Systems Neuroscience

Circuit mechanisms underlying learned changes in persistent neural activity

ABSTRACT Persistent neural activity, a sustained response following brief stimuli that is observed in many brain networks, needs to be appropriately tuned to meet the exacting demands of various motor and cognitive tasks. One task that has been particularly amenable to understanding persistent neural activity is the oculomotor control of gaze position.

Thalamocortical state control of tactile sensing: Mechanisms, Models, and Behavior

Thalamocortical state control of tactile sensing: Mechanisms, Models, and Behavior Despite the fact that the sensory thalamus plays a major role in shaping sensory representations in cortex, and thus shaping our percepts, most of what we know has been determined through electrophysiological investigation of the thalamus in-vitro or in the anesthetized brain. Properties of thalamic activity such as mean firing rates, timing and synchrony, and tonic/burst firing directly determine how sensory inputs are represented in the spatiotemporal activation of cortex.

Impact of cortical feedback on odor concentration change coding

ABSTRACT Top-down feedback connections between “higher” and “lower” brain areas are quite common, but their functional role remains a mystery. This general principle applies to the olfactory system, in which the olfactory bulb receives dense feedback innervation from its cortical targets. Here, we propose techniques with which feedback neurons can be targeted by a viral/transgenic intersectional strategy in mice. Using this strategy, we will identify feedback neurons during electrophysiological recordings by optogenetic tagging.

Multiplex imaging of neuronal activity and signaling dynamics underlying learning in discrete amygdala circuits of behaving mice.

PROJECT SUMMARY The amygdala plays a central role in diverse learned behaviors. By integrating the sensory information with stress, punishment, and reward signals, the circuitry within the amygdala is thought to be modified during learning to mediate specific behavioral outcomes. However, the circuit principles governing what is changed and how different types of learning give rise to qualitatively distinct behaviors remains largely unknown.

Viral Strategies for Functional Connectomics in the Visual System

Project Summary / Abstract A fundamental but unsolved question in neuroscience is how specific connections between brain cells (neurons) underlie information processing. Circuits in the cerebral cortex—the part of the mammalian brain that underlies high-level sensory, motor, and cognitive function—consists of tens of thousands of neurons, each of which sends and receives thousands of connections. Perhaps the biggest reason we don't understand the cerebral cortex is that we don't have an actual wiring diagram of any single cortical circuit.

THE DYNAMICS OF LONG RANGE CORRELATIONS IN CORTEX: SINGLE UNITS AND OXYGEN

ABSTRACT Resting state networks are a fascinating yet poorly understood phenomenon. Sets of spatially separated regions show correlated slow fluctuations in fMRI BOLD signals, most obvious when subjects are at rest. These networks appear to have clinical imporantance: brain injuries perturb resting state networks, and multiple clinical disorders, including depression, dyslexia and prosopagnosia, are associated with specific resting state network abnormalities.

Integrative Analysis of Long-range Top-down Cortical Circuit for Attentional Behavior

Attention deficit symptoms are frequently observed in psychiatric disorders, yet finite understanding of the neural circuits mediating attentional behavior has limited pathophysiologic insight. Previous studies in humans and rodent demonstrate that the frontal cortex—especially the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC)— plays a key role in implementing a top-down control of attention. However, the precise neural circuit mechanisms mediating attention remain largely unknown.

Methodologically-Integrated Approaches Linking Cell Types to Neural Circuits and Function

Project Summary Understanding the circuit mechanisms that give rise to perception and behavior requires linking neuronal activity to connectivity. This can be accomplished at multiple scales and ideally can be related to further studies using activity manipulations to demonstrate causality. Recent work in the mouse visual system has revealed the contributions of specific cell types to the generation of visual receptive field properties as well as state-dependent changes in the representation of visual information.

Readout and control of spatiotemporal neuronal codes for behavior

Project Summary To survive, organisms must both accurately represent stimuli in the outside world, and use that representation to generate beneficial behavioral actions. Historically, these two processes – the mapping from stimuli to neural responses, and the mapping from neural activity to behavior – have largely been treated separately. Of the two, the former has received the most attention. Often referred to as the “neural coding problem,” its goal is to determine which features of neural activity carry information about external stimuli.

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