All events, All years

The Development of Reading Pathways in School Age Children

Lecture
Date:
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Hour: 11:30
Location:
Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Brain Research
Dr. Michal Ben-Shachar
|
English Dept and the Gonda Brain Research Center Bar Ilan University

Learning to read involves exposure to large amounts of print in a focused period of time during childhood. How does this environmental transition affect cortical circuits for visual perception and shape recognition? I will present data from a developmental study of reading examining the relation between reading skill, cortical function and white matter properties in school age children. Functional properties in area MT+, and white matter properties in temporal callosal fibers, are both correlated with reading skill. I will discuss possible interpretations of these findings within a general model of the reading pathways.

Plasticity in the Human Ventral Stream:: Regional Differences Across Time Scales

Lecture
Date:
Monday, February 9, 2009
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
Prof. Kalanit Grill-Spector
|
Dept of Psychology & Neurosciences Institute Stanford University, CA

The human ventral stream consists of regions in the lateral and ventral aspects of the occipital and temporal lobes and is involved in visual recognition. One robust characteristic of selectivity in the adult human ventral stream is category selectivity. Category selectivity is manifested by both a regional preference to particular object categories, such as faces, places and bodyparts, as well as in specific (and reproducible) distributed response patterns across the ventral stream for different object categories. However, it is not well understood how experience modifies these representations and how do these representations come about throughout development. Here, I will describe two sets of experiments in which we addressed these important questions. First, I will describe experiments in adults in which we examined the effect of repetition on categorical responses in the ventral stream. Repeating objects decreases responses in the human ventral stream. However, repetition largely does not change the profile of category selectivity in the ventral stream, except for a place-selective region in the collateral sulcus in which long-lagged repetitions sharpened its responses. Second, I will describe experiments in which we examined changes in category selectivity throughout development from middle childhood (7-11 years), through adolescence (12-16) into adulthood. Surprisingly, we find that it takes more than a decade for the development of adult-like face and place-selective regions. In contrast, the lateral occipital object-selective region showed an adult-like profile by age 7. Finally, I will discuss the implications of these results on plasticity in the ventral stream and our theoretical models linking between fMRI measurements and the underlying neural mechanisms.

Neuronal Circuitry of Conditioned Fear

Lecture
Date:
Monday, February 2, 2009
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
Prof. Andreas Lüthi
|
Friedrich Miescher Institute, Switzerland

Fearful Brains in an Anxious World

Lecture
Date:
Sunday, February 1, 2009
Hour: 15:00
Location:
Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
Prof. Joseph E. Ledoux
|
Center for Neural Science, New York University

Generation of temporal patterns in the olivo-cerebellar system

Lecture
Date:
Thursday, January 22, 2009
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Jacob Ziskind Building
Dr. Gilad Jacobson
|
Dept of Neurobiology Hebrew University, Jerusalem

The olivo-cerebellar system plays a crucial role in timing of both motor and non-motor tasks. The mechanisms underlying this timing capability are still unclear. Here I propose a plausible mechanism in which a temporal pattern reflects accurate phase relationships between the oscillatory activity of olivary neurons. I provide evidence from chronic multi-electrode recordings in awake rats that inferior olive oscillations possess hitherto unknown properties that: (1) Oscillations in different parts of the inferior olive can maintain constant, non-zero phase differences; (2) The oscillation frequency of olivary neurons is co-modulated; and (3) Phase differences are well maintained despite frequency changes. Thus, the inferior olive can generate not only “clock ticks” at the oscillation cycle duration, but more importantly shorter intervals that emerge by combining different parts of the olivary circuitry. This enables the olivo-cerebellar circuit to support timing in the range implicated by behavioural studies.

Personal theories and self-images: Critical tools in the rehabilitation from a severe brain injury

Lecture
Date:
Sunday, January 18, 2009
Hour: 14:45
Location:
Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
Prof. Yoram Eshet
|
Dept of Psychology & Education The Open University of Israel

The lecture is given by a person who suffers from a severe (right-parietal) brain injury from the Yom Kippur War (1973). It discusses the injury as it is perceived by the injured person. The lecture focuses on self-images of the injury and emphasizes the pivotal role of higher cognitive processes, such as personal theories and narratives, as critical tools for a successful; rehabilitation.

