses of individual types? 3) What do the functional specializations of individual classes contribute to perceptual function or to visually mediated behavior? To pursue these questions, we label retinal ganglion cells by retrograde transport from the brain; analyze in vitro their light responses, intrinsic membrane properties and synaptic pharmacology using the whole-cell patch clamp method; and reveal their morphology with intracellular dyes. Recently, we have discovered a novel ganglion cell in rat retina that is intrinsically photosensitive. These ganglion cells exhibit robust light responses even when all influences from classical photoreceptors (rods and cones) are blocked, either by applying pharmacological agents or by dissociating the ganglion cell from the retina. These photosensitive ganglion cells seem likely to serve as photoreceptors for the photic synchronization of circadian rhythms, the mechanism that allows us to overcome jet lag. They project to the circadian pacemaker of the brain, the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus. Their temporal kinetics, threshold, dynamic range, and spectral tuning all match known properties of the synchronization or "entrainment" mechanism. These photosensitive ganglion cells innervate various other brain targets, such as the midbrain pupillary control center, and apparently contribute to a host of behavioral responses to ambient lighting conditions. These findings help to explain why circadian and pupillary light responses persist in mammals, including humans, with profound disruption of rod and cone function. Ongoing experiments are designed to elucidate the phototransduction mechanism, including the identity of the photopigment and the nature of downstream signaling pathways. In other studies, we seek to provide a more detailed characterization of the photic responsiveness and both morphological and functional evidence concerning possible interactions with conventional rod- and cone-driven retinal circuits. These studies are of potential value in understanding and designing appropriate therapies for jet lag, the negative consequences of shift work, and seasonal affective disorder.

SeminarNeuroscience

Multimodal investigation of the associations between sleep and Alzheimer's disease neuropathology in healthy individuals

Gilles Vandewalle
University of Liège, Belgium
May 9, 2022

Alterations in sleep are hallmarks of the ageing process and emerges as risk factors for Alzheimer’s disease (AD). While the fine-tuned coalescence of sleep microstructure elements may influence age-related cognitive trajectories, its association with AD-related processes is not fully established. We investigated whether sleep arousals and the coupling of spindles and slow waves, key elements of sleep microstructure, are associated with early amyloid-beta (Aβ) brain burden, hallmark of AD neuropathology, and cognitive change at 2 years in 100 late-midlife healthy individuals. We first found that arousals interrupting sleep continuity were positively linked to Aβ burden, while, by contrast, the more prevalent arousals upholding sleep continuity were associated with lower Aβ burden and better cognition. We further found that young-like co-occurrence of spindles and slow-depolarisation slow waves is associated to lower burden of Aβ over the medial prefrontal cortex and is predictive of memory decline at 2-year follow-up. We provide empirical evidence that arousals are diverse and differently associated with early AD-related neuropathology and cognition. We further show the altered coupling of sleep microstructure elements that are key to its mnesic functions may contribute to poorer brain and cognitive trajectories. The presentation will end with preliminary data show that activity of the locus coeruleus, essential to sleep and showing some of the earliest signs of AD-related pathological processes, is associated with sleep quality. These preliminary findings are the first of a project ailed at link sleep and AD through the locus coeruleus.

SeminarPsychology

ItsAllAboutMotion: Encoding of speed in the human Middle Temporal cortex

Anna Gaglianese
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, University of Lausanne
May 3, 2022

The human middle temporal complex (hMT+) has a crucial biological relevance for the processing and detection of direction and speed of motion in visual stimuli. In both humans and monkeys, it has been extensively investigated in terms of its retinotopic properties and selectivity for direction of moving stimuli; however, only in recent years there has been an increasing interest in how neurons in MT encode the speed of motion. In this talk, I will explore the proposed mechanism of speed encoding questioning whether hMT+ neuronal populations encode the stimulus speed directly, or whether they separate motion into its spatial and temporal components. I will characterize how neuronal populations in hMT+ encode the speed of moving visual stimuli using electrocorticography ECoG and 7T fMRI. I will illustrate that the neuronal populations measured in hMT+ are not directly tuned to stimulus speed, but instead encode speed through separate and independent spatial and temporal frequency tuning. Finally, I will show that this mechanism plays a role in evaluating multisensory responses for visual, tactile and auditory motion stimuli in hMT+.

SeminarNeuroscience

Extrinsic control and autonomous computation in the hippocampal CA1 circuit

Ipshita Zutshi
NYU
Apr 26, 2022

In understanding circuit operations, a key issue is the extent to which neuronal spiking reflects local computation or responses to upstream inputs. Because pyramidal cells in CA1 do not have local recurrent projections, it is currently assumed that firing in CA1 is inherited from its inputs – thus, entorhinal inputs provide communication with the rest of the neocortex and the outside world, whereas CA3 inputs provide internal and past memory representations. Several studies have attempted to prove this hypothesis, by lesioning or silencing either area CA3 or the entorhinal cortex and examining the effect of firing on CA1 pyramidal cells. Despite the intense and careful work in this research area, the magnitudes and types of the reported physiological impairments vary widely across experiments. At least part of the existing variability and conflicts is due to the different behavioral paradigms, designs and evaluation methods used by different investigators. Simultaneous manipulations in the same animal or even separate manipulations of the different inputs to the hippocampal circuits in the same experiment are rare. To address these issues, I used optogenetic silencing of unilateral and bilateral mEC, of the local CA1 region, and performed bilateral pharmacogenetic silencing of the entire CA3 region. I combined this with high spatial resolution recording of local field potentials (LFP) in the CA1-dentate axis and simultaneously collected firing pattern data from thousands of single neurons. Each experimental animal had up to two of these manipulations being performed simultaneously. Silencing the medial entorhinal (mEC) largely abolished extracellular theta and gamma currents in CA1, without affecting firing rates. In contrast, CA3 and local CA1 silencing strongly decreased firing of CA1 neurons without affecting theta currents. Each perturbation reconfigured the CA1 spatial map. Yet, the ability of the CA1 circuit to support place field activity persisted, maintaining the same fraction of spatially tuned place fields, and reliable assembly expression as in the intact mouse. Thus, the CA1 network can maintain autonomous computation to support coordinated place cell assemblies without reliance on its inputs, yet these inputs can effectively reconfigure and assist in maintaining stability of the CA1 map.

