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The fast and the slow: Neuronal oscillators, feedback, and control in the vibrissa system
Lecture
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
The fast and the slow: Neuronal oscillators, feedback, and control in the vibrissa system
Prof. David Kleinfeld
Departments of Physics and Neurobiology
University of California at San Diego
Prof. Kleinfeld will present recent work on the control of rhythmic whisking in rodents.
These studies bear on the apparent role of breathing as a master clock that drives
orofacial actions, establishes a hierarchy of control of orofacial behaviors, and may
temporally bind different orofacial inputs.
Adaptive Immunity at the Choroid Plexus Shapes Brain Function Throughout Life
Lecture
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Hour: 11:00
Location:
Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Brain Research
Adaptive Immunity at the Choroid Plexus Shapes Brain Function Throughout Life
Aleksandra Deczkowska
MSc Student, Prof. Michal Schwartz Group
Department of Neurobiology
Cortical Inhibition, Excitation and Cognitive Enhancement
Lecture
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Hour: 13:00
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
Cortical Inhibition, Excitation and Cognitive Enhancement
Dr. Roi Cohen Kadosh
Department of Experimental Psychology
University of Oxford, UK
Academic achievements such as math and reading are key predictors for future success at school, university, and later in life. Additionally, failure in these critical capacities negatively impacts the welfare of society as a whole. Current understanding of the link between high-level cognition, such as math and reading, and the brain has been primarily restricted to understanding the relationship between brain structure or function. At the same time a substantial body of animal and clinical research showing that cortical inhibition and excitation at the molecular or cellular levels play a critical role in efficient information transfer in the brain. It has further been suggested that cortical inhibition and excitation affects cognition in humans. I will present several studies that show how cortical inhibition and excitation are linked to high-level cognitive abilities in the child and adult human brain, and specifically how we can exogenously modulate cortical inhibition and excitation to optimise brain functions and improve cognition in typical and atypical populations. Such a multidisciplinary approach has the potential to bridge the separated strands of current research in psychology and education, system and molecular neuroscience, as well as animal models.
TRP channels: what are they and why are they important for understanding neuronal functions
Lecture
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
TRP channels: what are they and why are they important for understanding neuronal functions
Prof. Baruch Minke
Depts of Medical Neurobiology, the Institute of Medical Research Israel-Canada (IMRIC), the Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences (ELSC) Faculty of Medicine of the Hebrew University, Jerusalem
Transient receptor potential (TRP) channels constitute a large superfamily of polymodal channel proteins with diverse roles in many transduction and sensory pathways. These channels participate in most sensory modalities (e.g. vision, taste, temperature, pain, pheromone detection) and they either open directly in response to ligands or physical stimuli (e.g. temperature, osmotic pressure, or noxious substances) or, indirectly, downstream of a signal transduction cascade. TRP channels form an evolutionary conserved novel cation channel family consisting of seven subfamilies, which include nearly 30 human members. The founding member of this family was found in Drosophila and was designated TRP by Minke. TRP channels are classified into seven related subfamilies designated TRPC (Canonical or classical), TRPM (Melastatin), TRPN (NompC), TRPV (Vanilloid receptor), TRPA (ANKTM1), TRPP (Polycystin) and TRPML (Mucolipin). Our studies in Drosophila shed new light on the properties of the TRP channels by showing that a constitutive ATP-dependent process is required to keep these channels closed in the dark, a requirement that would make them sensitive to metabolic stress. Since mammalian TRP channels are heavily expressed in the brain, neuronal damage due to ischemia may involves activation of TRP channels.
Dendritic Computation
Lecture
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Hour: 17:00
Location:
Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Brain Research
Dendritic Computation
Prof. Michael Hausser
The Wolfson Institute for Biomedical Research
University College London
The computational power of single neurons has long been predicted using modelling approaches, but actual experimental examples of how neurons, and in particular their dendrites, can solve computational problems are rare. I will describe experiments using 2-photon glutamate uncaging in vitro, combined with in vivo 2-photon imaging and patch-clamp recording that demonstrate how active dendrites contribute to shaping canonical cortical computations.
