How we move our bodies affects how we perceive sound. For instance, head movements help us to better localize the source of a sound and to compensate for asymmetric hearing loss. However, many auditory experiments are designed to restrict head and body movements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHow we move our bodies affects how we perceive sound. For instance, we can explore an environment to seek out the source of a sound and we can use head movements to compensate for hearing loss. How we do this is not well understood because many auditory experiments are designed to limit head and body movements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpinal cord injury (SCI) can induce dysfunction in a multitude of neural circuits including those that lead to impaired sleep, respiratory dysfunction, and neuropathic pain. We used a lower thoracic rodent contusion SCI model of neuropathic pain that has been shown to associate with increased spontaneous activity in primary afferents and hindlimb mechanosensory stimulus hypersensitivity. Here we paired capture of these variables with chronic capture of three state sleep and respiration to more broadly understand SCI-induced physiological dysfunction and to assess possible interrelations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurosci Methods
October 2020
Study Objective: Validate a novel method for sleep-wake staging in mice using noninvasive electric field (EF) sensors.
Methods: Mice were implanted with electroencephalogram (EEG) and electromyogram (EMG) electrodes and housed individually. Noninvasive EF sensors were attached to the exterior of each chamber to record respiration and other movement simultaneously with EEG, EMG, and video.
In humans, exercises involving slowed respiratory rate (SRR) counter autonomic sympathetic bias and reduce responses to stressors, including in individuals with various degrees of autonomic dysfunction. In the rat, we examined whether operant conditioning could lead to reductions in respiratory rate (RR) and performed preliminary studies to assess whether conditioned SRR was sufficient to decrease physiological and behavioral responsiveness to stressors. RR was continuously monitored during 20 2-h sessions using whole body plethysmography.
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