Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
July 2024
The aberrant salience hypothesis is a well-known framework that explains symptoms of schizophrenia. However, no studies have directly examined the relationship between this hypothesis and impaired discrimination learning between neutral (CS-) and aversive (CS+) sound stimuli in a rat model of schizophrenia. The present study aimed to examine the relationship between aberrant salience and the discrimination learning deficits in a rat model of schizophrenia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
July 2024
In recent years, much attention has been paid to the information processing of the brain for interoception. One such neural component is heartbeat-evoked potentials (HEPs), which have been reported to reflect cognition and emotion. To elucidate the neural mechanism of HEPs using invasive recording techniques in animal models, this study sought to identify candidate HEPs in rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Both tinnitus and hyperacusis, likely triggered by hearing loss, can be attributed to maladaptive plasticity in auditory perception. However, owing to their co-occurrence, disentangling their neural mechanisms proves difficult. We hypothesized that the neural correlates of tinnitus are associated with neural activities triggered by low-intensity tones, while hyperacusis is linked to responses to moderate- and high-intensity tones.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
July 2023
Interpersonal synchronization of movement induced by music is believed to facilitate social bonding between human beings, but it is unknown whether it also works in animals. We allowed rats to interact and develop social bonding with a specific subject for four weeks under one of the three acoustic conditions: playback of K.448 at its original tempo, playback at its double-tempo, and silence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBeat perception and synchronization within 120 to 140 beats/min (BPM) are common in humans and frequently used in music composition. Why beat synchronization is uncommon in some species and the mechanism determining the optimal tempo are unclear. Here, we examined physical movements and neural activities in rats to determine their beat sensitivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To elaborate the recent theory of prediction models of the brain in light of actual neural activities, it is important to investigate the cross-modal interactions in the context of prediction construction. To this end, in this study, we assessed whether cross-modal disturbances would result in the attenuation of mismatch negativity in anesthetized animal models.
Methods: A surface electrode array recorded neural activities from the visual and auditory cortices of rats under isoflurane anesthesia, during an auditory oddball paradigm over the course of three audiovisual sequences.
When the brain tries to acquire an elaborate model of the world, multisensory integration should contribute to building predictions based on the various pieces of information, and deviance detection should repeatedly update these predictions by detecting "errors" from the actual sensory inputs. Accumulating evidence such as a hierarchical organization of the deviance-detection system indicates that the deviance-detection system can be interpreted in the predictive coding framework. Herein, we targeted mismatch negativity (MMN) as a type of prediction-error signal and investigated the relationship between multisensory integration and MMN.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interaction between the thalamus and sensory cortex plays critical roles in sensory processing. Previous studies have revealed pathway-specific synaptic properties of thalamo-cortical connections. However, few studies to date have investigated how each pathway routes moment-to-moment information.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuromodulation achieved by vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) induces various neuropsychiatric effects whose underlying mechanisms of action remain poorly understood. Innervation of neuromodulators and a microcircuit structure in the cerebral cortex informed the hypothesis that VNS exerts layer-specific modulation in the sensory cortex and alters the balance between feedforward and feedback pathways. To test this hypothesis, we characterized laminar profiles of auditory-evoked potentials (AEPs) in the primary auditory cortex (A1) of anesthetized rats with an array of microelectrodes and investigated the effects of VNS on AEPs and stimulus specific adaptation (SSA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMismatch negativity (MMN) has long been considered to be one of the deviance-detecting neural characteristics. Animal models exhibit similar neural activities, called MMN-like responses; however, there has been considerable debate on whether MMN-like responses are homologous to MMN in humans. Herein, we reviewed several studies that compared the electrophysiological, pharmacological, and functional properties of MMN-like responses and adaptation-exhibiting middle-latency responses (MLRs) in animals with those in humans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFunctional maps play crucial roles in the neural representations of the sensory cortices, although such representations occasionally extend beyond these maps. For example, the auditory cortex exhibits distinct tonotopic activation at the onset of tone, which is followed by rapid decays in the majority of neuronal signals and ongoing activities in only a small number of neurons. Such ongoing activity should be maintained by the cortical states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the auditory system, distinct and reproducible transient activities responding to the onset of sound have long been the focus when characterizing the auditory cortex, i.e., tonotopic maps, subregions, and layer-specific representation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMismatch negativity (MMN) is an N-methyl-D-aspartic acid-mediated component and thus has been widely considered a major candidate biomarker of schizophrenia. However, at present, no direct evidence has linked the MMN response and aberrant salience processing reported in schizophrenia patients, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConditioned place preference (CPP) tests in rodents have been well established to measure preference induced by secondary reinforcing properties, but conventional assays are not sensitive enough to measure innate, weak preference, or the primary reinforcing property of a conditioned stimulus. We designed a novel CPP assay with better sensitivity and efficiency in quantifying and ranking preference of particular sounds among multiple alternatives. Each test tone was presented according to the location of free-moving rats in the arena, where assignment of location to each tone changed in every 20-s session.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