Giving the brain a voice by converting traditional EEG into maps of brain activity: implication ranging from sleeping birds to humans with ALS
Lecture
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Hour: 11:00
Location:
Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium
Giving the brain a voice by converting traditional EEG into maps of brain activity: implication ranging from sleeping birds to humans with ALS
Dr. Philip Low
Founder, Chairman, and CEO of NeuroVigil
See: http://www.neurovigil.com/leadership/
Predicting deliberate decisions and the onset of conscious intention
Lecture
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Hour: 13:15
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
Predicting deliberate decisions and the onset of conscious intention
Dr. Uri Maoz
Div. of Biology,
California Institute of Technology,
Pasadena, CA
Human behavior was shown to be predictable from neural activity before subjects reported having decided on the contents or onset of their actions. This was suggested to challenges the role of consciousness intentions in decision making, and through it have far reaching implications for the notions of free will and moral responsibility. However, these studies focused on non-ecological, arbitrary decisions – like raising the left or right hand for no reason or purpose and with no consequences – which are not typically held to be the hallmarks of freedom, not to mention assigning blame or praise. We wanted to understand to what degree this ability generalizes to deliberate actions, so we analyzed intracranial, human brain activity in a competitive environment – a matching-pennies game. We were increasingly better able to predict such actions with time before movement onset, retrospectively and even online and in real time. We further discovered specific neural differences between deliberate and arbitrary decision making using EEG. And we also found bias activity in monkey DLPFC and striatum that may help explain the early predictions in arbitrary decisions. I will sketch some features of a model of action selection that is congruent with the above findings.
The role of hunger-promoting neurons in higher brain functions
Lecture
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Camelia Botnar Building
The role of hunger-promoting neurons in higher brain functions
Dr. Marcelo O. Dietrich
Section of Comparative Medicine,
Yale University
Hunger involves complex cognitive functions that rely on the physiological need for energy. The profound impact that hunger has on complex behaviors indicates that neuronal circuitries that promote hunger should control higher brain functions. I will present evidence that activation of hunger-promoting AgRP neurons in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus readily triggers changes in higher brain regions and behaviors, allocating a time-budget to consummatory responses (e.g., eating). In the absence of food, activation of these neurons leads to vast induction of repetitive behaviors, which can be prevented by using serotonin and dopamine reuptake inhibitors. Thus, we unmasked a hypothalamic neuronal population that regulates both homeostatic functions and complex behaviors.
More readings:
Hypothalamic control of energy balance: insights into the role of synaptic plasticity. Marcelo O Dietrich, Tamas L Horvath. Trends in Neurosciences ; 2013. DOI:10.1016/j.tins.2012.12.005
AgRP neurons regulate development of dopamine neuronal plasticity and nonfood-associated behaviors. Marcelo O Dietrich, Jeremy Bober, Jozélia G Ferreira, Luis A Tellez, Yann S Mineur, Diogo O Souza, Xiao-Bing Gao, Marina R Picciotto, Ivan Araújo, Zhong-Wu Liu, Tamas L Horvath. Nature Neuroscience 2012; 15(8):1108-10
AgRP neurons: the foes of reproduction in leptin-deficient obese subjects. Marcelo O Dietrich, Tamas L Horvath. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.2012; 109(8):2699-700
See also: http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Marcelo_Dietrich/publications/
Hippocampus longitudinal axis and memory: Location, location, location
Lecture
Monday, August 12, 2013
Hour: 13:00
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
Hippocampus longitudinal axis and memory: Location, location, location
Prof. Etan Markus
University of Connecticut, Storrs
Mechanisms of vocal learning in songbirds and humans
Lecture
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
Mechanisms of vocal learning in songbirds and humans
Dr. Dina Lipkind
Department of Psychology
Hunter College, City University of New York
Abstract: Songbirds are a great model for studying how the brain solves the challenges of vocal imitation, because, like human infants, young songbirds learn to produce complex vocal sequences that are exact copies of those of adult conspecifics. To study how this feat is accomplished, we experimentally induce birds to perform song learning tasks, by exposing them sequentially to two different songs and recording their entire vocal output during the process. Applying this methodology to vocal combinatorial learning, we trained juvenile zebra finches to swap syllable order in their song, or insert a new syllable into a string. Birds solved these permutation tasks gradually, by a series of steps in which novel pair-wise transitions between syllables were acquired one by one. This effect was confirmed in the development of vocal babbling in human infants, suggesting the existence of a common generative process of acquiring vocal combinatorial ability that is conserved across species.
