294 results match your criteria: "Centre of Excellence for Integrative Brain Function[Affiliation]"
Neuroimage Clin
December 2019
Danish Research Centre for Magnetic Resonance, Centre for Functional and Diagnostic Imaging and Research, Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Hvidovre, Denmark; Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark; Department of Neurology, Copenhagen University Hospital Bispebjerg, Copenhagen, Denmark.
One of the most common copy number variants, the 22q11.2 microdeletion, confers an increased risk for schizophrenia. Since schizophrenia has been associated with an aberrant neural response to repeated stimuli through both reduced adaptation and prediction, we here hypothesized that this may also be the case in nonpsychotic individuals with a 22q11.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
February 2019
Laboratory for Marmoset Neural Architecture, RIKEN Center for Brain Science, Wako, Japan.
Understanding the connectivity architecture of entire vertebrate brains is a fundamental but difficult task. Here we present an integrated neuro-histological pipeline as well as a grid-based tracer injection strategy for systematic mesoscale connectivity mapping in the common marmoset (). Individual brains are sectioned into ~1700 20 µm sections using the tape transfer technique, permitting high quality 3D reconstruction of a series of histochemical stains (Nissl, myelin) interleaved with tracer labeled sections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurophysiol
March 2019
Eccles Institute of Neuroscience, John Curtin School of Medical Research, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory , Australia.
Since sensory systems operate with a finite quantity of processing resources, an animal would benefit from prioritizing processing of sensory stimuli within a time window that is expected to provide key information. This behavioral manifestation of such prioritization is known as attention. Here, we investigate attention with temporal cueing and its neuronal correlates in the rat primary vibrissal somatosensory (vS1) cortex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neural Circuits
June 2019
Department of Physiology, Biomedicine Discovery Institute, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia.
The goal of sensory neuroscience is to understand how the brain creates its myriad of representations of the world, and uses these representations to produce perception and behavior. Circuits of neurons in spatially segregated regions of brain tissue have distinct functional specializations, and these regions are connected to form a functional processing hierarchy. Advances in technology for recording neuronal activity from multiple sites in multiple cortical areas mean that we are now able to collect data that reflects how information is transformed within and between connected members of this hierarchy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFeNeuro
March 2019
Neuroscience Program, Biomedicine Discovery Institute and Department of Physiology, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria 3800, Australia.
The study of neuronal responses to random-dot motion patterns has provided some of the most valuable insights into how the activity of neurons is related to perception. In the opposite directions of motion paradigm, the motion signal strength is decreased by manipulating the coherence of random dot patterns to examine how well the activity of single neurons represents the direction of motion. To extend this paradigm to populations of neurons, studies have used modelling based on data from pairs of neurons, but several important questions require further investigation with larger neuronal datasets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vis
January 2019
Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
Neural processing of sensory input in the brain takes time, and for that reason our awareness of visual events lags behind their actual occurrence. One way the brain might compensate to minimize the impact of the resulting delays is through extrapolation. Extrapolation mechanisms have been argued to underlie perceptual illusions in which moving and static stimuli are mislocalised relative to one another (such as the flash-lag and related effects).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMov Disord
March 2019
Monash Biomedical Imaging, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Background: Friedreich ataxia is a recessively inherited, progressive neurological disease characterized by impaired mitochondrial iron metabolism. The dentate nuclei of the cerebellum are characteristic sites of neurodegeneration in the disease, but little is known of the longitudinal progression of abnormalities in these structures.
Methods: Using in vivo magnetic resonance imaging, including quantitative susceptibility mapping, we investigated changes in iron concentration and volume in the dentate nuclei in individuals with Friedreich ataxia (n = 20) and healthy controls (n = 18) over a 2-year period.