SeminarOpen SourceRecording

PiSpy: An Affordable, Accessible, and Flexible Imaging Platform for the Automated Observation of Organismal Biology and Behavior

Gregory Pask and Benjamin Morris
Middlebury College
Apr 19, 2022

A great deal of understanding can be gleaned from direct observation of organismal growth, development, and behavior. However, direct observation can be time consuming and influence the organism through unintentional stimuli. Additionally, video capturing equipment can often be prohibitively expensive, difficult to modify to one’s specific needs, and may come with unnecessary features. Here, we describe the PiSpy, a low-cost, automated video acquisition platform that uses a Raspberry Pi computer and camera to record video or images at specified time intervals or when externally triggered. All settings and controls, such as programmable light cycling, are accessible to users with no programming experience through an easy-to-use graphical user interface. Importantly, the entire PiSpy system can be assembled for less than $100 using laser-cut and 3D-printed components. We demonstrate the broad applications and flexibility of the PiSpy across a range of model and non-model organisms. Designs, instructions, and code can be accessed through an online repository, where a global community of PiSpy users can also contribute their own unique customizations and help grow the community of open-source research solutions.

SeminarNeuroscience

Inter-individual variability in reward seeking and decision making: role of social life and consequence for vulnerability to nicotine

Philippe Faure
Neurophysiology and Behavior , Sorbonne University, Paris
Apr 6, 2022

Inter-individual variability refers to differences in the expression of behaviors between members of a population. For instance, some individuals take greater risks, are more attracted to immediate gains or are more susceptible to drugs of abuse than others. To probe the neural bases of inter-individual variability  we study reward seeking and decision-making in mice, and dissect the specific role of dopamine in the modulation of these behaviors. Using a spatial version of the multi-armed bandit task, in which mice are faced with consecutive binary choices, we could link modifications of midbrain dopamine cell dynamics with modulation of exploratory behaviors, a major component of individual characteristics in mice. By analyzing mouse behaviors in semi-naturalistic environments, we then explored the role of social relationships in the shaping of dopamine activity and associated beahviors. I will present recent data from the laboratory suggesting that changes in the activity of dopaminergic networks link social influences with variations in the expression of non-social behaviors: by acting on the dopamine system, the social context may indeed affect the capacity of individuals to make decisions, as well as their vulnerability to drugs of abuse, in particular nicotine.

SeminarNeuroscience

Untitled Seminar

Emilia Favuzzi (USA), Ewoud Schmidt (USA), Tracy Bale (USA), Anastassia Voronova (Canada)
Mar 29, 2022

Emilia Favuzzi (USA): Artisans of Brain Wiring: GABA-Receptive Microglia Selectively Sculpt Inhibitory Circuits; Ewoud Schmidt (USA): Humanizing the mouse brain: reorganizing cortical circuits through modified synaptic development; Tracy Bale (USA): Trophoblast mechanisms key in regulating neurodevelopment Anastassia Voronova (Canada): Regulation of neural stem cell fates by neuronal ligands

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Brain dynamics and flexible behaviors

Lucina Uddin
Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California, Los Angeles
Mar 15, 2022

Executive control processes and flexible behaviors rely on the integrity of, and dynamic interactions between, large-scale functional brain networks. The right insular cortex is a critical component of a salience/midcingulo-insular network that is thought to mediate interactions between brain networks involved in externally oriented (central executive/lateral frontoparietal network) and internally oriented (default mode/medial frontoparietal network) processes. How these brain systems reconfigure with development is a critical question for cognitive neuroscience, with implications for neurodevelopmental pathologies affecting brain connectivity. I will describe studies examining how brain network dynamics support flexible behaviors in typical and atypical development, presenting evidence suggesting a unique role for the dorsal anterior insular from studies of meta-analytic connectivity modeling, dynamic functional connectivity, and structural connectivity. These findings from adults, typically developing children, and children with autism suggest that structural and functional maturation of insular pathways is a critical component of the process by which human brain networks mature to support complex, flexible cognitive processes throughout the lifespan.

SeminarNeuroscience

A biological model system for studying predictive processing

Ede Rancz
University of Oxford
Feb 23, 2022

Despite the increasing recognition of predictive processing in circuit neuroscience, little is known about how it may be implemented in cortical circuits. We set out to develop and characterise a biological model system with layer 5 pyramidal cells in the centre. We aim to gain access to prediction and internal model generating processes by controlling, understanding or monitoring everything else: the sensory environment, feed-forward and feed-back inputs, integrative properties, their spiking activity and output. I’ll show recent work from the lab establishing such a model system both in terms of biology as well as tool development.

SeminarNeuroscience

Effects of pathological Tau on hippocampal neuronal activity and spatial memory in ageing mice

Tim Viney
University of Oxford
Feb 10, 2022

The gradual accumulation of hyperphosphorylated forms of the Tau protein (pTau) in the human brain correlate with cognitive dysfunction and neurodegeneration. I will present our recent findings on the consequences of human pTau aggregation in the hippocampal formation of a mouse tauopathy model. We show that pTau preferentially accumulates in deep-layer pyramidal neurons, leading to their neurodegeneration. In aged but not younger mice, pTau spreads to oligodendrocytes. During ‘goal-directed’ navigation, we detect fewer high-firing pyramidal cells, but coupling to network oscillations is maintained in the remaining cells. The firing patterns of individually recorded and labelled pyramidal and GABAergic neurons are similar in transgenic and non-transgenic mice, as are network oscillations, suggesting intact neuronal coordination. This is consistent with a lack of pTau in subcortical brain areas that provide rhythmic input to the cortex. Spatial memory tests reveal a reduction in short-term familiarity of spatial cues but unimpaired spatial working and reference memory. These results suggest that preserved subcortical network mechanisms compensate for the widespread pTau aggregation in the hippocampal formation. I will also briefly discuss ideas on the subcortical origins of spatial memory and the concept of the cortex as a monitoring device.

