Publications by authors named "B E Allman"

Article Synopsis
  • Sensory processing disruptions, a key feature of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), are commonly evaluated using the acoustic startle response and prepulse inhibition (PPI).
  • A study utilizing knock-out (KO) rats found that PPI deficits vary significantly based on factors like sex, prepulse intensity, and startle stimulus intensity.
  • The research revealed that under certain conditions, KO rats performed better than wild-types, suggesting that evaluating PPI requires careful consideration of testing conditions to address conflicting results in prior studies.
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It is well established that hearing loss can lead to widespread plasticity within the central auditory pathway, which is thought to contribute to the pathophysiology of audiological conditions such as tinnitus and hyperacusis. Emerging evidence suggests that hearing loss can also result in plasticity within brain regions involved in higher-level cognitive functioning like the prefrontal cortex; findings which may underlie the association between hearing loss and cognitive impairment documented in epidemiological studies. Using the 40-Hz auditory steady state response to assess sound-evoked gamma oscillations, we previously showed that noise-induced hearing loss results in impaired gamma phase coherence within the prefrontal but not the auditory cortex.

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Following adult-onset hearing impairment, crossmodal plasticity can occur within various sensory cortices, often characterized by increased neural responses to visual stimulation in not only the auditory cortex, but also in the visual and audiovisual cortices. In the present study, we used an established model of loud noise exposure in rats to examine, for the first time, whether the crossmodal plasticity in the audiovisual cortex that occurs following a relatively mild degree of hearing loss emerges solely from altered intracortical processing or if thalamocortical changes also contribute to the crossmodal effects. Using a combination of an established pharmacological 'cortical silencing' protocol and current source density analysis of the laminar activity recorded across the layers of the audiovisual cortex (i.

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Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental behavioral disorder characterized by social, communicative, and motor deficits. There is no single etiological cause for ASD, rather, there are various genetic and environmental factors that increase the risk for ASD. It is thought that some of these factors influence the same underlying neural mechanisms, and that an interplay of both genetic and environmental factors would better explain the pathogenesis of ASD.

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Background: Rats with a loss-of-function mutation in the contactin-associated protein-like 2 () gene have been validated as an animal model of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Similar to many autistic individuals, knock-out rats () are hyperreactive to sound as measured through the acoustic startle response. The brainstem region that mediates the acoustic startle response is the caudal pontine reticular nucleus (PnC), specifically giant neurons in the PnC.

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