We next used the same methodology to study the conversion of an auditory memory of a target song into a motor program performing the same song, a long-standing hypothesis in vocal learning. To do this, we induced birds to change both global song structure (syllable order) and its local structure (pitch of individual syllables). We found that birds matched the pitch of syllables to the most acoustically similar target in the tutor song, regardless of global context, resulting in an intermediate-stage song in which the correct syllables were sung in the wrong order. These results refute a sensory-motor learning mechanism where a target song memory is recalled by temporal order, and suggest that instead, parts of the song memory are recalled in a motor driven way, according to their similarity to sung syllables.
Consequently, two distinct mechanisms are required to accomplish the learning of a vocal sequence: 1. Local matching of the acoustic structure of individual units in the sequence; and 2. Global matching of sequence order. Our results present the first experimental evidence of how an internal sensory template is used to guide the development of the motor program for song.
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The role of hunger-promoting neurons in higher brain functions
Lecture
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Camelia Botnar Building
The role of hunger-promoting neurons in higher brain functions
Dr. Marcelo O. Dietrich
Section of Comparative Medicine,
Yale University
Hunger involves complex cognitive functions that rely on the physiological need for energy. The profound impact that hunger has on complex behaviors indicates that neuronal circuitries that promote hunger should control higher brain functions. I will present evidence that activation of hunger-promoting AgRP neurons in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus readily triggers changes in higher brain regions and behaviors, allocating a time-budget to consummatory responses (e.g., eating). In the absence of food, activation of these neurons leads to vast induction of repetitive behaviors, which can be prevented by using serotonin and dopamine reuptake inhibitors. Thus, we unmasked a hypothalamic neuronal population that regulates both homeostatic functions and complex behaviors.
More readings:
Hypothalamic control of energy balance: insights into the role of synaptic plasticity. Marcelo O Dietrich, Tamas L Horvath. Trends in Neurosciences ; 2013. DOI:10.1016/j.tins.2012.12.005
AgRP neurons regulate development of dopamine neuronal plasticity and nonfood-associated behaviors. Marcelo O Dietrich, Jeremy Bober, Jozélia G Ferreira, Luis A Tellez, Yann S Mineur, Diogo O Souza, Xiao-Bing Gao, Marina R Picciotto, Ivan Araújo, Zhong-Wu Liu, Tamas L Horvath. Nature Neuroscience 2012; 15(8):1108-10
AgRP neurons: the foes of reproduction in leptin-deficient obese subjects. Marcelo O Dietrich, Tamas L Horvath. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.2012; 109(8):2699-700
See also: http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Marcelo_Dietrich/publications/
Hippocampus longitudinal axis and memory: Location, location, location
Lecture
Monday, August 12, 2013
Hour: 13:00
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
Hippocampus longitudinal axis and memory: Location, location, location
Prof. Etan Markus
University of Connecticut, Storrs
Mechanisms of vocal learning in songbirds and humans
Lecture
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
Mechanisms of vocal learning in songbirds and humans
Dr. Dina Lipkind
Department of Psychology
Hunter College, City University of New York
Abstract: Songbirds are a great model for studying how the brain solves the challenges of vocal imitation, because, like human infants, young songbirds learn to produce complex vocal sequences that are exact copies of those of adult conspecifics. To study how this feat is accomplished, we experimentally induce birds to perform song learning tasks, by exposing them sequentially to two different songs and recording their entire vocal output during the process. Applying this methodology to vocal combinatorial learning, we trained juvenile zebra finches to swap syllable order in their song, or insert a new syllable into a string. Birds solved these permutation tasks gradually, by a series of steps in which novel pair-wise transitions between syllables were acquired one by one. This effect was confirmed in the development of vocal babbling in human infants, suggesting the existence of a common generative process of acquiring vocal combinatorial ability that is conserved across species.