SeminarNeuroscience

Primary Motor Cortex Circuitry in a Mouse Model of Parkinson’s Disease

Olivia Swanson
Dani lab, University of Pennsylvania
Feb 8, 2022

The primary motor cortex (M1) is a major output center for movement execution and motor learning, and its dysfunction contributes to the pathophysiology of Parkinson’s disease (PD). While human studies have indicated that a loss of midbrain dopamine neurons alters M1 activation, the mechanisms underlying this phenomenon remain unclear. Using a mouse model of PD, we uncovered several shifts within M1 circuitry following dopamine depletion, including impaired excitation by thalamocortical afferents and altered excitability. Our findings add to the growing body of literature highlighting M1 as a major contributor in PD, and provide targeted neural substrates for possible therapeutic interventions.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NaV Long-term Inactivation Regulates Adaptation in Place Cells and Depolarization Block in Dopamine Neurons

Carmen Canavier
LSU Health Sciences Center, New Orleans
Feb 8, 2022

In behaving rodents, CA1 pyramidal neurons receive spatially-tuned depolarizing synaptic input while traversing a specific location within an environment called its place. Midbrain dopamine neurons participate in reinforcement learning, and bursts of action potentials riding a depolarizing wave of synaptic input signal rewards and reward expectation. Interestingly, slice electrophysiology in vitro shows that both types of cells exhibit a pronounced reduction in firing rate (adaptation) and even cessation of firing during sustained depolarization. We included a five state Markov model of NaV1.6 (for CA1) and NaV1.2 (for dopamine neurons) respectively, in computational models of these two types of neurons. Our simulations suggest that long-term inactivation of this channel is responsible for the adaptation in CA1 pyramidal neurons, in response to triangular depolarizing current ramps. We also show that the differential contribution of slow inactivation in two subpopulations of midbrain dopamine neurons can account for their different dynamic ranges, as assessed by their responses to similar depolarizing ramps. These results suggest long-term inactivation of the sodium channel is a general mechanism for adaptation.

SeminarNeuroscience

Diversification of cortical inhibitory circuits & Molecular programs orchestrating the wiring of inhibitory circuitries

Beatriz Rico and Professor Oscar Marin
MRC Centre for Neurodevelopmental Disorders Centre for Developmental Neurobiology , King’s College London, UK
Feb 2, 2022

GABAergic interneurons play crucial roles in the regulation of neural activity in the cerebral cortex. In this Dual Lecture, Prof Oscar Marín and Prof Beatriz Rico will discuss several aspects of the formation of inhibitory circuits in the mammalian cerebral cortex. Prof. Marín will provide an overview of the mechanisms regulating the generation of the remarkable diversity of GABAergic interneurons and their ultimate numbers. Prof. Rico will describe the molecular logic through which specific pyramidal cell-interneuron circuits are established in the cerebral cortex, and how alterations in some of these connectivity motifs might be liked to disease.   Our web pages for reference: https://devneuro.org.uk/marinlab/ & https://devneuro.org.uk/rico/default

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Network mechanisms underlying representational drift in area CA1 of hippocampus

Alex Roxin
CRM, Barcelona
Feb 1, 2022

Recent chronic imaging experiments in mice have revealed that the hippocampal code exhibits non-trivial turnover dynamics over long time scales. Specifically, the subset of cells which are active on any given session in a familiar environment changes over the course of days and weeks. While some cells transition into or out of the code after a few sessions, others are stable over the entire experiment. The mechanisms underlying this turnover are unknown. Here we show that the statistics of turnover are consistent with a model in which non-spatial inputs to CA1 pyramidal cells readily undergo plasticity, while spatially tuned inputs are largely stable over time. The heterogeneity in stability across the cell assembly, as well as the decrease in correlation of the population vector of activity over time, are both quantitatively fit by a simple model with Gaussian input statistics. In fact, such input statistics emerge naturally in a network of spiking neurons operating in the fluctuation-driven regime. This correspondence allows one to map the parameters of a large-scale spiking network model of CA1 onto the simple statistical model, and thereby fit the experimental data quantitatively. Importantly, we show that the observed drift is entirely consistent with random, ongoing synaptic turnover. This synaptic turnover is, in turn, consistent with Hebbian plasticity related to continuous learning in a fast memory system.

SeminarNeuroscience

Stress deceleration theory: chronic adolescent stress exposure results in decelerated neurobehavioral maturation

Kshitij Jadhav
University of Cambridge
Jan 18, 2022

Normative development in adolescence indicates that the prefrontal cortex is still under development thereby unable to exert efficient top-down inhibitory control on subcortical regions such as the basolateral amygdala and the nucleus accumbens. This imbalance in the developmental trajectory between cortical and subcortical regions is implicated in expression of the prototypical impulsive, compulsive, reward seeking and risk-taking adolescent behavior. Here we demonstrate that a chronic mild unpredictable stress procedure during adolescence in male Wistar rats arrests the normal behavioral maturation such that they continue to express adolescent-like impulsive, hyperactive, and compulsive behaviors into late adulthood. This arrest in behavioral maturation is associated with the hypoexcitability of prelimbic cortex (PLC) pyramidal neurons and reduced PLC-mediated synaptic glutamatergic control of BLA and nucleus accumbens core (NAcC) neurons that lasts late into adulthood. At the same time stress exposure in adolescence results in the hyperexcitability of the BLA pyramidal neurons sending stronger glutamatergic projections to the NAcC. Chemogenetic reversal of the PLC hypoexcitability decreased compulsivity and improved the expression of goal-directed behavior in rats exposed to stress during adolescence, suggesting a causal role for PLC hypoexcitability in this stress-induced arrested behavioral development. (https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.11.21.469381v1.abstract)

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The GluN2A Subunit of the NMDA Receptor and Parvalbumin Interneurons: A Possible Role in Interneuron Development