August 2016
Biased or too strong preference for a particular object is often problematic, resulting in addiction and phobia. In animal models, alternative forced-choice tasks have been routinely used, but such preference test is far from daily situations that addicts or phobic are facing. In the present study, we developed a behavioral assay to evaluate the preference of sounds in rodents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
August 2016
Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is a therapy on medically refractory epilepsy, and recently reported to improve cognitive function including learning and memory. The thalamo-cortical system may underlie such VNS-induced cognitive improvements. Thus, the present study targeted the auditory cortex and thalamus in rats, and investigated whether and how VNS modulates stimulus-specific adaptation (SSA) of the neural activity in these nuclei.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neural Circuits
October 2017
Humans can rapidly detect regular patterns (i.e., within few cycles) without any special attention to the acoustic environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCortical information processing of the onset, offset, and continuous plateau of an acoustic stimulus should play an important role in acoustic object perception. To date, transient activities responding to the onset and offset of a sound have been well investigated and cortical subfields and topographic representation in these subfields, such as place code of sound frequency, have been well characterized. However, whether these cortical subfields with tonotopic representation are inherited in the sustained activities that follow transient activities and persist during the presentation of a long-lasting stimulus remains unknown, because sustained activities do not exhibit distinct, reproducible, and time-locked responses in their amplitude to be characterized by grand averaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe rat has long been considered an important model system for studying neural mechanisms of auditory perception and learning, and particularly mechanisms involving auditory thalamo-cortical processing. However, the functional topography of the auditory thalamus, or medial geniculate body (MGB) has not yet been fully characterized in the rat, and the anatomically-defined features of field-specific, layer-specific and tonotopic thalamo-cortical projections have never been confirmed electrophysiologically. In the present study, we have established a novel technique for recording simultaneously from a surface microelectrode array on the auditory cortex, and a depth electrode array across auditory cortical layers and within the MGB, and characterized the rat MGB and thalamo-cortical projections under isoflurane anesthesia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVery slow fluctuations of spontaneous activities significantly influence not only behavioral performance in a conscious state, but also neural activities in an unconscious state. Covariation of pupil and cortical activities may lend important insights into the state-dependent modulation of stimulus encoding, yet this phenomenon has received little attention, especially with regard to non-visual cortices. In the present study, we investigated co-fluctuation of pupil size and neural activity in the auditory cortex of rats under isoflurane anesthesia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMismatch Negativity (MMN) is an N-methyl-d-aspartic acid (NMDA)-mediated, negative deflection in human auditory evoked potentials in response to a cognitively discriminable change. MMN-like responses have been extensively investigated in animal models, but the existence of MMN equivalent is still controversial. In this study, we aimed to investigate how closely the putative MMN (MMNp) in rats exhibited the comparable properties of human MMN.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
August 2015
In the auditory cortex, onset activities have been extensively investigated as a cortical representation of sound information such as sound frequency. Yet, less attention has been paid to date to steady-state activities following the onset activities. In this study, we used machine learning to investigate whether steady-state activities in the presence of continuous sounds represent the sound frequency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
August 2015
Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is a palliative treatment for intractable epilepsy. Therapeutic mechanisms of VNS have not been elucidated. In this study, we measured the local field potential (LFP) with high-spatial resolution using a microelectrode array in adult rats, and analyzed VNS-evoked phase modulation at a local network level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFONO-3708, a thromboxane A2 (TXA2) antagonist, was administered at a dose of 2 micrograms/kg/min by a double blind method as compared with inactive placebo during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) procedure to study the changes of thromboxane B2 (TXB2) levels in plasma and urine and N-acetyl-glucosaminidase (NAG) level in urine. TXB2 levels in plasma and urine increased significantly (P less than 0.01) during CPB in the patients given ONO-3708 (ONO-3708 group) and in those given placebo (placebo group).
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