Neuroimage
April 2019
Monash Biomedical Imaging, Monash University, 770 Blackburn Rd, Melbourne, 3800, Australia; Monash Institute for Cognitive and Clinical Neurosciences, Monash University, Wellington Rd, Melbourne, 3800, Australia; Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Integrative Brain Function, 770 Blackburn Rd, Melbourne, 3800, Australia. Electronic address:
Studies of task-evoked brain activity are the cornerstone of cognitive neuroscience, and unravel the spatial and temporal brain dynamics of cognition in health and disease. Blood oxygenation level dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-fMRI) is one of the most common methods of studying brain function in humans. BOLD-fMRI indirectly infers neuronal activity from regional changes in blood oxygenation and is not a quantitative metric of brain function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroreport
February 2019
National Vision Research Institute, Australian College of Optometry, Carlton.
In primate visual cortex (V1), about half the neurons are sensitive to the spatial phases of grating stimuli and generate highly modulated responses to drifting gratings (simple cells). The remaining cells show far less phase sensitivity and relatively unmodulated responses to moving gratings (complex cells). In the second visual area (V2) and the motion processing area MT (or V5), the majority of cells have unmodulated responses to drifting gratings - they are phase invariant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHum Brain Mapp
September 2021
Monash Biomedical Imaging, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Head motion is a major source of image artefacts in neuroimaging studies and can lead to degradation of the quantitative accuracy of reconstructed PET images. Simultaneous magnetic resonance-positron emission tomography (MR-PET) makes it possible to estimate head motion information from high-resolution MR images and then correct motion artefacts in PET images. In this article, we introduce a fully automated PET motion correction method, MR-guided MAF, based on the co-registration of multicontrast MR images.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Brain Res
April 2019
Cognitive Neuroscience Research Center, Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, Iran; ARC Centre of Excellence for Integrative Brain function, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, 3800, Australia.
Current models suggest that neuropeptide oxytocin modulates the salience of emotional/social stimuli and consequently influences perceptual, attentional and learning processes that underlie social behaviour. Therefore, oxytocin has been considered as a potential treatment in managing social and communication deficits in neuropsychological disorders. Recent studies indicate that effects of oxytocin on social and cognitive functions greatly vary and even lead to opposite outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
December 2018
Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Australia.
Sleep Med Rev
February 2019
Sleep Research Group, Charles Perkins Centre, University of Sydney, Australia; Northern Clinical School, Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, Australia; Department of Respiratory and Sleep Medicine, Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
Jetlag is a combination of travel fatigue and circadian misalignment resulting from air travel across time zones. Routinely recommended interventions based on circadian science include timely exposure to light and darkness (scheduled sleep), but the real-world effectiveness of these and other non-circadian strategies is unknown. We systematically reviewed the evidence for non-pharmacological interventions for jetlag.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Comput Biol
December 2018
School of Physics, The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia.
There is growing evidence that population-level brain activity is often organized into propagating waves that are structured in both space and time. Such spatiotemporal patterns have been linked to brain function and observed across multiple recording methodologies and scales. The ability to detect and analyze these patterns is thus essential for understanding the working mechanisms of neural circuits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
April 2019
Neuroscience Program, Biomedicine Discovery Institute, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia.
Visual masking occurs when the perception of a brief target stimulus is affected by a preceding or succeeding mask. The uncoupling of the target and its perception allows an opportunity to investigate the neuronal mechanisms involved in sensory representation and visual perception. To determine whether rats are a suitable model for subsequent studies of the neuronal basis of visual masking, we first demonstrated that decoding of neuronal responses recorded in the primary visual cortex (V1) of anaesthetized rats predicted that orientation discrimination performance should decline when masking stimuli are presented immediately before or after oriented target stimuli.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Comput Biol
November 2018
School of Physics, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Diverse plasticity mechanisms are orchestrated to shape the spatiotemporal dynamics underlying brain functions. However, why these plasticity rules emerge and how their dynamics interact with neural activity to give rise to complex neural circuit dynamics remains largely unknown. Here we show that both Hebbian and homeostatic plasticity rules emerge from a functional perspective of neuronal dynamics whereby each neuron learns to encode its own activity in the population activity, so that the activity of the presynaptic neuron can be decoded from the activity of its postsynaptic neurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neural Circuits
April 2019
Neuroscience Program, Biomedicine Discovery Institute and Department of Physiology, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia.