Steve Traynelis & Chad Camp
Emory University School of Medicine
Jan 18, 2022

N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) are excitatory glutamate-gated ion channels that are expressed throughout the central nervous system. NMDARs mediate calcium entry into cells, and are involved in a host of neurological functions. The GluN2A subunit, encoded by the GRIN2A gene, is expressed by both excitatory and inhibitory neurons, with well described roles in pyramidal cells. By using Grin2a knockout mice, we show that the loss of GluN2A signaling impacts parvalbumin-positive (PV) GABAergic interneuron function in hippocampus. Grin2a knockout mice have 33% more PV cells in CA1 compared to wild type but similar cholecystokinin-positive cell density. Immunohistochemistry and electrophysiological recordings show that excess PV cells do eventually incorporate into the hippocampal network and participate in phasic inhibition. Although the morphology of Grin2a knockout PV cells is unaffected, excitability and action-potential firing properties show age-dependent alterations. Preadolescent (P20-25) PV cells have an increased input resistance, longer membrane time constant, longer action-potential half-width, a lower current threshold for depolarization-induced block of action-potential firing, and a decrease in peak action-potential firing rate. Each of these measures are corrected in adulthood, reaching wild type levels, suggesting a potential delay of electrophysiological maturation. The circuit and behavioral implications of this age-dependent PV interneuron malfunction are unknown. However, neonatal Grin2a knockout mice are more susceptible to lipopolysaccharide and febrile-induced seizures, consistent with a critical role for early GluN2A signaling in development and maintenance of excitatory-inhibitory balance. These results could provide insights into how loss-of-function GRIN2A human variants generate an epileptic phenotypes.

SeminarNeuroscience

Nonlinear spatial integration in retinal bipolar cells shapes the encoding of artificial and natural stimuli

Helene Schreyer
Gollisch lab, University Medical Center Göttingen, Germany
Dec 8, 2021

Vision begins in the eye, and what the “retina tells the brain” is a major interest in visual neuroscience. To deduce what the retina encodes (“tells”), computational models are essential. The most important models in the retina currently aim to understand the responses of the retinal output neurons – the ganglion cells. Typically, these models make simplifying assumptions about the neurons in the retinal network upstream of ganglion cells. One important assumption is linear spatial integration. In this talk, I first define what it means for a neuron to be spatially linear or nonlinear and how we can experimentally measure these phenomena. Next, I introduce the neurons upstream to retinal ganglion cells, with focus on bipolar cells, which are the connecting elements between the photoreceptors (input to the retinal network) and the ganglion cells (output). This pivotal position makes bipolar cells an interesting target to study the assumption of linear spatial integration, yet due to their location buried in the middle of the retina it is challenging to measure their neural activity. Here, I present bipolar cell data where I ask whether the spatial linearity holds under artificial and natural visual stimuli. Through diverse analyses and computational models, I show that bipolar cells are more complex than previously thought and that they can already act as nonlinear processing elements at the level of their somatic membrane potential. Furthermore, through pharmacology and current measurements, I illustrate that the observed spatial nonlinearity arises at the excitatory inputs to bipolar cells. In the final part of my talk, I address the functional relevance of the nonlinearities in bipolar cells through combined recordings of bipolar and ganglion cells and I show that the nonlinearities in bipolar cells provide high spatial sensitivity to downstream ganglion cells. Overall, I demonstrate that simple linear assumptions do not always apply and more complex models are needed to describe what the retina “tells” the brain.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Novel population of synchronously active pyramidal cells in hippocampal area CA1

Dori Grijseels (they/them)
University of Sussex
Dec 1, 2021

Hippocampal pyramidal cells have been widely studied during locomotion, when theta oscillations are present, and during short wave ripples at rest, when replay takes place. However, we find a subset of pyramidal cells that are preferably active during rest, in the absence of theta oscillations and short wave ripples. We recorded these cells using two-photon imaging in dorsal CA1 of the hippocampus of mice, during a virtual reality object location recognition task. During locomotion, the cells show a similar level of activity as control cells, but their activity increases during rest, when this population of cells shows highly synchronous, oscillatory activity at a low frequency (0.1-0.4 Hz). In addition, during both locomotion and rest these cells show place coding, suggesting they may play a role in maintaining a representation of the current location, even when the animal is not moving. We performed simultaneous electrophysiological and calcium recordings, which showed a higher correlation of activity between the LFO and the hippocampal cells in the 0.1-0.4 Hz low frequency band during rest than during locomotion. However, the relationship between the LFO and calcium signals varied between electrodes, suggesting a localized effect. We used the Allen Brain Observatory Neuropixels Visual Coding dataset to further explore this. These data revealed localised low frequency oscillations in CA1 and DG during rest. Overall, we show a novel population of hippocampal cells, and a novel oscillatory band of activity in hippocampus during rest.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Systematic exploration of neuron type differences in standard plasticity protocols employing a novel pathway based plasticity rule

Patricia Rubisch (she/her)
University of Edinburgh
Dec 1, 2021

Spike Timing Dependent Plasticity (STDP) is argued to modulate synaptic strength depending on the timing of pre- and postsynaptic spikes. Physiological experiments identified a variety of temporal kernels: Hebbian, anti-Hebbian and symmetrical LTP/LTD. In this work we present a novel plasticity model, the Voltage-Dependent Pathway Model (VDP), which is able to replicate those distinct kernel types and intermediate versions with varying LTP/LTD ratios and symmetry features. In addition, unlike previous models it retains these characteristics for different neuron models, which allows for comparison of plasticity in different neuron types. The plastic updates depend on the relative strength and activation of separately modeled LTP and LTD pathways, which are modulated by glutamate release and postsynaptic voltage. We used the 15 neuron type parametrizations in the GLIF5 model presented by Teeter et al. (2018) in combination with the VDP to simulate a range of standard plasticity protocols including standard STDP experiments, frequency dependency experiments and low frequency stimulation protocols. Slight variation in kernel stability and frequency effects can be identified between the neuron types, suggesting that the neuron type may have an effect on the effective learning rule. This plasticity model builds a middle ground between biophysical and phenomenological models allowing not just for the combination with more complex and biophysical neuron models, but is also computationally efficient so can be used in network simulations. Therefore it offers the possibility to explore the functional role of the different kernel types and electrophysiological differences in heterogeneous networks in future work.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Untangling Contributions of Distinct Features of Images to Object Processing in Inferotemporal Cortex

