10,973 research outputs found

    TMS-evoked long-lasting artefacts: A new adaptive algorithm for EEG signal correction

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    OBJECTIVE: During EEG the discharge of TMS generates a long-lasting decay artefact (DA) that makes the analysis of TMS-evoked potentials (TEPs) difficult. Our aim was twofold: (1) to describe how the DA affects the recorded EEG and (2) to develop a new adaptive detrend algorithm (ADA) able to correct the DA. METHODS: We performed two experiments testing 50 healthy volunteers. In experiment 1, we tested the efficacy of ADA by comparing it with two commonly-used independent component analysis (ICA) algorithms. In experiment 2, we further investigated the efficiency of ADA and the impact of the DA evoked from TMS over frontal, motor and parietal areas. RESULTS: Our results demonstrated that (1) the DA affected the EEG signal in the spatiotemporal domain; (2) ADA was able to completely remove the DA without affecting the TEP waveforms; (3). ICA corrections produced significant changes in peak-to-peak TEP amplitude. CONCLUSIONS: ADA is a reliable solution for the DA correction, especially considering that (1) it does not affect physiological responses; (2) it is completely data-driven and (3) its effectiveness does not depend on the characteristics of the artefact and on the number of recording electrodes. SIGNIFICANCE: We proposed a new reliable algorithm of correction for long-lasting TMS-EEG artifacts

    Muscle synergies after stroke are correlated with perilesional high gamma.

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    Movements can be factored into modules termed "muscle synergies". After stroke, abnormal synergies are linked to impaired movements; however, their neural basis is not understood. In a single subject, we examined how electrocorticography signals from the perilesional cortex were associated with synergies. The measured synergies contained a mix of both normal and abnormal patterns and were remarkably similar to those described in past work. Interestingly, we found that both normal and abnormal synergies were correlated with perilesional high gamma. Given the link between high gamma and cortical spiking, our results suggest that perilesional spiking may organize synergies after stroke

    Sensing with the Motor Cortex

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    The primary motor cortex is a critical node in the network of brain regions responsible for voluntary motor behavior. It has been less appreciated, however, that the motor cortex exhibits sensory responses in a variety of modalities including vision and somatosensation. We review current work that emphasizes the heterogeneity in sensorimotor responses in the motor cortex and focus on its implications for cortical control of movement as well as for brain-machine interface development

    Pericyte-mediated regulation of capillary diameter: a component of neurovascular coupling in health and disease

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    Because regional blood flow increases in association with the increased metabolic demand generated by localised increases in neural activity, functional imaging researchers often assume that changes in blood flow are an accurate read-out of changes in underlying neural activity. An understanding of the mechanisms that link changes in neural activity to changes in blood flow is crucial for assessing the validity of this assumption, and for understanding the processes that can go wrong during disease states such as ischaemic stroke. Many studies have investigated the mechanisms of neurovascular regulation in arterioles but other evidence suggests that blood flow regulation can also occur in capillaries, because of the presence of contractile cells, pericytes, on the capillary wall. Here we review the evidence that pericytes can modulate capillary diameter in response to neuronal activity and assess the likely importance of neurovascular regulation at the capillary level for functional imaging experiments. We also discuss evidence suggesting that pericytes are particularly sensitive to damage during pathological insults such as ischaemia, Alzheimer’s disease and diabetic retinopathy, and consider the potential impact that pericyte dysfunction might have on the development of therapeutic interventions and on the interpretation of functional imaging data in these disorders

    Causal frequency-specific contributions of frontal spatiotemporal patterns induced by non-invasive neurostimulation to human visual performance

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    Neural oscillatory activity is known to play a crucial role in brain function. In the particular domain of visual perception, specific frequency bands in different brain regions and networks, from sensory areas to large-scale frontoparietal systems, have been associated with distinct aspects of visual behavior. Nonetheless, their contributions to human visual cognition remain to be causally demonstrated. We hereby used non-uniform (and thus non-frequency-specific) and uniform (frequency-specific) high-beta and gamma patterns of noninvasive neurostimulation over the right frontal eye field (FEF) to isolate the behavioral effects of oscillation frequency and provide causal evidence that distinct visual behavioral outcomes could be modulated by frequency-specific activity emerging from a single cortical region. In a visual detection task using near-threshold targets, high-beta frequency enhanced perceptual sensitivity (d ) without changing response criterion (beta), whereas gamma frequency shifted response criterion but showed no effects on perceptual sensitivity. The lack of behavioral modulations by non-frequency-specific patterns demonstrates that these behavioral effects were specifically driven by burstfrequency. We hypothesizethat suchfrequency-coded behavioral impact of oscillatory activity may reflect a general brain mechanism to multiplex functions within the same neural substrate. Furthermore, pathological conditions involving impaired cerebral oscillations could potentially benefit in the near future from the use of neurostimulation to restore the characteristic oscillatory patterns of healthy systems

    Population-scale organization of cerebellar granule neuron signaling during a visuomotor behavior.

