Research Projects

Molecular MRI of Brain Metabolism Enabled by Long-Lived Spin States

Molecular MRI of Brain Metabolism enabled by Long-Lived Spin States Abstract: Brain function is regulated by molecular signaling and metabolism, however our ability to track metabolic transformations of individual metabolites deep in the brain pales compared to their central relevance to life. It is our goal to establish technology for tomographic mapping of metabolites and their metabolic pathways directly in the brain.

A Comparative Framework for Modeling the Low-Dimensional Geometry of Neural Population States

Project Summary Advances in neural recording technology now provide access to neural activity at high temporal resolutions, from many brain areas, and during complex and naturalistic behavior. Interpreting these types of high-dimensional and unconstrained neural recordings is still a major challenge in neuroscience. The aim of this project is to develop innovative methods for distilling high-dimensional neural activity patterns into simpler low-dimensional formats that can be effectively compared across time, conditions, or even across species.

Connecting neural circuit architecture and experience-driven probabilistic computations

Project Summary: Organisms' actions and decisions are guided by experience. Models of such behavior often appeal to the formalism of probabilistic inference, in which expectations about the world build up sequentially due to past observations. These models can account for typical response patterns of subjects performing cog- nitive tasks. However, a theory grounded in biophysical principles of neural circuit architecture and activity is lacking.

Human Neocortical Neurosolver

Abstract The field of neuroscience is experiencing unprecedented growth in the ability to record from and manipulate brain circuits in humans and in animal models. MEG/EEG are the leading methods to non-invasively record human neural dynamics with millisecond temporal resolution. However, it is still extremely difficult to interpret the underlying cellular and circuit level generators of these `macro-scale' signals without simultaneous invasive recordings.

Learning spatio-temporal statistics from the environment in recurrent networks

Project Summary Abstract Learning new tasks and exposure to new environments lead to changes in the dynamics of brain circuits, as observed in various recent experiments. The ability to embed the statistics of the environment within brain circuits is essential for animals ability to thrive and survive in changing environments. However, the mechanisms by which circuits dynamics are implemented and learned are not well understood, and pose significant theoretical challenges. Recent work in both theoretical and experimental labs has highlighted the importance of circuit dynamics.

Diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease Using Dynamic High-Order Brain Networks

Diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease Using Dynamic High- Order Brain Networks Abstract Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia with no known disease-modifying treatment. Current clinical diagnosis and monitoring of the disease are primarily based on subjective neuropsychological and neurobehavioral assessments, which are generally susceptible to large variability.

BRAIN Initiative: Theories, Models and Methods for Analysis of Complex Data from the Brain

Abstract The twin study design in brain imaging offers a very effective way of determining heritability of the human brain. The difference in variability between monozygotic (MZ) and same-sex dizygotic (DZ) twins can be used in determining heritability. We propose to determine the extent of heritability of both structural and functional brain networks at the voxel-level using 200 pairs of twin (400 individuals) of fMRI/DTI and MRI.

EFFECTIVE CONNECTIVITY IN BRAIN NETWORKS: Discovering Latent Structure, Network Complexity and Recurrence.

Principal investigator/Program Director (Last, first, middle): Hanson, Stephen, José RFA-EB-15-006 Project Summary/Abstract Since the earliest days of neuroscience research, core methods have focused on matching specific functions to local brain structure and neural activity. The relationship between brain structure and function has been a key motivation for the development and application of novel methods and discovery. Despite the apparent success of this program in identifying brain areas associated with memory, attention, executive control, action- perception, language, etc..

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