Hanxiao Lu
Yale University
Nov 30, 2021

How do humans perceive daily objects of various features and categorize these seemingly intuitive and effortless mental representations? Prior literature focusing on the role of the inferotemporal region (IT) has revealed object category clustering that is consistent with the semantic predefined structure (superordinate, ordinate, subordinate). It has however been debated whether the neural signals in the IT regions are a reflection of such categorical hierarchy [Wen et al.,2018; Bracci et al., 2017]. Visual attributes of images that correlated with semantic and category dimensions may have confounded these prior results. Our study aimed to address this debate by building and comparing models using the DNN AlexNet, to explain the variance in representational dissimilarity matrix (RDM) of neural signals in the IT region. We found that mid and high level perceptual attributes of the DNN model contribute the most to neural RDMs in the IT region. Semantic categories, as in predefined structure, were moderately correlated with mid to high DNN layers (r = [0.24 - 0.36]). Variance partitioning analysis also showed that the IT neural representations were mostly explained by DNN layers, while semantic categorical RDMs brought little additional information. In light of these results, we propose future works should focus more on the specific role IT plays in facilitating the extraction and coding of visual features that lead to the emergence of categorical conceptualizations.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Resilience through diversity: Loss of neuronal heterogeneity in epileptogenic human tissue impairs network resilience to sudden changes in synchrony

Scott Rich
Kremibl Brain Institute
Nov 30, 2021

A myriad of pathological changes associated with epilepsy, including the loss of specific cell types, improper expression of individual ion channels, and synaptic sprouting, can be recast as decreases in cell and circuit heterogeneity. In recent experimental work, we demonstrated that biophysical diversity is a key characteristic of human cortical pyramidal cells, and past theoretical work has shown that neuronal heterogeneity improves a neural circuit’s ability to encode information. Viewed alongside the fact that seizure is an information-poor brain state, these findings motivate the hypothesis that epileptogenesis can be recontextualized as a process where reduction in cellular heterogeneity renders neural circuits less resilient to seizure onset. By comparing whole-cell patch clamp recordings from layer 5 (L5) human cortical pyramidal neurons from epileptogenic and non-epileptogenic tissue, we present the first direct experimental evidence that a significant reduction in neural heterogeneity accompanies epilepsy. We directly implement experimentally-obtained heterogeneity levels in cortical excitatory-inhibitory (E-I) stochastic spiking network models. Low heterogeneity networks display unique dynamics typified by a sudden transition into a hyper-active and synchronous state paralleling ictogenesis. Mean-field analysis reveals a distinct mathematical structure in these networks distinguished by multi-stability. Furthermore, the mathematically characterized linearizing effect of heterogeneity on input-output response functions explains the counter-intuitive experimentally observed reduction in single-cell excitability in epileptogenic neurons. This joint experimental, computational, and mathematical study showcases that decreased neuronal heterogeneity exists in epileptogenic human cortical tissue, that this difference yields dynamical changes in neural networks paralleling ictogenesis, and that there is a fundamental explanation for these dynamics based in mathematically characterized effects of heterogeneity. These interdisciplinary results provide convincing evidence that biophysical diversity imbues neural circuits with resilience to seizure and a new lens through which to view epilepsy, the most common serious neurological disorder in the world, that could reveal new targets for clinical treatment.

SeminarNeuroscience

Entering the Loop: Strong and specific connections between retina and midbrain revealed by large-scale paired recordings

Jens Kremkow
Charite Medical University, Berlin
Nov 28, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

Dual lecture: Diversification of cortical inhibitory circuits & Molecular programs orchestrating the wiring of inhibitory circuitries

Oscar Marín & Beatriz Rico
MRC Centre for Neurodevelopmental Disorders & Centre for Developmental Neurobiology, King’s College London, UK
Nov 3, 2021

GABAergic interneurons play crucial roles in the regulation of neural activity in the cerebral cortex. In this Dual Lecture, Prof Oscar Marín and Prof Beatriz Rico will discuss several aspects of the formation of inhibitory circuits in the mammalian cerebral cortex. Prof. Marín will provide an overview of the mechanisms regulating the generation of the remarkable diversity of GABAergic interneurons and their ultimate numbers. Prof. Rico will describe the molecular logic through which specific pyramidal cell-interneuron circuits are established in the cerebral cortex, and how alterations in some of these connectivity motifs might be liked to disease.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Optimising spiking interneuron circuits for compartment-specific feedback

Henning Sprekeler
Technische Universität Berlin
Nov 1, 2021

Cortical circuits process information by rich recurrent interactions between excitatory neurons and inhibitory interneurons. One of the prime functions of interneurons is to stabilize the circuit by feedback inhibition, but the level of specificity on which inhibitory feedback operates is not fully resolved. We hypothesized that inhibitory circuits could enable separate feedback control loops for different synaptic input streams, by means of specific feedback inhibition to different neuronal compartments. To investigate this hypothesis, we adopted an optimization approach. Leveraging recent advances in training spiking network models, we optimized the connectivity and short-term plasticity of interneuron circuits for compartment-specific feedback inhibition onto pyramidal neurons. Over the course of the optimization, the interneurons diversified into two classes that resembled parvalbumin (PV) and somatostatin (SST) expressing interneurons. The resulting circuit can be understood as a neural decoder that inverts the nonlinear biophysical computations performed within the pyramidal cells. Our model provides a proof of concept for studying structure-function relations in cortical circuits by a combination of gradient-based optimization and biologically plausible phenomenological models

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Encoding and perceiving the texture of sounds: auditory midbrain codes for recognizing and categorizing auditory texture and for listening in noise

