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Seminars & Colloquia

Live and recorded talks from the researchers shaping this domain.

20 items
Seminar
GMT+1

Neural circuits underlying sleep structure and functions

Sleep is an active state critical for processing emotional memories encoded during waking in both humans and animals. There is a remarkable overlap between the brain structures and circuits active during sleep, particularly rapid eye-movement (REM) sleep, and the those encoding emotions. Accordingly, disruptions in sleep quality or quantity, including REM sleep, are often associated with, and precede the onset of, nearly all affective psychiatric and mood disorders. In this context, a major biomedical challenge is to better understand the underlying mechanisms of the relationship between (REM) sleep and emotion encoding to improve treatments for mental health. This lecture will summarize our investigation of the cellular and circuit mechanisms underlying sleep architecture, sleep oscillations, and local brain dynamics across sleep-wake states using electrophysiological recordings combined with single-cell calcium imaging or optogenetics. The presentation will detail the discovery of a 'somato-dendritic decoupling'in prefrontal cortex pyramidal neurons underlying REM sleep-dependent stabilization of optimal emotional memory traces. This decoupling reflects a tonic inhibition at the somas of pyramidal cells, occurring simultaneously with a selective disinhibition of their dendritic arbors selectively during REM sleep. Recent findings on REM sleep-dependent subcortical inputs and neuromodulation of this decoupling will be discussed in the context of synaptic plasticity and the optimization of emotional responses in the maintenance of mental health.

Speaker

Antoine Adamantidis • University of Bern

Scheduled for

Jun 12, 2025, 11:00 AM

Timezone

GMT+1

Seminar
PDT

Fear learning induces synaptic potentiation between engram neurons in the rat lateral amygdala

Fear learning induces synaptic potentiation between engram neurons in the rat lateral amygdala. This study by Marios Abatis et al. demonstrates how fear conditioning strengthens synaptic connections between engram cells in the lateral amygdala, revealed through optogenetic identification of neuronal ensembles and electrophysiological measurements. The work provides crucial insights into memory formation mechanisms at the synaptic level, with implications for understanding anxiety disorders and developing targeted interventions. Presented by Dr. Kenneth Hayworth, this journal club will explore the paper's methodology linking engram cell reactivation with synaptic plasticity measurements, and discuss implications for memory decoding research.

Speaker

Kenneth Hayworth • Carboncopies Foundation & BPF Aspirational Neuroscience

Scheduled for

Apr 21, 2025, 3:00 PM

Timezone

PDT

Seminar
GMT-3

A modular, free and open source graphical interface for visualizing and processing electrophysiological signals in real-time

Portable biosensors become more popular every year. In this context, I propose NeuriGUI, a modular and cross-platform graphical interface that connects to those biosensors for real-time processing, exploring and storing of electrophysiological signals. The NeuriGUI acts as a common entry point in brain-computer interfaces, making it possible to plug in downstream third-party applications for real-time analysis of the incoming signal. NeuriGUI is 100% free and open source.

Speaker

David Baum • Research Engineer at InteraXon

Scheduled for

May 27, 2024, 12:00 PM

Timezone

GMT-3

Seminar
GMT+1

Applied cognitive neuroscience to improve learning and therapeutics

Advancements in cognitive neuroscience have provided profound insights into the workings of the human brain and the methods used offer opportunities to enhance performance, cognition, and mental health. Drawing upon interdisciplinary collaborations in the University of California San Diego, Human Performance Optimization Lab, this talk explores the application of cognitive neuroscience principles in three domains to improve human performance and alleviate mental health challenges. The first section will discuss studies addressing the role of vision and oculomotor function in athletic performance and the potential to train these foundational abilities to improve performance and sports outcomes. The second domain considers the use of electrophysiological measurements of the brain and heart to detect, and possibly predict, errors in manual performance, as shown in a series of studies with surgeons as they perform robot-assisted surgery. Lastly, findings from clinical trials testing personalized interventional treatments for mood disorders will be discussed in which the temporal and spatial parameters of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) are individualized to test if personalization improves treatment response and can be used as predictive biomarkers to guide treatment selection. Together, these translational studies use the measurement tools and constructs of cognitive neuroscience to improve human performance and well-being.