Learning to smell: Cortical plasticity and odor perception

Lecture
Date:
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Hour: 10:30
Location:
Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
Prof. Donald Wilson
|
New York University School of Medicine & Emotional Brain Institute Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research

Odor perception - discrimination and recognition of volatile chemicals in the environment – is critical for wide ranging behaviors including kin recognition, mate selection, predator avoidance, homing, and feeding. Most naturally occurring odors are complex mixtures, often containing hundreds of different components. Furthermore, natural odors invariably occur against odorous backgrounds. Thus, olfaction and odor perception involves far more than simple odor ligands binding to receptors in the nose. I will describe recent work

The tempotron: applications to visual and time-warp invariant auditory processing

Lecture
Date:
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Jacob Ziskind Building
Dr. Robert Guetig
|
Racah Institute of Physics & Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Computation Hebrew University, Jerusalem

The timing of action potentials of sensory neurons contains substantial information about the eliciting stimuli. Although computational advantages of spike-timing-based neuronal codes have long been recognized, it is unclear whether and how neurons can learn to read out such representations. We propose a novel biologically plausible supervised synaptic learning rule, the tempotron, enabling neurons to efficiently learn a broad range of decision rules, even when information is embedded in the spatio-temporal structure of spike patterns and not in mean firing rates. We demonstrate the enhanced performance of the tempotron over the rate-based perceptron in reading out spike patterns from retinal ganglion cell populations. Extending the tempotron to conductance-based voltage kinetics, we show that this model can subserve time-warp invariant processing of afferent spike patterns. Furthermore, we show that the conductance-based tempotron can learn to balance excitation and inhibition to match its integration time constant to the temporal scale of a given processing task. We show that already a small population of neurons can solve the TI46 isolated digit speech recognition task with near perfect performance

How to migrate when immobilized: Novel role for Reelin in the migration of cortical neurons

Lecture
Date:
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Brain Research
Prof. Michael Frotscher
|
Institute of Anatomy & Cell Biology University of Freiburg, Germany

Reelin, a glycoprotein of the extracellular matrix, is secreted by Cajal-Retzius cells in the marginal zone of the cortex and controls the radial migration of cortical neurons. Reelin signaling involves the lipoprotein receptors apolipoprotein E receptor 2 (ApoER2) and very low density lipoprotein receptor (VLDLR), the adapter protein Disabled1 (Dab1), and phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K). In regulating neuronal migration, Reelin signaling eventually acts on the cytoskeleton; however, its effects on the dynamic reorganization of the cytoskeleton have remained obscure. In reeler mutants deficient in Reelin, the majority of cortical neurons are unable to migrate to their destinations, suggesting Reelin signaling to be essential for the dynamic cytoskeletal reorganization that is required for neurons to migrate. In contrast, we show that Reelin signaling stabilizes the cytoskeleton by serine3 phosphorylation of n-cofilin, an actin-depolymerizing protein. Phosphorylation at serine3 renders n-cofilin unable to depolymerize F-actin. However, depolymerization of F-actin is required for cytoskeletal reorganization. The Reelin receptor ApoER2, Dab1, src family kinases (SFKs), and PI3K were found to be involved in n-cofilin serine3 phosphorylation. Phosphorylation of n-cofilin was observed in the leading processes of migrating neurons when they reached the Reelin-containing marginal zone. Using a stripe choice assay, we found neuronal processes to be stable on Reelin-coated stripes. In contrast, on control stripes they formed lamellipodia as a sign of ongoing growth. These new results indicate that Reelin-induced stabilization of neuronal processes anchors them to the marginal zone which is crucial for directional migration by nuclear translocation. (Supported by the German Research Foundation, DFG: SFB 592)

Rule-Rationality versus Act-Rationality

Lecture
Date:
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Hour: 12:30
Location:
Jacob Ziskind Building
Prof. Yisrael Aumann
|
Nobel Prize Laureate in Economics, 2005 The Center for the Study of Rationality Hebrew University, Jerusalem

People's actions often deviate from rationality, i.e., self-interested behavior. We propose a paradigm called rule-rationality, according to which people do not maximize utility in each of their acts, but rather follow rules or modes of behavior that usually---but not always---maximize utility. Specifically, rather than choosing an act that maximizes utility among all possible acts in a given situation, people adopt rules that maximize average utility among all applicable rules, when the same rule is applied to many apparently similar situations. The distinction is analogous to that between Bentham's "act-utilitarianism'' and the "rule-utilitarianism'' of Mill, Harsanyi, and others. The genesis of such behavior is examined, and examples are given. The paradigm may provide a synthesis between rationalistic neo-classical economic theory and behavioral economics.