Monty Escabi
University of Connecticut
Sep 30, 2021

Natural soundscapes such as from a forest, a busy restaurant, or a busy intersection are generally composed of a cacophony of sounds that the brain needs to interpret either independently or collectively. In certain instances sounds - such as from moving cars, sirens, and people talking - are perceived in unison and are recognized collectively as single sound (e.g., city noise). In other instances, such as for the cocktail party problem, multiple sounds compete for attention so that the surrounding background noise (e.g., speech babble) interferes with the perception of a single sound source (e.g., a single talker). I will describe results from my lab on the perception and neural representation of auditory textures. Textures, such as a from a babbling brook, restaurant noise, or speech babble are stationary sounds consisting of multiple independent sound sources that can be quantitatively defined by summary statistics of an auditory model (McDermott & Simoncelli 2011). How and where in the auditory system are summary statistics represented and the neural codes that potentially contribute towards their perception, however, are largely unknown. Using high-density multi-channel recordings from the auditory midbrain of unanesthetized rabbits and complementary perceptual studies on human listeners, I will first describe neural and perceptual strategies for encoding and perceiving auditory textures. I will demonstrate how distinct statistics of sounds, including the sound spectrum and high-order statistics related to the temporal and spectral correlation structure of sounds, contribute to texture perception and are reflected in neural activity. Using decoding methods I will then demonstrate how various low and high-order neural response statistics can differentially contribute towards a variety of auditory tasks including texture recognition, discrimination, and categorization. Finally, I will show examples from our recent studies on how high-order sound statistics and accompanying neural activity underlie difficulties for recognizing speech in background noise.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Credit Assignment in Neural Networks through Deep Feedback Control

Alexander Meulemans
Institute of Neuroinformatics, University of Zürich and ETH Zürich
Sep 29, 2021

The success of deep learning sparked interest in whether the brain learns by using similar techniques for assigning credit to each synaptic weight for its contribution to the network output. However, the majority of current attempts at biologically-plausible learning methods are either non-local in time, require highly specific connectivity motives, or have no clear link to any known mathematical optimization method. Here, we introduce Deep Feedback Control (DFC), a new learning method that uses a feedback controller to drive a deep neural network to match a desired output target and whose control signal can be used for credit assignment. The resulting learning rule is fully local in space and time and approximates Gauss-Newton optimization for a wide range of feedback connectivity patterns. To further underline its biological plausibility, we relate DFC to a multi-compartment model of cortical pyramidal neurons with a local voltage-dependent synaptic plasticity rule, consistent with recent theories of dendritic processing. By combining dynamical system theory with mathematical optimization theory, we provide a strong theoretical foundation for DFC that we corroborate with detailed results on toy experiments and standard computer-vision benchmarks.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Learning from unexpected events in the neocortical microcircuit

Colleen Gillon
Richards lab, University of Toronto
Sep 21, 2021

Predictive learning hypotheses posit that the neocortex learns a hierarchical model of the structure of features in the environment. Under these hypotheses, expected or predictable features are differentiated from unexpected ones by comparing bottom-up and top-down streams of data, with unexpected features then driving changes in the representation of incoming stimuli. This is supported by numerous studies in early sensory cortices showing that pyramidal neurons respond particularly strongly to unexpected stimulus events. However, it remains unknown how their responses govern subsequent changes in stimulus representations, and thus, govern learning. Here, I present results from our study of layer 2/3 and layer 5 pyramidal neurons imaged in primary visual cortex of awake, behaving mice using two-photon calcium microscopy at both the somatic and distal apical planes. Our data reveals that individual neurons and distal apical dendrites show distinct, but predictable changes in unexpected event responses when tracked over several days. Considering existing evidence that bottom-up information is primarily targeted to somata, with distal apical dendrites receiving the bulk of top-down inputs, our findings corroborate hypothesized complementary roles for these two neuronal compartments in hierarchical computing. Altogether, our work provides novel evidence that the neocortex indeed instantiates a predictive hierarchical model in which unexpected events drive learning.

SeminarPsychology

Characterising the brain representations behind variations in real-world visual behaviour

Simon Faghel-Soubeyrand
Université de Montréal
Aug 4, 2021

Not all individuals are equally competent at recognizing the faces they interact with. Revealing how the brains of different individuals support variations in this ability is a crucial step to develop an understanding of real-world human visual behaviour. In this talk, I will present findings from a large high-density EEG dataset (>100k trials of participants processing various stimulus categories) and computational approaches which aimed to characterise the brain representations behind real-world proficiency of “super-recognizers”—individuals at the top of face recognition ability spectrum. Using decoding analysis of time-resolved EEG patterns, we predicted with high precision the trial-by-trial activity of super-recognizers participants, and showed that evidence for face recognition ability variations is disseminated along early, intermediate and late brain processing steps. Computational modeling of the underlying brain activity uncovered two representational signatures supporting higher face recognition ability—i) mid-level visual & ii) semantic computations. Both components were dissociable in brain processing-time (the first around the N170, the last around the P600) and levels of computations (the first emerging from mid-level layers of visual Convolutional Neural Networks, the last from a semantic model characterising sentence descriptions of images). I will conclude by presenting ongoing analyses from a well-known case of acquired prosopagnosia (PS) using similar computational modeling of high-density EEG activity.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Disinhibitory and neuromodulatory regulation of hippocampal synaptic plasticity

Inês Guerreiro
Gutkin lab, Ecole Normale Superieure
Jul 27, 2021

The CA1 pyramidal neurons are embedded in an intricate local circuitry that contains a variety of interneurons. The roles these interneurons play in the regulation of the excitatory synaptic plasticity remains largely understudied. Recent experiments showed that repeated cholinergic activation of 𝛼7 nACh receptors expressed in oriens-lacunosum-moleculare (OLM𝛼2) interneurons could induce LTP in SC-CA1 synapses. We used a biophysically realistic computational model to examine mechanistically how cholinergic activation of OLMa2 interneurons increases SC to CA1 transmission. Our results suggest that, when properly timed, activation of OLMa2 interneurons cancels the feedforward inhibition onto CA1 pyramidal cells by inhibiting fast-spiking interneurons that synapse on the same dendritic compartment as the SC, i.e., by disinhibiting the pyramidal cell dendritic compartment. Our work further describes the pairing of disinhibition with SC stimulation as a general mechanism for the induction of synaptic plasticity. We found that locally-reduced GABA release (disinhibition) paired with SC stimulation could lead to increased NMDAR activation and intracellular calcium concentration sufficient to upregulate AMPAR permeability and potentiate the excitatory synapse. Our work suggests that inhibitory synapses critically modulate excitatory neurotransmission and induction of plasticity at excitatory synapses. Our work also shows how cholinergic action on OLM interneurons, a mechanism whose disruption is associated with memory impairment, can down-regulate the GABAergic signaling into CA1 pyramidal cells and facilitate potentiation of the SC-CA1 synapse.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

How inclusive and diverse is non-invasive brain stimulation in the treatment of psychiatric disorders?