Speaker

Greg Applebaum • Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego

Scheduled for

May 15, 2024, 5:00 PM

Timezone

GMT+1

Seminar
GMT

Combined electrophysiological and optical recording of multi-scale neural circuit dynamics

This webinar will showcase new approaches for electrophysiological recordings using our silicon neural probes and surface arrays combined with diverse optical methods such as wide-field or 2-photon imaging, fiber photometry, and optogenetic perturbations in awake, behaving mice. Multi-modal recording of single units and local field potentials across cortex, hippocampus and thalamus alongside calcium activity via GCaMP6F in cortical neurons in triple-transgenic animals or in hippocampal astrocytes via viral transduction are brought to bear to reveal hitherto inaccessible and under-appreciated aspects of coordinated dynamics in the brain.

Speaker

Chris Lewis • University of Zurich

Scheduled for

Apr 29, 2024, 3:00 PM

Timezone

GMT

Seminar
GMT+1

The immunopathogenesis of autoimmune seizure disorders

Immune-mediated mechanisms are increasingly recognised as a cause of epilepsy even in the absence of an immune response against a specifical neuronal antigen. In some cases, these autoimmune processes are clearly pathogenic, for example acute seizures in autoimmune encephalitis, whereas in others this is less clear, for example autoimmune-associated epilepsy. Recent research has provided novel insights into the clinical, paraclinical and immunopathogenetic mechanisms in these conditions. I will provide an overview of clinical and paraclinical features of immune-associated seizures. Furthermore, I will describe specific immunopathogenic examples implicating lymphoid follicular autoimmunisation and intrathecal B cells in these conditions. These insights into immunopathogenesis may help to explain the role of current and immunotherapies in these conditions.

Speaker

Adam Handel • Oxford University

Scheduled for

Mar 26, 2024, 6:00 PM

Timezone

GMT+1

Seminar
GMT+1

Epileptic micronetworks and their clinical relevance

A core aspect of clinical epileptology revolves around relating epileptic field potentials to underlying neural sources (e.g. an “epileptogenic focus”). Yet still, how neural population activity relates to epileptic field potentials and ultimately clinical phenomenology, remains far from being understood. After a brief overview on this topic, this seminar will focus on unpublished work, with an emphasis on seizure-related focal spreading depression. The presented results will include hippocampal and neocortical chronic in vivo two-photon population imaging and local field potential recordings of epileptic micronetworks in mice, in the context of viral encephalitis or optogenetic stimulation. The findings are corroborated by invasive depth electrode recordings (macroelectrodes and BF microwires) in epilepsy patients during pre-surgical evaluation. The presented work carries general implications for clinical epileptology, and basic epilepsy research.

Speaker

Michael Wenzel • Bonn University

Scheduled for

Mar 12, 2024, 6:00 PM

Timezone

GMT+1

Seminar
GMT+1

Seizure control by electrical stimulation: parameters and mechanisms

Seizure suppression by deep brain stimulation (DBS) applies high frequency stimulation (HFS) to grey matter to block seizures. In this presentation, I will present the results of a different method that employs low frequency stimulation (LFS) (1 to 10Hz) of white matter tracts to prevent seizures. The approach has been shown to be effective in the hippocampus by stimulating the ventral and dorsal hippocampal commissure in both animal and human studies respectively for mesial temporal lobe seizures. A similar stimulation paradigm has been shown to be effective at controlling focal cortical seizures in rats with corpus callosum stimulation. This stimulation targets the axons of the corpus callosum innervating the focal zone at low frequencies (5 to 10Hz) and has been shown to significantly reduce both seizure and spike frequency. The mechanisms of this suppression paradigm have been elucidated with in-vitro studies and involve the activation of two long-lasting inhibitory potentials GABAB and sAHP. LFS mechanisms are similar in both hippocampus and cortical brain slices. Additionally, the results show that LFS does not block seizures but rather decreases the excitability of the tissue to prevent seizures. Three methods of seizure suppression, LFS applied to fiber tracts, HFS applied to focal zone and stimulation of the anterior nucleus of the thalamus (ANT) were compared directly in the same animal in an in-vivo epilepsy model. The results indicate that LFS generated a significantly higher level of suppression, indicating LFS of white matter tract could be a useful addition as a stimulation paradigm for the treatment of epilepsy.