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Extended Access to Self-Administered Cocaine –A Model for Cocaine Addiction

Lecture
Date:
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Hour: 12:15
Location:
Jacob Ziskind Building
Dr. Osnat Ben-Shahar
|
Dept of Psychology University of California Santa Barbara

Animal models used to study neuronal mechanisms of drug addiction most commonly rely upon either repeated experimenter-administered cocaine or drug-administration protocols that result in stable patterns of drug-taking. However, it is well established that differences in the route of administration (IV vs. IP or SC) and in the control over administration (self-administered vs. experimenter-administered) lead to differences in cocaine-induced neurochemical effects. In addition, the neural consequences of cocaine administration are different when tested in the middle of the administration protocol, immediately after the last administration of cocaine, or after 2, 14 or 60 days of withdrawal. Finally, the frequency and size of the daily-dose of cocaine are important factors determining the nature of the changes induced by cocaine. It would seem, then, that if we are to better understand the neuroadaptations that underlie the development of addiction in humans, animal models that mimic as closely as possible the human situation should be employed. Hence, my lab uses an animal model that employs an IV route of administration (as opposed to IP or SC), requiring self-administration (as opposed to experimenter-administered), under conditions (based on Ahmed & Koob, 1998) that distinguish the effects of short versus extended daily access to cocaine upon both behavior and neural substrates. This permits the investigation of neuroadaptations associated with the transition from the drug-naïve state to controlled drug-use, versus the further adaptations associated with the transition from controlled to compulsive drug-use. The differences we found, in both behavior and underlying neuronal adaptations, between controlled and compulsive drug-states, will be discussed in this talk.

Neural circuits for sensory-guided decisions in rats

Lecture
Date:
Monday, August 4, 2008
Hour: 12:15
Location:
Jacob Ziskind Building
Dr. Gidon Felsen
|
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

We are interested in how the nervous system controls movements based on sensory-cued spatial choices. To this end, we have been studying how rats use olfactory stimuli to select, initiate, execute, and evaluate directional movements. We reasoned that the superior colliculus (SC), a midbrain structure, could play a critical role in these processes, since it is known to be involved in several species in processing sensory input and producing orienting movements. We tested this idea by using tetrodes to record simultaneously from several single neurons in the SC of rats performing a sensory-guided spatial choice task. In this task, an odor cue delivered at a central port determines whether water will be delivered upon entry into the left or right reward port. After sampling the odor, a well-trained rat will, in one fluid movement, withdraw from the odor port, orient left or right, and enter the selected reward port. This task thus requires that a freely moving animal make a spatial choice, while also affording reliable timing of task events and a large number of trials. In this context, not only did a substantial majority of SC neurons encode choice direction during a goal-directed movement, but many also predicted the upcoming choice, maintained selectivity for it after movement completion, or represented the trial outcome. In order to determine whether the observed neural activity is causally related to the movement, we used the GABAA agonist muscimol to unilaterally inactivate the SC in rats performing the spatial choice task. If SC output were necessary for initiating contralateral movements, we would expect inactivation to bias the rat towards ipsilateral choices. Indeed, we found that muscimol, but not saline, biased the rat ipsilaterally, and this bias was dosage-dependent. Our results demonstrate that the SC provides a rich representation of information relevant for several aspects of the control of orienting movements. These representations are necessary for executing appropriate movements. Together, these findings suggest a general role for the SC in behavior requiring sensory-guided navigation.

Hippocampal place field representation of the environment: Encoding, retrieval and remapping

Lecture
Date:
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Hour: 12:15
Location:
Jacob Ziskind Building
Prof. Etan Markus
|
University of Connecticut

When a rat runs through a familiar environment, the hippocampus retrieves a previously stored spatial representation of the environment. When the environment is modified a new representation is seen, presumably corresponding to the hippocampus encoding the new information. I will present single unit data on examining the issue of how the “hippocampus decides” whether to retrieve an old representation or form a new representation.