Indira Tendolkar
Radboud Univeristy
Jul 13, 2021

How inclusive and diverse is non-invasive brain stimulation in the treatment of psychiatric disorders?Indira Tendolkar, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Department of Psychiatry. Mental illness is associated with a huge socioeconomic burden worldwide, with annual costs only in the Netherlands of €22 billion. Over two decades of cognitive and affective neuroscience research with modern tools of neuroimaging and neurophysiology in humans have given us a wealth of information about neural circuits underlying the main symptom domains of psychiatric disorders and their remediation. Neuromodulation entails the alteration of these neural circuits through invasive (e.g., DBS) or non-invasive (e.g., TMS) techniques with the aim of improving symptoms and/or functions and enhancing neuroplasticity. In my talk, I will focus on neuromodulation studies using repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) as a relatively safe, noninvasive method, which can be performed simultaneously with neurocognitive interventions. Using the examples of two chronifying mental illnesses, namely obsessive compulsive disorders and major depressive disorder (MDD), I will review the concept of "state dependent" effects of rTMS and highlight how simultaneous or sequential cognitive interventions could help optimize rTMS therapy by providing further control of ongoing neural activity in targeted neural networks. Hardly any attention has been paid to diversity aspects in the studies. By including studies from low- and middle income countries, I will discuss the potential of non-invasive brain stimulation from a transcultural perspective.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Communicating (Neuro)Science

Anna Stoeckl
Würzburg University
Jul 7, 2021

In recent years, communicating one’s research to audiences outside of academia has grown in importance and time commitment for many researchers. Science Slams or University Open Days reliably draw large crowds, and the potential of social media to amplify any message has made it possible to reach interested recipients without the traditional press as a middleman. In this presentation, I will provide insights into science communication from my perspective as a neuroscience researcher, who enjoys spreading the word about how amazing insect brains are. We will have a look at the What?, Why? and How? of science communication. What do we generally mean by the term, and what forms can it take? Why should – or must – we engage in it? And how can we best achieve our aims with it? I will provide an overview of the current communication landscape, some food for (critical) thought, and many practical tips that help me when preparing to share my science with a wider audience.

ePoster

Computational analysis of optogenetic inhibition of a pyramidal CA1 neuron

Laila Weyn, Thomas Tarnaud, Xavier De Becker, Wout Joseph, Robrecht Raedt, Emmeric Tanghe

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Dual role, single pathway: A pyramidal cell model of feedback integration in function and learning

Daniel Schmid, Christian Jarvers, Timo Oess, Heiko Neumann

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Modeling HCN Channel-Mediated Modulation on Dendro-Somatic Electric Coupling in CA1 Pyramidal Cells

Marvin Marz

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Pyramidal Interneuron Next-Generation Neural Mass Model: Synaptic Properties and Stimulation Response

Raul Aristides, Pau Cobero, Roser Sanchez-Todo, Giulio Ruffini, Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Cortex-wide decision circuits are shaped by distinct classes of excitatory pyramidal neurons

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Distinct dynamics in projection-specific midbrain dopamine populations for learning and motivation

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Large-scale paired recordings reveal strong and specific connections between retina and midbrain.

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Large-scale paired recordings reveal strong and specific connections between retina and midbrain.

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Natural scene expectation shapes the structure of trial to trial variability in mid-level visual cortex

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Natural scene expectation shapes the structure of trial to trial variability in mid-level visual cortex

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Clustered representation of vocalizations in the auditory midbrain of the echolocating bat

Jennifer Lawlor, Melville Wohlgemuth, Cynthia F. Moss, Kishore Kuchibhotla

COSYNE 2023

ePoster

Computation of abstract context in the midbrain reticular nucleus during perceptual decision-making

Jordan Shaker, Dan Birman, Nicholas Steinmetz

COSYNE 2023

ePoster

Dendritic low pass filtering shapes midbrain neural responses to behaviorally relevant stimuli

Norma Kühn, Bram Nuttin, Chen Li, Natalia Baimacheva, Katja Reinhard, Vincent Bonin, Karl Farrow

COSYNE 2023

ePoster

Embryonic layer 5 pyramidal neurons form earliest recurrent circuits with correlated activity

Arjun Bharioke, Martin Munz, Georg Kosche, Verónica Moreno-Juan, Alexandra Brignall, Alexandra Graff-Meyer, Talia Ulmer, Tiago Rodrigues, Simone Picelli, Cameron Cowan, Botond Roska

COSYNE 2023

ePoster

Responses to inconsistent stimuli in pyramidal neurons: An open science dataset

Colleen J. Gillon, Jérôme A. Lecoq, Jason E. Pina, Timothy M. Henley, Yazan N. Billeh, Shiella Caldejon, Jed Perkins, Matthew T. Valley, Ali Williford, Yoshua Bengio, Timothy Lillicrap, Joel Zylberberg, Blake A. Richards

COSYNE 2023

ePoster

The accumulation of dendritic extracellular Potassium as in vivo model of epilepsy in CA1 pyramidal neurons

Valentina Carpentieri, Christophe Bernard, Michele Migliore

COSYNE 2025

ePoster

Compartment-specific stability in CA3 pyramidal neuron dendrites revealed by automatic segmentation

Jason Moore, Dmitri Chklovskii, Jayeeta Basu

COSYNE 2025

ePoster

Midbrain dopamine activity produces regionally localized decision substrates

Alejandro Pan Vazquez, Christopher Zimmerman, Brenna McMannon, Miranta Louka, Steven West, Mayo Faulkner, International Brain Laboratory, Peter Dayan, Ilana Witten