We next used the same methodology to study the conversion of an auditory memory of a target song into a motor program performing the same song, a long-standing hypothesis in vocal learning. To do this, we induced birds to change both global song structure (syllable order) and its local structure (pitch of individual syllables). We found that birds matched the pitch of syllables to the most acoustically similar target in the tutor song, regardless of global context, resulting in an intermediate-stage song in which the correct syllables were sung in the wrong order. These results refute a sensory-motor learning mechanism where a target song memory is recalled by temporal order, and suggest that instead, parts of the song memory are recalled in a motor driven way, according to their similarity to sung syllables.
Consequently, two distinct mechanisms are required to accomplish the learning of a vocal sequence: 1. Local matching of the acoustic structure of individual units in the sequence; and 2. Global matching of sequence order. Our results present the first experimental evidence of how an internal sensory template is used to guide the development of the motor program for song.
Law and Order in Visual Cortical Evolution
Lecture
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Hour: 11:30
Location:
Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Brain Research
Law and Order in Visual Cortical Evolution
Prof. Dr. Fred Wolf
Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Goettingen, Germany.
Over the past 65 million years, the evolution of mammals led - in several lineages - to a dramatic increase in brain size. During this process, some neocortical areas, including the primary sensory ones, expanded by many orders of magnitude. The primary visual cortex, for instance, measured about a square millimeter in late cretaceous stem eutherians but in homo sapiens comprises more than 2000 mm2. If we could rewind time and restart the evolution of large and large brained mammals, would the network architecture of neocortical circuits take the same shape or would the random tinkering process of biological evolution generate different or even fundamentally distinct designs?
In this talk, I will argue that, based on the consolidated mammalian phylogenies available now, this seemingly speculative question can be rigorously approached using a combination of quantitative brain imaging, computational, and dynamical systems techniques. Our studies on visual cortical circuit layout in a broad range of eutherian species indicate that neuronal plasticity and developmental network self-organization have restricted the evolution of neuronal circuitry underlying orientation columns to a few discrete design alternatives.
Our theoretical analyzes predict that different evolutionary lineages adopt virtually identical circuit designs when using only qualitatively similar mechanisms of developmental plasticity.
On Cinema and Memory, a conversation between Ari Folman (Waltz with Bashir) and Yadin Dudai
Lecture
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Hour: 16:00
Location:
Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium
On Cinema and Memory, a conversation between Ari Folman (Waltz with Bashir) and Yadin Dudai
Ari Folman (Waltz with Bashir) and Yadin Dudai
Evolutionary tradeoff and the geometry of phenotype space
Lecture
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
Evolutionary tradeoff and the geometry of phenotype space
Prof. Uri Alon
Molecular Cell Biology and Physics of Complex Systems, WIS
Applied Population Neuronal Interfaces:Some New Methods and Results
Lecture
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
Applied Population Neuronal Interfaces:Some New Methods and Results
Prof. Shy Shoham
Faculty of Biomedical Engineering, Technion, Haifa
The talk will present several recent steps in the development and application of tools for controlling and monitoring large neuronal populations and their potential application in medicine. I will first describe holographic stimulation approaches (photonic or acoustic) for simultaneous patterned control of populations of retinal ganglion cells with millisecond temporal precision and cellular resolution, and its early translation to in vivo conditions. Next, I will present recent results demonstrating highly structured encoding of speech features in neuronal populations recorded in human subjects, and the development of a simple and effective decoding strategy and structural inference for this data (joint work with Itzhak Fried and Ariel Tankus). The final part of the talk will describe the development of a rapid multiphoton temporal-focusing microscope allowing to monitor activity in >1000 neurons simultaneously in "optonet" artificial neural networks.
Exploring neuronal processing of complex tactile scenes in the somatosensory system of the rat
Lecture
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
Exploring neuronal processing of complex tactile scenes in the somatosensory system of the rat
Prof. Daniel Shulz
Director of Research CNRS
Sensory processing, Neuromodulation and Plasticity lab
Unit of Neuroscience, Information and Complexity Gif sur Yvette, France
(Weston Visiting Professor at WIS)
The tactile sensations mediated by the whisker-to-barrel cortex system allow rodents to efficiently detect and discriminate objects and surfaces. The temporal structure of whisker deflections and the temporal correlation between deflections occurring on several whiskers simultaneously vary for different tactile substrates. We hypothesize that tactile discrimination capabilities rely strongly on the ability of the system to encode different levels of inter-whisker correlations.
