Publications by authors named "J L Touboul"

Neurons in the primary visual cortex (V1) are classically thought to encode spatial features of visual stimuli through simple population codes: each neuron exhibits a preferred orientation and preferred spatial frequency that are invariant to other aspects of the visual stimulus. Here, we show that this simple rule does not apply to the representation of major features of stimulus motion, including stimulus direction and temporal frequency (TF). We collected an extensive dataset of cat V1 responses to stimuli covarying in orientation, direction, spatial frequency, and TF to assess the extent of motion selectivity.

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Article Synopsis
  • Parkinson's Disease (PD) affects neural activity primarily in the basal ganglia and cerebral cortex, and Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic nucleus is a key treatment when patients have motor complications from levodopa.
  • Research shows that STN-DBS helps improve the brain's ability to transmit information, particularly in predicting limb movements, even if visible EEG patterns don't differ significantly with or without therapy.
  • The study examines how different synaptic parameters and excitability levels in cortical networks contribute to enhanced information processing under STN-DBS, suggesting ways to optimize the treatment based on cortical activity measurement.
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Spatio-temporal activity patterns have been observed in a variety of brain areas in spontaneous activity, prior to or during action, or in response to stimuli. Biological mechanisms endowing neurons with the ability to distinguish between different sequences remain largely unknown. Learning sequences of spikes raises multiple challenges, such as maintaining in memory spike history and discriminating partially overlapping sequences.

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We analyze a spatially extended version of a well-known model of forest-savanna dynamics, which presents as a system of nonlinear partial integro-differential equations, and study necessary conditions for pattern-forming bifurcations. Homogeneous solutions dominate the dynamics of the standard forest-savanna model, regardless of the length scales of the various spatial processes considered. However, several different pattern-forming scenarios are possible upon including spatial resource limitation, such as competition for water, soil nutrients, or herbivory effects.

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A variety of nonlinear models of biological systems generate complex chaotic behaviors that contrast with biological homeostasis, the observation that many biological systems prove remarkably robust in the face of changing external or internal conditions. Motivated by the subtle dynamics of cell activity in a crustacean central pattern generator (CPG), this paper proposes a refinement of the notion of chaos that reconciles homeostasis and chaos in systems with multiple timescales. We show that systems displaying relaxation cycles while going through chaotic attractors generate chaotic dynamics that are regular at macroscopic timescales and are, thus, consistent with physiological function.

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