Visuo-Motor Mirror Neurons in Human Frontal and Temporal Lobes

Lecture
Date:
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Hour: 12:15
Location:
Jacob Ziskind Building
Dr. Roy Mukamel
|
UCLA

Recently, a unique population of neurons in the monkey ventral pre-motor cortex and in the rostral inferior parietal lobe, have been shown to respond during both execution of a goal-directed action and the perception of a goal-directed action performed by someone else. Since the activity of these motor neurons ‘reflects’ the perceived actions, these neurons have been termed mirror neurons. Due to their unique response properties, these neurons have been implicated in various behaviors such as imitation and empathy. Moreover, a dysfunction of this neural system has been implicated in various disorders such as autism. In humans, there is accumulating evidence from various techniques, supporting the existence of a parallel mirror neuron system however direct evidence is still lacking. We recorded extra-cellular activity of single neurons in medial pre-frontal and medial temporal regions of 23 epileptic patients while performing and observing hand movements and facial gestures. We found that 13.5% of the recorded neurons in both frontal and temporal lobes exhibited visuo-motor mirror properties. A subset of these mirror neurons responded with excitation action-observation and inhibition to action-execution suggesting a possible mechanism for inhibition of unwanted imitation. Our data supports a revision of the current definition of mirror neurons to include not only motor neurons that respond also to the perception of actions performed by others but also perceptual neurons in temporal lobe, responding to actions performed by oneself.

Gateways to tactile perception: Parallel processing of pain and somatosensation

Lecture
Date:
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
Hour: 12:15
Location:
Jacob Ziskind Building
Prof. Asaf Keller
|
University of Maryland

Vibrissal information is relayed to the barrel cortex through at least two parallel pathways: a lemniscal pathway involving the ventroposterior medial thalamic nucleus (VPM), and a paralemniscal pathway involving the posteromedial nucleus (POm). I will review the role of the lemniscal system, focusing on the mechanisms by which VPM shapes the response properties of neurons in cortical barrels. I will argue that although analyses of these properties (e.g. receptive field structure and angular preference) have illuminated the process of input transformation in sensory pathways, they may have only limited ethological role. I will show that this lemniscal pathway is critical for temporal coding of somatosensory inputs. In the paralemniscal pathway, and in POm in particular, neurons respond poorly and unreliably to physiologically relevant stimuli. I will show that the GABAergic nucleus zona incerta (ZI) regulates POm activity is a state-dependent manner. This regulation is mediated by the cholinergic activating system, which enhances POm activity during states of arousal and vigilance. However, even in these states, POm neurons fail to reliably encode sensory inputs. I will show that POm is critically involved in coding noxious stimuli. Specifically, I will present evidence in support of the hypothesis that the phenomenon of central pain may be the result of suppressed inhibitory regulation of POm activity.

DC Magnetic Fields Produced by the Human Body

Lecture
Date:
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Hour: 15:00
Location:
Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
Prof. David Cohen
|
Biomag Group Leader (ret.), MIT Magnet Lab,& Assoc. Prof. of Radiology, Harvard Med. School

This is a review of measurements made mostly at the MIT Biomag Lab during the period of 1969 to 1983, partly in collaboration with Prof. Yoram Palti. These measurements are usually unique, in that their current sources are difficult to be seen with electric potentials. They are timely today because the new multi-channel SQUID systems are now being made capable of measuring DC fields from the head (and other organs). Our measurements were essentially a mapping over the whole body. DC fields were found almost everywhere, from many internal sources. They were larger over the limbs and head than over the torso proper, except over the abdomen, where it was largest. Over the head, there were puzzling signals from vicinity of healthy hair follicles, suggesting that so-called neural sources of the dcMEG could be overshadowed by more superficial sources. One major mechanism for generating these fields generally appeared to be a change in the K+ concentration in the vicinity of long excitable fibers. Overall, we concluded that DC fields are a rich and complex phenomena, including the dcMEG.

Information theory and the perception-action-cycle

Lecture
Date:
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Hour: 12:15
Location:
Jacob Ziskind Building
Prof. Naftali Tishby
|
School of Computer Science & Engineering and Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Computation The Hebrew University, Jerusalem

I will argue that living organisms can be characterized by their abilities to exchange information with their environment through sensing and acting. Moreover, the optimal interaction of an organism with its environment is determined by the information it can extract and store from the past about the future of its environment, on multiple time scales. Its optimal achievable performance is therefore bounded by the predictive-information of the environment, in some analogy with the entropy and channel-capacity bounds in Shannon's theory of communication. In that sense, life utilizes the predictability of its environment and act in order to increase its predictive capacity. This conceptual and quantitative framework can allow us to design and analyze experiments in neuroscience in a new way. I will discuss some recent applications to auditory and motor physiology.