Speaker

Dominique Durand • Case Western

Scheduled for

Jan 30, 2024, 6:00 PM

Timezone

GMT+1

Seminar
GMT+1

Virtual Brain Twins for Brain Medicine and Epilepsy

Over the past decade we have demonstrated that the fusion of subject-specific structural information of the human brain with mathematical dynamic models allows building biologically realistic brain network models, which have a predictive value, beyond the explanatory power of each approach independently. The network nodes hold neural population models, which are derived using mean field techniques from statistical physics expressing ensemble activity via collective variables. Our hybrid approach fuses data-driven with forward-modeling-based techniques and has been successfully applied to explain healthy brain function and clinical translation including aging, stroke and epilepsy. Here we illustrate the workflow along the example of epilepsy: we reconstruct personalized connectivity matrices of human epileptic patients using Diffusion Tensor weighted Imaging (DTI). Subsets of brain regions generating seizures in patients with refractory partial epilepsy are referred to as the epileptogenic zone (EZ). During a seizure, paroxysmal activity is not restricted to the EZ, but may recruit other healthy brain regions and propagate activity through large brain networks. The identification of the EZ is crucial for the success of neurosurgery and presents one of the historically difficult questions in clinical neuroscience. The application of latest techniques in Bayesian inference and model inversion, in particular Hamiltonian Monte Carlo, allows the estimation of the EZ, including estimates of confidence and diagnostics of performance of the inference. The example of epilepsy nicely underwrites the predictive value of personalized large-scale brain network models. The workflow of end-to-end modeling is an integral part of the European neuroinformatics platform EBRAINS and enables neuroscientists worldwide to build and estimate personalized virtual brains.

Speaker

Viktor Jirsa • Aix Marseille Université - Inserm

Scheduled for

Nov 7, 2023, 6:00 PM

Timezone

GMT+1

Seminar
GMT

State-of-the-Art Spike Sorting with SpikeInterface

This webinar will focus on spike sorting analysis with SpikeInterface, an open-source framework for the analysis of extracellular electrophysiology data. After a brief introduction of the project (~30 mins) highlighting the basics of the SpikeInterface software and advanced features (e.g., data compression, quality metrics, drift correction, cloud visualization), we will have an extensive hands-on tutorial (~90 mins) showing how to use SpikeInterface in a real-world scenario. After attending the webinar, you will: (1) have a global overview of the different steps involved in a processing pipeline; (2) know how to write a complete analysis pipeline with SpikeInterface.

Speaker

Samuel Garcia and Alessio Buccino • CRNS, Lyon, France and Allen Institute for Neural Dynamics, Seattle, USA

Scheduled for

Nov 6, 2023, 3:00 PM

Timezone

GMT

Seminar
GMT+1

Location, time and type of epileptic activity influence how sleep modulates epilepsy

Sleep and epilepsy are tightly interconnected: On the one hand disturbed sleep is known to negatively affect epilepsy, whereas on the other hand epilepsy negatively impacts sleep. In this talk, we leverage on the unique opportunity provided by simultaneous stereo-EEG and sleep recordings to disentangle these relationships. We will discuss latest evidence on if anatomy (temporal vs. extratemporal), time (early vs. late sleep), and type of epileptic activity (ictal vs. interictal) influence how epileptic activity is modulated by sleep. After this talk, attendees will have a more nuanced understanding of the contributions of location, time and type of epileptic activity in the relationship between sleep and epilepsy.

