The volumetric measure of the main subdivisions of the telencephalon has been carried on 24 species of Lizards and 2 species of Snakes. The studied structures are termed as follows: main and accessory olfactory bulbs, medial cortex (M 1 and M 2), dorsal cortex (D 1, D 2 and D 3), lateral cortex (L), Septum, Tuberculum olfactorium, dorsal and ventral striatum, amygdala and nucleus sphaericus. The analysis of the datas makes use of the SNEL L's formula which relates the volume of the various telencephalic subdivisions (V) to the somatic weight (S): V = k x S alpha. Each alpha value is compared to the value of the coefficient of allometry (A) of the whole brain. The evolutive (phylogenetic) growth of a structure is said fast (or slow) when its corresponding alpha value is higher (or lower) than the encephalic A value. At the cortical level such analysis shows the progressive nature of the dorsal cortex. A partition of the sample into Lacertomorpha (14 species) and Dracomorpha (10 species) (in agreement with the NORTHCUTT'S definition of his Type I and Type II Lizards) corroborates this cortical detail, more distinctly with the second group as well (especially for the D 2 portion). Moreover the high number of progressive structures among the Dracomorpha leads to consider this group as phylogenetically the most advanced in the Order of Lizards. The somatic indices are calculated according the allometric characteristics of the Reference Lizards. The judicious choice of some species allows to show how the development of a biological function may be expressed by the values of the indices of the related structures. For examples: dorsal cortex, dorsal striatum and mode of locomotion; olfactory bulbs, lateral cortex, part M 1 of the medial cortex and olfactory system; D 3 subdivision of the dorsal cortex and visual performances. The duality between Lacertomorpha and Dracomorpha is therefore corroborated by significant differences found for the various indices of a great number of telencephalic subdivisions. It leads moreover to find, grosso modo, two functional types of Lizards: moving-on-the-ground and wellsmelling (mainly Lacertomorpha) on the one hand, arboreal and with a fine vision (mainly Dracomorpha) on the other hand. The isoponderal percentages take an useful illustration of these results; it allows to establish the telencephalic pattern of a standard Lizard in which the pallium keeps the larger part (42%); in the pallium itself, the M 1 subdivision of the medial cortex has the most important percentage, a little more than the D 2 part of the dorsal cortex. A comparative study carried on 2 Snakes gives for Boa constrictor the lowest values of the indices, for almost all the structures. In return Natrix natrix stays, for a great number of structures, close to the level of the legless Lizards; this last result confirms distinctly the two levels of telencephalization already found in Snakes (PLATEL, 1976 a).
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J Neuroimmunol
January 2025
Department of Psychology, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85257, USA; Interdisciplinary Graduate Program in Neuroscience, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85257, USA. Electronic address:
Methamphetamine (METH) use is associated with peripheral and brain inflammation that can contribute to METH-associated toxicity and heightened cue reactivity. However, the persistence of these phenomena, especially with regards to changes in brain proinflammatory cytokine levels, is not yet clear. In this study, we determined the effects of repeated binge-like METH self-administration (96-h/week for 3 weeks) followed by cued drug seeking for up to 60 days into abstinence in male and female rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Sci
January 2025
Faculty of Medicine and Surgery, Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, 20132 Milan, Italy.
Background/objectives: A neurobiological framework of bi- or multilingual neurocognitive development must consider the following: (i) longitudinal behavioral and neural measures; (ii) brain developmental constraints across structure and function; and (iii) the development of global multilingual competence in a homogeneous social environment. In this study, we investigated whether multilingual competence yields early changes in executive attention control mechanisms and their underlying neural structures in the frontal-striatal system, such as the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex/pre-supplemental area and the left caudate.
Methods: We employed longitudinal neuroimaging and functional connectivity methods in a small group of multilingual children over two years.
Neuropsychologia
January 2025
Neuroscience Area, SISSA, Trieste, Italy; Dipartimento di Medicina dei Sistemi, Università di Roma-Tor Vergata, Roma, Italy.
Although gesture observation tasks are believed to invariably activate the action-observation network (AON), we investigated whether the activation of different cognitive mechanisms when processing identical stimuli with different explicit instructions modulates AON activations. Accordingly, 24 healthy right-handed individuals observed gestures and they processed both the actor's moved hand (hand laterality judgment task, HT) and the meaning of the actor's gesture (meaning task, MT). The main brain-level result was that the HT (vs MT) differentially activated the left and right precuneus, the left inferior parietal lobe, the left and right superior parietal lobe, the middle frontal gyri bilaterally and the left precentral gyrus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Brain Res
January 2025
Dept. of Neurosurgery, Upstate Medical University, 750 E. Adams St, Syracuse, NY, 13210, USA.
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) has been used for many years to study the pathophysiology of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Based on single- or dual-pulse TMS and EMG and/or single motor unit (MU) recordings, many groups have described a loss of central inhibition as an early marker of ALS dysfunction, reflecting a state of cortical 'hyperexcitability'. This conclusion is not without its detractors, however, leading us to reexamine this issue using 4-pulse TMS, shown previously to be more effective for testing central motor pathway functional integrity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
January 2025
Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine, Nanyang Technological University, 11 Mandalay Road, Singapore 308232, Singapore.
Reward prediction errors (RPEs) quantify the difference between expected and actual rewards, serving to refine future actions. Although reinforcement learning (RL) provides ample theoretical evidence suggesting that the long-term accumulation of these error signals improves learning efficiency, it remains unclear whether the brain uses similar mechanisms. To explore this, we constructed RL-based theoretical models and used multiregional two-photon calcium imaging in the mouse dorsal cortex.
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