Wiring mechanisms in the mammalian somatosensory system

Lecture
Date:
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Hour: 12:15
Location:
Jacob Ziskind Building
Dr. Avraham Yaron
|
Dept of Biological Chemistry, WIS

During development, the basic wiring of the nervous system is established by connecting trillions of neurons to their target cells. To reach their correct targets, neurons extend axons that are guided by cues in the extracellular environment. The talk will describe our efforts to understand the mechanisms of axonal guidance using the somatosensory system as a model; with special focus on the role of the Semaphorins family of guidance cues in the process.

Grouping by synchrony and precise temporal patterns in the visual cortex: evidence from voltage-sensitive dye imaging

Lecture
Date:
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Hour: 10:00
Location:
Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
Dr. Hamutal Slovin
|
Bar Ilan University

Accumulating psychophysical and physiological evidence suggest the involvement of early visual areas in the process of visual integration and specifically in local facilitation of proximal and collinear stimuli. To investigate the early integration mechanisms at the population level, we performed voltage-sensitive dye imaging that is highly sensitive to subthreshold population activity, and imaged from the primary visual cortex (V1) and extrastriate cortex (V2) of a behaving monkey. The animal was trained on a simple fixation task while presented with collinear or non-collinear patterns of small gratings, Gabors or short oriented bars. Facilitation in terms of increased amplitude activity at the corresponding retinotopic site of the target was observed for low contrast targets presented as part of collinear or non-collinear pattern. The facilitation effect and its time course depended on the target flanker separation distance, suggesting the role of horizontal connections. Next, we compared the dynamics of cortical response. We found that the time course of responses increased faster in the collinear pattern as compared with the non-collinear pattern. Finally, to study synchronization, we calculated the spatial correlation of pixels at the target location and found that correlation was higher for the collinear pattern, suggesting that the neuronal code for collinear versus non-collinear pattern may be carried by synchronization and response dynamics rather than simply maximal amplitude of response. These results suggest that neuronal population activity in area V1 is involved in local visual integration processes, and specifically in the increased sensitivity for low-contrast visual stimuli surrounded by high contrast flankers. In the second part of my talk I will discuss repeating spatio-precise spatio-temporal patterns. Numerous studies of neuronal coding have reported precise time relations among spikes in cortical neurons. Here our main goal was to study whether information processing in the cortex involves precise spatio-temporal patterns and to detect and characterize those patterns among neuronal populations exploiting voltage-sensitive dye imaging (VSDI) in visual cortical areas of a fixating monkey. Our preliminary results demonstrate that spatio-temporal patterns do exist above chance level (p<0.0001). The spatial characteristics of those patterns are consistent with physiological studies regarding the interplay between different visual areas, and the temporal characteristics show that the majority of the patterns appear in a range of 10-20ms apart

Timing and the olivo-cerebellar system

Lecture
Date:
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Hour: 12:15
Location:
Jacob Ziskind Building
Prof. Yosef Yarom
|
Hebrew University of Jerusalem

The crystal-like anatomy and circuitry of the cerebellum and its preservation throughout vertebrate phylogeny suggest that it performs a single basic computation. It has been proposed that this basic computation is to create temporal patterns of activity necessary for timing motor, sensory and cognitive tasks. Despite the wide agreement about the involvement of the cerebellum in temporal coordination, there is an ongoing debate as to the neural mechanism that subserves this function. This debate stems from the current dogma that dominates cerebellar research. According to this dogma, PC simple spikes are evoked by input from granule cells and determine cerebellar nuclear (CN) activity, thus governing cerebellar output. The complex spikes, according to this view, serve as an error signal which is used by the system to readjust the simple spike activity. A novel theory of cerebellar function will be presented. According to this theory, the complex spike, rather than the simple spike, transmits the cerebellar output. The inferior olive generates accurate temporal patterns orchestrated by the cerebellar cortex and implemented in a variety of motor and non-motor tasks. Although this is a radical change of concept, it is well supported by experimental observations and it settles major problems inherent to the current dogma

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