Speaker

Birgit Frauscher • Duke

Scheduled for

Oct 10, 2023, 6:00 PM

Timezone

GMT+1

Seminar
GMT+1

Sleep deprivation and the human brain: from brain physiology to cognition”

Sleep strongly affects synaptic strength, making it critical for cognition, especially learning and memory formation. Whether and how sleep deprivation modulates human brain physiology and cognition is poorly understood. Here we examined how overnight sleep deprivation vs overnight sufficient sleep affects (a) cortical excitability, measured by transcranial magnetic stimulation, (b) inducibility of long-term potentiation (LTP)- and long-term depression (LTD)-like plasticity via transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), and (c) learning, memory, and attention. We found that sleep deprivation increases cortical excitability due to enhanced glutamate-related cortical facilitation and decreases and/or reverses GABAergic cortical inhibition. Furthermore, tDCS-induced LTP-like plasticity (anodal) abolishes while the inhibitory LTD-like plasticity (cathodal) converts to excitatory LTP-like plasticity under sleep deprivation. This is associated with increased EEG theta oscillations due to sleep pressure. Motor learning, behavioral counterparts of plasticity, and working memory and attention, which rely on cortical excitability, are also impaired during sleep deprivation. Our study indicates that upscaled brain excitability and altered plasticity, due to sleep deprivation, are associated with impaired cognitive performance. Besides showing how brain physiology and cognition undergo changes (from neurophysiology to higher-order cognition) under sleep pressure, the findings have implications for variability and optimal application of noninvasive brain stimulation.

Speaker

Ali Salehinejad • Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment & Human Factors, Dortmund, Germany

Scheduled for

Aug 28, 2023, 12:15 PM

Timezone

GMT+1

Seminar
EDT

Internal representation of musical rhythm: transformation from sound to periodic beat

When listening to music, humans readily perceive and move along with a periodic beat. Critically, perception of a periodic beat is commonly elicited by rhythmic stimuli with physical features arranged in a way that is not strictly periodic. Hence, beat perception must capitalize on mechanisms that transform stimulus features into a temporally recurrent format with emphasized beat periodicity. Here, I will present a line of work that aims to clarify the nature and neural basis of this transformation. In these studies, electrophysiological activity was recorded as participants listened to rhythms known to induce perception of a consistent beat across healthy Western adults. The results show that the human brain selectively emphasizes beat representation when it is not acoustically prominent in the stimulus, and this transformation (i) can be captured non-invasively using surface EEG in adult participants, (ii) is already in place in 5- to 6-month-old infants, and (iii) cannot be fully explained by subcortical auditory nonlinearities. Moreover, as revealed by human intracerebral recordings, a prominent beat representation emerges already in the primary auditory cortex. Finally, electrophysiological recordings from the auditory cortex of a rhesus monkey show a significant enhancement of beat periodicities in this area, similar to humans. Taken together, these findings indicate an early, general auditory cortical stage of processing by which rhythmic inputs are rendered more temporally recurrent than they are in reality. Already present in non-human primates and human infants, this "periodized" default format could then be shaped by higher-level associative sensory-motor areas and guide movement in individuals with strongly coupled auditory and motor systems. Together, this highlights the multiplicity of neural processes supporting coordinated musical behaviors widely observed across human cultures.The experiments herein include: a motor timing task comparing the effects of movement vs non-movement with and without feedback (Exp. 1A & 1B), a transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) study on the role of the supplementary motor area (SMA) in transforming temporal information (Exp. 2), and a perceptual timing task investigating the effect of noisy movement on time perception with both visual and auditory modalities (Exp. 3A & 3B). Together, the results of these studies support the Bayesian cue combination framework, in that: movement improves the precision of time perception not only in perceptual timing tasks but also motor timing tasks (Exp. 1A & 1B), stimulating the SMA appears to disrupt the transformation of temporal information (Exp. 2), and when movement becomes unreliable or noisy there is no longer an improvement in precision of time perception (Exp. 3A & 3B). Although there is support for the proposed framework, more studies (i.e., fMRI, TMS, EEG, etc.) need to be conducted in order to better understand where and how this may be instantiated in the brain; however, this work provides a starting point to better understanding the intrinsic connection between time and movement

Speaker

Tomas Lenc • Institute of Neuroscience, UCLouvain, Belgium

Scheduled for

May 30, 2023, 10:00 AM

Timezone

EDT

Seminar
EDT

Manipulating single-unit theta phase-locking with PhaSER: An open-source tool for real-time phase estimation and manipulation