To test this hypothesis, we generated complex spatio-temporal patterns of whisker deflections during electrophysiological recordings in the barrel cortex, the ventro-posterior medial (VPM) nucleus of the thalamus and the trigeminal ganglion. A piezoelectric-based stimulator featuring 24 independent and fully adjustable whisker actuators was built for this purpose (Jacob et al., 2010).
Using this stimulator in anesthetized rats, we have previously shown that cortical neurons exhibit direction selectivity to the apparent motion of a multivibrissal stimulus (i.e. an emerging property of the global stimulus), uncorrelated to the local direction of individual whiskers (Jacob et al. 2008). Since a certain level of multiwhisker integration has been reported in the VPM, the nucleus relaying tactile information to the barrel cortex, we showed that emergent properties of multiwhisker stimulations are already coded by VPM neurons although to a lesser degree than in cortex (Ego-Stengel et al., 2012).
Finally, we applied a reverse correlation approach to this problem by using Gaussian white noise stimulation on 24 whiskers and progressively varying the level of temporal correlation among them. Based on spike-triggered analysis for various levels of inter-whisker correlation, our recent findings (Estebanez et al., 2012) show that neuronal cortical networks implement coexisting coding schemes to cope with the varying statistics of the tactile sensory world. We propose a simple and comprehensive framework that not only accounts for most of the previous reported phenomenology of multiwhisker interactions but also provides a physiological role for this functional selectivity in terms of local contrast and global motion detection.
“The Young and the Restless” Adult Neurogenesis in the Mouse Olfactory Bulb
Lecture
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
“The Young and the Restless” Adult Neurogenesis in the Mouse Olfactory Bulb
Prof. Adi Mizrahi
Dept of Neurobiology and the Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
The mammalian the olfactory bulb (OB) maintains a continuous inflow of new neurons to its circuitry throughout adulthood. The role of these newborn neurons in sensory processing or the bulbs’ function remains completely unknown. We use in vivo imaging and electrophysiology to study the structure and function of these neurons. I will present our studies of the development and plasticity of adult-born interneurons as well as that of their resident counterparts. Specifically we use two-photon imaging of single neurons to probe their morphology and two-photon targeted patch to study their physiology in high spatiotemporal resolution. I will discuss our data showing that newborn neurons mature to become integral elements of the sensory coding machinery during the very early stages of olfactory processing. Furthermore, we argue that our results challenge some basic dogmas in the field of adult neurogenesis.
A Metric Approach to Olfactory Space
Lecture
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
A Metric Approach to Olfactory Space
Prof. Noam Sobel
Department of Neurobiology, WIS
Olfaction researchers at all levels are ultimately trying to solve the same problem, namely a transform across three spaces: from the physicochemical space of odor molecules, through the brain space of neural activity, and on to the space of odor perception and its ensuing behavioral decisions. To solve these transforms, one has to be able to measure each one of these spaces independently. As each of these three spaces is apparently of very high dimensionality, we applied principal components analysis (PCA) to data in each of these three domains. We observed that the functional dimensionality of these spaces was significantly lower than their apparent dimensionality. Moreover, the key axis (PC1) was correlated across domains. In other words, the key axis of olfactory perception was correlated with the key axis of odorant structure, and both of these were correlated with the key axis of neural activity in the olfactory system across species. These correlations allowed us to construct a modest but significant predictive framework across domains. In other words, we could now look at the structure of a novel molecule, and predict modest but significant aspects of its perception and ensuing neural activity across species. Beyond this predictive framework, our approach has several implications regarding sensory phenomena within a metric space. For example, it implies a point of sensory convergence where all olfactory mixtures should smell the same. We call this point "olfactory white". Our metric approach also implies points (odors) that are at the upper and lower boundaries of this metric space, and should therefore be odorless. We call these points "infra smell" and "ultra smell". In this talk I will consider the implications of this approach, as well as its potential shortcomings, and their possible solutions.
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