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Midline Thalamus

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midline thalamus

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with midline thalamus across World Wide.
5 curated items3 Seminars2 ePosters
Updated over 1 year ago
5 items · midline thalamus
5 results
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.

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.

SeminarNeuroscience

Striatal circuits for reward learning and decision-making

Ilana Witten
Princeton University
Jun 10, 2020

How are actions linked with subsequent outcomes to guide choices? The nucleus accumbens (NAc), which is implicated in this process, receives glutamatergic inputs from the prelimbic cortex (PL) and midline regions of the thalamus (mTH). However, little is known about what is represented in PL or mTH neurons that project to NAc (PL-NAc and mTH-NAc). By comparing these inputs during a reinforcement learning task in mice, we discovered that i) PL-NAc preferentially represents actions and choices, ii) mTH-NAc preferentially represents cues, iii) choice-selective activity in PL-NAc is organized in sequences that persist beyond the outcome. Through computational modelling, we demonstrate that these sequences can support the neural implementation of temporal difference learning, a powerful algorithm to connect actions and outcomes across time. Finally, we test and confirm predictions of our circuit model by direct manipulation of PL-NAc neurons. Thus, we integrate experiment and modelling to suggest a neural solution for credit assignment.

ePoster

Large-scale single unit recordings in the dorsal midline thalamus in naturally behaving mice

Gergely Komlosi, Laszlo Acsady, Gyorgy Buzsaki

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Projections from the medial prefrontal cortex to the ventral midline thalamus are crucial for cognitive flexibility in rats

Elodie Panzer, Laurine Boch, Brigitte Cosquer, Anne Pereira de Vasconcelos, Aline Stéphan, Jean-Christophe Cassel

FENS Forum 2024