Zoe has developed an open-source tool PhaSER, which allows her to perform real-time oscillatory phase estimation and apply optogenetic manipulations at precise phases of hippocampal theta during high-density electrophysiological recordings in head-fixed mice while they navigate a virtual environment. The precise timing of single-unit spiking relative to network-wide oscillations (i.e., phase locking) has long been thought to maintain excitatory-inhibitory homeostasis and coordinate cognitive processes, but due to intense experimental demands, the causal influence of this phenomenon has never been determined. Thus, we developed PhaSER (Phase-locked Stimulation to Endogenous Rhythms), a tool which allows the user to explore the temporal relationship between single-unit spiking and ongoing oscillatory activity.

Speaker

Zoe Christenson-Wick • Mount Sinai School of Medicine, NY, USA

Scheduled for

May 8, 2023, 10:00 AM

Timezone

EDT

Seminar
GMT+1

Why is 7T MRI indispensable in epilepsy now?

Identifying a structural brain lesion on MRI is the most important factor that correlates with seizure freedom after surgery in patients suffering from drug-resistant focal epilepsy. By providing better image contrast and higher spatial resolution, structural MRI at 7 Tesla (7T) can lead to lesion detection in about 25% of patients presenting with negative MRI at lower fields. In addition to a better detection/delineation/phenotyping of epileptogenic lesions, higher signal at ultra-high field also facilitates more detailed analyses of several functional and molecular alterations of tissues, susceptible to detect epileptogenic properties even in absence of visible lesions. These advantages but also the technical challenges of 7T MRI in practice will be presented and discussed.

Speaker

Maxime Guye • CRMBM Aix Marseille University

Scheduled for

Apr 25, 2023, 6:00 PM

Timezone

GMT+1

Seminar
EDT

Precise spatio-temporal spike patterns in cortex and model

The cell assembly hypothesis postulates that groups of coordinated neurons form the basis of information processing. Here, we test this hypothesis by analyzing massively parallel spiking activity recorded in monkey motor cortex during a reach-to-grasp experiment for the presence of significant ms-precise spatio-temporal spike patterns (STPs). For this purpose, the parallel spike trains were analyzed for STPs by the SPADE method (Stella et al, 2019, Biosystems), which detects, counts and evaluates spike patterns for their significance by the use of surrogates (Stella et al, 2022 eNeuro). As a result we find STPs in 19/20 data sets (each of 15min) from two monkeys, but only a small fraction of the recorded neurons are involved in STPs. To consider the different behavioral states during the task, we analyzed the data in a quasi time-resolved analysis by dividing the data into behaviorally relevant time epochs. The STPs that occur in the various epochs are specific to behavioral context - in terms of neurons involved and temporal lags between the spikes of the STP. Furthermore we find, that the STPs often share individual neurons across epochs. Since we interprete the occurrence of a particular STP as the signature of a particular active cell assembly, our interpretation is that the neurons multiplex their cell assembly membership. In a related study, we model these findings by networks with embedded synfire chains (Kleinjohann et al, 2022, bioRxiv 2022.08.02.502431).

Speaker

Sonia Gruen • Forschungszentrum Jülich, Germany

Scheduled for

Apr 25, 2023, 11:00 AM

Timezone

EDT

Seminar
GMT+1

Developmentally structured coactivity in the hippocampal trisynaptic loop

The hippocampus is a key player in learning and memory. Research into this brain structure has long emphasized its plasticity and flexibility, though recent reports have come to appreciate its remarkably stable firing patterns. How novel information incorporates itself into networks that maintain their ongoing dynamics remains an open question, largely due to a lack of experimental access points into network stability. Development may provide one such access point. To explore this hypothesis, we birthdated CA1 pyramidal neurons using in-utero electroporation and examined their functional features in freely moving, adult mice. We show that CA1 pyramidal neurons of the same embryonic birthdate exhibit prominent cofiring across different brain states, including behavior in the form of overlapping place fields. Spatial representations remapped across different environments in a manner that preserves the biased correlation patterns between same birthdate neurons. These features of CA1 activity could partially be explained by structured connectivity between pyramidal cells and local interneurons. These observations suggest the existence of developmentally installed circuit motifs that impose powerful constraints on the statistics of hippocampal output.

