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Sensory Circuits

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sensory circuits

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with sensory circuits across World Wide.
7 curated items5 Seminars1 Position1 ePoster
Updated 1 day ago
7 items · sensory circuits
7 results
SeminarNeuroscience

How neural circuits organize and learn during development

Julijana Gjorgjieva
Technical University of Munich
Jun 14, 2022

To generate brain circuits that are both flexible and stable requires the coordination of powerful developmental mechanisms acting at different scales, including activity-dependent synaptic plasticity and changes in single neuron properties. The brain prepares to efficiently compute information and reliably generate behavior during early development without any prior sensory experience but through patterned spontaneous activity. After the onset of sensory experience, ongoing activity continues to modify sensory circuits, and plays an important functional role in the mature brain. Using quantitative data analysis, experiment-driven theory and computational modeling, I will present a framework for how neural circuits are built and organized during early postnatal development into functional units, and how they are modified by intact and perturbed sensory-evoked activity. Inspired by experimental data from sensory cortex, I will then show how neural circuits use the resulting non-random connectivity to flexibly gate a network’s response, providing a mechanism for routing information.

SeminarNeuroscience

The thalamus that speaks to the cortex: Spontaneous activity in the developing sensory circuits

Guillermina Lopez Bendito
Neuroscience Institute, UMH-CSIC, Alicante, Spain
Sep 5, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

A thalamus that speaks to the cortex: Spontaneous activity in development and plasticity of sensory circuits”

Guillermina López-Bendito
Instituto de Neurociencias, UMH-CSIC, Alicante
Mar 31, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Dynamic computation in the retina by retuning of neurons and synapses

Leon Lagnado
University of Sussex
Sep 15, 2020

How does a circuit of neurons process sensory information? And how are transformations of neural signals altered by changes in synaptic strength? We investigate these questions in the context of the visual system and the lateral line of fish. A distinguishing feature of our approach is the imaging of activity across populations of synapses – the fundamental elements of signal transfer within all brain circuits. A guiding hypothesis is that the plasticity of neurotransmission plays a major part in controlling the input-output relation of sensory circuits, regulating the tuning and sensitivity of neurons to allow adaptation or sensitization to particular features of the input. Sensory systems continuously adjust their input-output relation according to the recent history of the stimulus. A common alteration is a decrease in the gain of the response to a constant feature of the input, termed adaptation. For instance, in the retina, many of the ganglion cells (RGCs) providing the output produce their strongest responses just after the temporal contrast of the stimulus increases, but the response declines if this input is maintained. The advantage of adaptation is that it prevents saturation of the response to strong stimuli and allows for continued signaling of future increases in stimulus strength. But adaptation comes at a cost: a reduced sensitivity to a future decrease in stimulus strength. The retina compensates for this loss of information through an intriguing strategy: while some RGCs adapt following a strong stimulus, a second population gradually becomes sensitized. We found that the underlying circuit mechanisms involve two opposing forms of synaptic plasticity in bipolar cells: synaptic depression causes adaptation and facilitation causes sensitization. Facilitation is in turn caused by depression in inhibitory synapses providing negative feedback. These opposing forms of plasticity can cause simultaneous increases and decreases in contrast-sensitivity of different RGCs, which suggests a general framework for understanding the function of sensory circuits: plasticity of both excitatory and inhibitory synapses control dynamic changes in tuning and gain.

ePoster

Green light exerts antinociceptive and anxiolytic effects via visual-somatosensory circuits

Peng Cao, Zhang Mingjun, Ni Ziyun, Zhang Zhi

FENS Forum 2024