The ability of animals to detect motion is critical for survival, and errors or even delays in motion perception may prove costly. In the natural world, moving objects in the visual field often produce concurrent sounds. Thus, it can highly advantageous to detect motion elicited from sensory signals of either modality, and to integrate them to produce more reliable motion perception.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
November 2018
Save Sight Institute, Discipline of Clinical Ophthalmology, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2000, Australia.
The AII amacrine cell is known as a key interneuron in the scotopic (night-vision) pathway in the retina. Under scotopic conditions, rod signals are transmitted via rod bipolar cells to AII amacrine cells, which split the rod signal into the OFF (via glycinergic synapses) and the ON pathway (via gap junctions). But the AII amacrine cell also has a "day job": at high light levels when cones are active, AII connections with ON cone bipolar cells provide crossover inhibition to extend the response range of OFF cone bipolar cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
November 2018
Discipline of Physiology, School of Medical Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Multisensory integration is a process by which signals from different sensory modalities are combined to facilitate detection and localization of external events. One substrate for multisensory integration is the midbrain superior colliculus (SC) which plays an important role in orienting behavior. In rodent SC, visual and somatosensory (whisker) representations are in approximate registration, but whether and how these signals interact is unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med Imaging
November 2018
Monash Biomedical Imaging, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Background: Attenuation correction is one of the most crucial correction factors for accurate PET data quantitation in hybrid PET/MR scanners, and computing accurate attenuation coefficient maps from MR brain acquisitions is challenging. Here, we develop a method for accurate bone and air segmentation using MR ultrashort echo time (UTE) images.
Methods: MR UTE images from simultaneous MR and PET imaging of five healthy volunteers was used to generate a whole head, bone and air template image for inclusion into an improved MR derived attenuation correction map, and applied to PET image data for quantitative analysis.
Cereb Cortex
August 2019
Neuroscience Program, Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute, 19 Innovation Walk, Clayton, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Using stereological analysis of NeuN-stained sections, we investigated neuronal density and number of neurons per column throughout the marmoset cortex. Estimates of mean neuronal density encompassed a greater than 3-fold range, from >150 000 neurons/mm3 in the primary visual cortex to ~50 000 neurons/mm3 in the piriform complex. There was a trend for density to decrease from posterior to anterior cortex, but also local gradients, which resulted in a complex pattern; for example, in frontal, auditory, and somatosensory cortex neuronal density tended to increase towards anterior areas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neurosci
September 2018
Computational Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Predictive coding postulates that we make (top-down) predictions about the world and that we continuously compare incoming (bottom-up) sensory information with these predictions, in order to update our models and perception so as to better reflect reality. That is, our so-called "Bayesian brains" continuously create and update generative models of the world, inferring (hidden) causes from (sensory) consequences. Neuroimaging datasets enable the detailed investigation of such modeling and updating processes, and these datasets can themselves be analyzed with Bayesian approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe koniocellular (K) layers of the primate dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus house a variety of visual receptive field types, not all of which have been fully characterized. Here we made single-cell recordings targeted to the K layers of diurnal New World monkeys (marmosets). A subset of recorded cells was excited by both increments and decrements of light intensity (on/off-cells).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
October 2018
QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Metro North Mental Health Service, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Electronic address:
A receptor map of serotonin distribution is integrated into a model of the dynamic activity of the brain under the effects of LSD. The approach opens new avenues to understand experimental manipulations of healthy brain activity and offers a novel drug-discovery platform.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Struct Funct
January 2019
Monash University Node, Australian Research Council, Centre of Excellence for Integrative Brain Function, Clayton, VIC, 3800, Australia.