Speaker

Roman Huszár • Buzsáki Lab, New York University

Scheduled for

Apr 4, 2023, 5:00 PM

Timezone

GMT+1

Seminar
GMT+1

From cells to systems: multiscale studies of the epileptic brain

It is increasingly recognized that epilepsy affects human brain organization across multiple scales, ranging from cellular alterations in specific regions towards macroscale network imbalances. My talk will overview an emerging paradigm that integrates cellular, neuroimaging, and network modelling approaches to faithful characterize the extent of structural and functional alterations in the common epilepsies. I will also discuss how multiscale framework can help to derive clinically useful biomarkers of dysfunction, and how these methods may guide surgical planning and prognostics.

Speaker

Boris Bernhardt • Montreal Neurological Institute

Scheduled for

Mar 28, 2023, 6:00 PM

Timezone

GMT+1

Seminar
EDT

The strongly recurrent regime of cortical networks

Modern electrophysiological recordings simultaneously capture single-unit spiking activities of hundreds of neurons. These neurons exhibit highly complex coordination patterns. Where does this complexity stem from? One candidate is the ubiquitous heterogeneity in connectivity of local neural circuits. Studying neural network dynamics in the linearized regime and using tools from statistical field theory of disordered systems, we derive relations between structure and dynamics that are readily applicable to subsampled recordings of neural circuits: Measuring the statistics of pairwise covariances allows us to infer statistical properties of the underlying connectivity. Applying our results to spontaneous activity of macaque motor cortex, we find that the underlying network operates in a strongly recurrent regime. In this regime, network connectivity is highly heterogeneous, as quantified by a large radius of bulk connectivity eigenvalues. Being close to the point of linear instability, this dynamical regime predicts a rich correlation structure, a large dynamical repertoire, long-range interaction patterns, relatively low dimensionality and a sensitive control of neuronal coordination. These predictions are verified in analyses of spontaneous activity of macaque motor cortex and mouse visual cortex. Finally, we show that even microscopic features of connectivity, such as connection motifs, systematically scale up to determine the global organization of activity in neural circuits.

Speaker

David Dahmen • Jülich Research Centre, Germany

Scheduled for

Mar 28, 2023, 11:00 AM

Timezone

EDT

Seminar
GMT

Neuron-glial interactions in health and disease: from cognition to cancer

In the central nervous system, neuronal activity is a critical regulator of development and plasticity. Activity-dependent proliferation of healthy glial progenitors, oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs), and the consequent generation of new oligodendrocytes contributes to adaptive myelination. This plasticity of myelin tunes neural circuit function and contributes to healthy cognition. The robust mitogenic effect of neuronal activity on normal oligodendroglial precursor cells, a putative cellular origin for many forms of glioma, suggests that dysregulated or “hijacked” mechanisms of myelin plasticity might similarly promote malignant cell proliferation in this devastating group of brain cancers. Indeed, neuronal activity promotes progression of both high-grade and low-grade glioma subtypes in preclinical models. Crucial mechanisms mediating activity-regulated glioma growth include paracrine secretion of BDNF and the synaptic protein neuroligin-3 (NLGN3). NLGN3 induces multiple oncogenic signaling pathways in the cancer cell, and also promotes glutamatergic synapse formation between neurons and glioma cells. Glioma cells integrate into neural circuits synaptically through neuron-to-glioma synapses, and electrically through potassium-evoked currents that are amplified through gap-junctional coupling between tumor cells This synaptic and electrical integration of glioma into neural circuits is central to tumor progression in preclinical models. Thus, neuron-glial interactions not only modulate neural circuit structure and function in the healthy brain, but paracrine and synaptic neuron-glioma interactions also play important roles in the pathogenesis of glial cancers. The mechanistic parallels between normal and malignant neuron-glial interactions underscores the extent to which mechanisms of neurodevelopment and plasticity are subverted by malignant gliomas, and the importance of understanding the neuroscience of cancer.

Speaker

Michelle Monje • Stanford Medicine

Scheduled for

Mar 13, 2023, 4:00 PM

Timezone

GMT