COSYNE 2025

ePoster

Adrenergic receptors control of rebound depolarization in medial prefrontal cortex pyramidal neurons

Przemyslaw Kurowski, Piotr Lach

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

All-optical mapping of feedback and sensory-evoked synaptic inputs to pyramidal neurons in the mouse primary somatosensory cortex

Céline Dürst, David van Oorschot, Elodie Husi, Anthony Holtmaat

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Altered dendritic excitability and cell maturation of CA3 pyramidal neurons during development in the Scn2aA263V genetic epilepsy model

Michela Barboni

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Anatomically heterogeneous pyramidal cells in supragranular layers of the dorsal cortex show the surface-to-deep firing frequency increase during natural sleep

Boglárka Bozsó, Robert G. Averkin, János Horváth, Sándor Bordé, Gábor Tamás

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Antiepileptic medication is associated with excitatory synaptic strengthening in pyramidal neurons of the adult human neocortex

Amelie Eichler, Maximilian Lenz, Pia Kruse, Han Lu, Sandra Diaz, Jakob Strähle, Paul Turko, Hanna Hemeling, Phyllis Stöhr, Imre Vida, Jürgen Beck, Andreas Vlachos

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Bayesian causal inference predicts center-surround interactions in the middle temporal visual area (MT)

Gabor Lengyel, Sabyasachi Shivkumar, Ralf Haefner

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Cholinergic regulation of dendritic Ca2+ spikes controls firing mode of hippocampal CA3 pyramidal neurons

Noémi Kis, Balázs Lükő, Judit Herédi, Ádám Magó, Bela Erlinghagen, Mahboubeh Ahmadi, Snezana Raus Balind, Mátyás Irás, Balázs B. Ujfalussy, Judit K. Makara

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Complex sublamination of cortical marginal zone in human and monkey at midgestation

Marina Čavka, Maura Zanze Beader, Tin Luka Petanjek, Tomislav Balen, Monique Esclapez, Ana Hladnik

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Contrasting the role of excitatory pyramidal cells and GABAergic interneurons in prefrontal cortex through a novel contextual auditory stimulus task paradigm and calcium imaging

Florian Steenbergen, Brice De La Crompe, Julian Ammer, Ilka Diester

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Cortical miR-16 involvement in the antidepressant effects of pharmacological elevation of anandamide in a rat model for depression

Anna Portugalov, Irit Akirav

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Decoding activity patterns across pyramidal cell dendritic trees during spontaneous behaviors using 3D arboreal scanning

Antoine Valera, Thomas J. Younts, Victoria A. Griffiths, Diccon Coyle, R. Angus Silver

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Depressive-like phenotype induced by AAV-mediated overexpression of human α-synuclein in midbrain dopaminergic neurons

Laura Kondrataviciute, Minesh Kapadia, Jimmy George, Hien Chau, Erdost Yildiz, Taufik Valiante, Luka Milosevic, Lorraine V. Kalia, Suneil K. Kalia

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Differential metabolism of serine enantiomers in the striatum of MPTP-lesioned monkeys and mice correlates with the severity of dopaminergic midbrain degeneration

Marcello Serra, Anna Di Maio, Valentina Bassareo, Tommaso Nuzzo, Francesco Errico, Federica Servillo, Mario Capasso, Pathik Parekh, Qin Li, Marie-Laure Thiolat, Erwan Bezard, Paolo Calabresi, David Sulzer, Manolo Carta, Micaela Morelli, Alessandro Usiello

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Discrete populations of midbrain dopamine neurons differently signal decision-making

Gabriella Portlock, Jessica Bowden, Riccardo Avvisati, Paul Dodson

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Distinct frequency-dependent synaptic plasticity and NMDAR subunit content in the supra- and infrapyramidal blade of the dentate gyrus in freely behaving animals

Juliane Böge, Christina Strauch, Olena Shchyglo, Valentyna Dubovyk, Denise Manahan-Vaughan

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

DJ-1-mediated metabolic efficiency determined the vulnerability of midbrain dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson’s disease

Amina Abulimiti, Ali Anwaar, Bae Haesoo, Tsujishita Minou, Balakrishnan Shanmuganathan, Djordje Gveric, Steve Gentleman, Kambiz N. Alavian

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Dual effect of anandamide and its endogenous precursor 20:4-NAPE on DRG neuronal excitability and nociception

Anirban Bhattacharyya, Daniel Vasconcelos, Diana Spicarova, Jiri Palecek

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

The dynamic state of a prefrontal-hypothalamic-midbrain circuit commands behavioural transitions

Mahsa Altafi, Changwan Chen, Mihaela-Anca Corbu, Aleksandra Trenk, Hanna van den Munkhof, Kristin Weineck, Franziska Bender, Marta Carus-Cadavieco, Alisa Bakhareva, Tatiana Korotkova, Alexey Ponomarenko

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

The effect of vitamin D deficiency and unpredictable chronic mild stress on memory and hippocampal plasticity in middle-aged mice

Külli Jaako, Kelli Somelar-Duracz, Monika Jürgenson, Janeli Viil, Alexander Zharkovsky

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Emergence of NMDA-spikes: Unraveling network dynamics in pyramidal neurons

Michael Dick, Joshua Böttcher, David Dahmen, Willem Wybo, Abigail Morrison

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Enhanced inhibition in hippocampal pyramidal neurons in a gain-of-function GABRB3 mouse model of epilepsy

Chaseley McKenzie, Khaing Phyu Aung, Lauren Bleakley, Susan Lin, Vivian Liao, Ming S Soh, Nathan Absalom, Rikke S Møller, Mary Chebib, Philip Ahring, Christopher Reid

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Firing properties of the mouse hippocampal pyramidal CA1 neurons during postnatal development

Igor Nagula, Emilija Kavalnyte, Kornelija Vitkute, Daiva Dabkeviciene, Urte Neniskyte, Aidas Alaburda

FENS Forum 2024