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Neural Bases

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Neural Bases

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with Neural Bases across World Wide.
10 curated items6 Seminars2 Positions2 ePosters
Updated about 15 hours ago
10 items · Neural Bases
10 results
PositionPsychology

Timothy F. Brady

Department of Psychology, University of California, San Diego
University of California, San Diego
Dec 5, 2025

The Department of Psychology at UC San Diego invites applications for a tenure-track Assistant Professor position focused on computational and theoretical mechanisms of behavior and/or its neural bases. The selected candidate will be responsible for establishing a rigorous, high-quality research program that complements existing departmental strengths in Behavioral Neuroscience, Cognitive Psychology, Developmental Psychology, and/or Social Psychology. Additional responsibilities include teaching graduate and undergraduate level courses and mentoring students within the Department of Psychology, as well as participating in department and university service.

PositionNeuroscience

Maximilian Riesenhuber, PhD

Georgetown University
Georgetown University Medical Center, Research Building Room WP-12, 3970 Reservoir Rd., NW, Washington, DC 20007
Dec 5, 2025

We have an opening for a postdoc position investigating the neural bases of deep multimodal learning in the brain. The project involves EEG and laminar 7T imaging (in collaboration with Dr. Peter Bandettini’s lab at NIMH) to test computational hypotheses for how the brain learns multimodal concept representations. Responsibilities of the postdoc include running EEG and fMRI experiments, data analysis and manuscript preparation. Georgetown University has a vibrant neuroscience community with over fifty labs participating in the Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience and a number of relevant research centers, including the new Center for Neuroengineering (cne.georgetown.edu). Interested candidates should submit a CV, a brief (1 page) statement of research interests, representative reprints, and the names and contact information of three references to Interfolio via https://apply.interfolio.com/148520. Faxed, emailed, or mailed applications will not be accepted. Questions about the position can be directed to Maximilian Riesenhuber (mr287@georgetown.edu).

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

Neural circuits for novel choices and for choice speed and accuracy changes in macaques

Alessandro Bongioanni
University of Oxford
Feb 3, 2022

While most experimental tasks aim at isolating simple cognitive processes to study their neural bases, naturalistic behaviour is often complex and multidimensional. I will present two studies revealing previously uncharacterised neural circuits for decision-making in macaques. This was possible thanks to innovative experimental tasks eliciting sophisticated behaviour, bridging the human and non-human primate research traditions. Firstly, I will describe a specialised medial frontal circuit for novel choice in macaques. Traditionally, monkeys receive extensive training before neural data can be acquired, while a hallmark of human cognition is the ability to act in novel situations. I will show how this medial frontal circuit can combine the values of multiple attributes for each available novel item on-the-fly to enable efficient novel choices. This integration process is associated with a hexagonal symmetry pattern in the BOLD response, consistent with a grid-like representation of the space of all available options. We prove the causal role played by this circuit by showing that focussed transcranial ultrasound neuromodulation impairs optimal choice based on attribute integration and forces the subjects to default to a simpler heuristic decision strategy. Secondly, I will present an ongoing project addressing the neural mechanisms driving behaviour shifts during an evidence accumulation task that requires subjects to trade speed for accuracy. While perceptual decision-making in general has been thoroughly studied, both cognitively and neurally, the reasons why speed and/or accuracy are adjusted, and the associated neural mechanisms, have received little attention. We describe two orthogonal dimensions in which behaviour can vary (traditional speed-accuracy trade-off and efficiency) and we uncover independent neural circuits concerned with changes in strategy and fluctuations in the engagement level. The former involves the frontopolar cortex, while the latter is associated with the insula and a network of subcortical structures including the habenula.

SeminarNeuroscience

Separable pupillary signatures of perception and action during perceptual multistability

Jan Brascamp
Michigan State University
Jan 25, 2022

The pupil provides a rich, non-invasive measure of the neural bases of perception and cognition, and has been of particular value in uncovering the role of arousal-linked neuromodulation, which alters cortical processing as well as pupil size. But pupil size is subject to a multitude of influences, which complicates unique interpretation. We measured pupils of observers experiencing perceptual multistability -- an ever-changing subjective percept in the face of unchanging but inconclusive sensory input. In separate conditions the endogenously generated perceptual changes were either task-relevant or not, allowing a separation between perception-related and task-related pupil signals. Perceptual changes were marked by a complex pupil response that could be decomposed into two components: a dilation tied to task execution and plausibly indicative of an arousal-linked noradrenaline surge, and an overlapping constriction tied to the perceptual transient and plausibly a marker of altered visual cortical representation. Constriction, but not dilation, amplitude systematically depended on the time interval between perceptual changes, possibly providing an overt index of neural adaptation. These results show that the pupil provides a simultaneous reading on interacting but dissociable neural processes during perceptual multistability, and suggest that arousal-linked neuromodulation shapes action but not perception in these circumstances. This presentation covers work that was published in e-life

SeminarNeuroscience

Molecular, receptor, and neural bases for chemosensory-mediated sexual and social behavior in mice

Kazushige Touhara
University of Tokyo
Jun 28, 2021

For many animals, the sense of olfaction plays a major role in controlling sexual behaviors. Olfaction helps animals to detect mates, discriminate their status, and ultimately, decide on their behavioral output such as courtship behavior or aggression. Specific pheromone cues and receptors have provided a useful model to study how sensory inputs are converted into certain behavioral outputs. With the aid of recent advances in tools to record and manipulate genetically defined neurons, our understanding of the neural basis of sexual and social behavior has expanded substantially. I will discuss the current understanding of the neural processing of sex pheromones and the neural circuitry which controls sexual and social behaviors and ultimately reproduction, by focusing on rodent studies, mainly in mice, and the vomeronasal sensory system.

ePoster

Explainable Machine Learning Approach to Investigating Neural Bases of Brain State Classification

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

The neural bases of how dogs and humans navigate their social environment

Magdalena Boch, Christoph Völter, Rogier B. Mars, Ludwig Huber, Claus Lamm

FENS Forum 2024