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    Granule cells at the input layer of the cerebellum comprise over half the neurons in the human brain and are thought to be critical for learning. However, little is known about granule neuron signaling at the population scale during behavior. We used calcium imaging in awake zebrafish during optokinetic behavior to record transgenically identified granule neurons throughout a cerebellar population. A significant fraction of the population was responsive at any given time. In contrast to core precerebellar populations, granule neuron responses were relatively heterogeneous, with variation in the degree of rectification and the balance of positive versus negative changes in activity. Functional correlations were strongest for nearby cells, with weak spatial gradients in the degree of rectification and the average sign of response. These data open a new window upon cerebellar function and suggest granule layer signals represent elementary building blocks under-represented in core sensorimotor pathways, thereby enabling the construction of novel patterns of activity for learning

    Hierarchical Bayesian optimization of targeted motor outputs with spatiotemporal neurostimulation

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    Ce mémoire par article part de la question suivante: pouvons-nous utiliser des prothèses neurales afin d’activer artificiellement certain muscles dans le but d’accélérer la guérison et le réapprentissage du contrôle moteur après un AVC ou un traumatisme cervical ? Cette question touche plus de 15 millions de personnes chaque année à travers le monde, et est au coeur de la recherche de Numa Dancause et Marco Bonizzato, nos collaborateurs dans le département de Neuroscience de l’Université de Montréal. Il est maintenant possible d’implanter des électrodes à grande capacité dans le cortex dans le but d’acheminer des signaux électriques, mais encore difficile de prédire l’effet de stimulations sur le cerveau et le reste du corps. Cependant, des résultats préliminaires prometteurs sur des rats et singes démontrent qu’une récupération motrice non-négligeable est observée après stimulation de régions encore fonctionnelles du cortex moteur. Les difficultés rattachées à l’implémentation optimale de stimulation motocorticale consistent donc à trouver une de ces régions, ainsi qu’un protocole de stimulation efficace à la récupération. Bien que cette optimisation a été jusqu’à présent faite à la main, l’émergence d’implants capables de livrer des signaux sur plusieurs sites et avec plusieurs patrons spatio-temporels rendent l’exploration manuelle et exhaustive impossible. Une approche prometteuse afin d’automatiser et optimiser ce processus est d’utiliser un algorithme d’exploration bayésienne. Mon travail a été de déveloper et de raffiner ces techniques avec comme objectif de répondre aux deux questions scientifiques importantes suivantes: (1) comment évoquer des mouvements complexes en enchainant des microstimulations corticales ?, et (2) peuvent-elles avoir des effets plus significatifs que des stimulations simples sur la récupération motrice? Nous présentons dans l’article de ce mémoire notre approche hiérarchique utilisant des processus gaussiens pour exploiter les propriétés connues du cerveau afin d’accélérer la recherche, ainsi que nos premiers résultats répondant à la question 1. Nous laissons pour des travaux futur une réponse définitive à la deuxième question.The idea for this thesis by article sprung from the following question: can we use neural prostheses to stimulate specific muscles in order to help recovery of motor control after stroke or cervical injury? This question is of crucial importance to 15 million people each year around the globe, and is at the heart of Numa Dancause and Marco Bonizzato’s research, our collaborators in the Neuroscience department at the University of Montreal. It is now possible to implant large capacity electrodes for electrical stimulation in cortex, but still difficult to predict their effect on the brain and the rest of the body. Nevertheless, preliminary but promising results on rats and monkeys have shown that a non-negligible motor recovery is obtained after stimulation of regions of motor cortex that are still functional. The difficulties related to optimal microcortical stimulation hence consist in finding both one of these regions, and a stimulation protocol with optimal recovery efficacy. This search has up to present day been performed by hand, but recent and upcoming large scale stimulation technologies permitting delivery of spatio-temporal signals are making such exhaustive searches impossible.A promising approach to automating and optimizing this discovery is the use of Bayesian optimization. My work has consisted in developing and refining such techniques with two scientific questions in mind: (1) how can we evoke complex movements by chaining cortical microstimulations?, and (2) can these outperform single channel stimulations in terms of recovery efficacy? We present in the main article of this thesis our hierarchical Bayesian optimization approach which uses gaussian processes to exploit known properties of the brain to speed up the search, as well as first results answering question 1. We leave to future work a definitive answer to the second question

    The Rac-FRET mouse reveals tight spatiotemporal control of Rac activity in primary cells and tissues

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    The small G protein family Rac has numerous regulators that integrate extracellular signals into tight spatiotemporal maps of its activity to promote specific cell morphologies and responses. Here, we have generated a mouse strain, Rac-FRET, which ubiquitously expresses the Raichu-Rac biosensor. It enables FRET imaging and quantification of Rac activity in live tissues and primary cells without affecting cell properties and responses. We assessed Rac activity in chemotaxing Rac-FRET neutrophils and found enrichment in leading-edge protrusions and unexpected longitudinal shifts and oscillations during protruding and stalling phases of migration. We monitored Rac activity in normal or disease states of intestinal, liver, mammary, pancreatic, and skin tissue, in response to stimulation or inhibition and upon genetic manipulation of upstream regulators, revealing unexpected insights into Rac signaling during disease development. The Rac-FRET strain is a resource that promises to fundamentally advance our understanding of Rac-dependent responses in primary cells and native environments

    Large-scale Spatiotemporal Spike Patterning Consistent with Wave Propagation in Motor Cortex

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    Aggregate signals in cortex are known to be spatiotemporally organized as propagating waves across the cortical surface, but it remains unclear whether the same is true for spiking activity in individual neurons. Furthermore, the functional interactions between cortical neurons are well documented but their spatial arrangement on the cortical surface has been largely ignored. Here we use a functional network analysis to demonstrate that a subset of motor cortical neurons in non-human primates spatially coordinate their spiking activity in a manner that closely matches wave propagation measured in the beta oscillatory band of the local field potential. We also demonstrate that sequential spiking of pairs of neuron contains task-relevant information that peaks when the neurons are spatially oriented along the wave axis. We hypothesize that the spatial anisotropy of spike patterning may reflect the underlying organization of motor cortex and may be a general property shared by other cortical areas
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