2,451 research outputs found
TurbuStat: Turbulence Statistics in Python
We present TurbuStat (v1.0): a Python package for computing turbulence
statistics in spectral-line data cubes. TurbuStat includes implementations of
fourteen methods for recovering turbulent properties from observational data.
Additional features of the software include: distance metrics for comparing two
data sets; a segmented linear model for fitting lines with a break-point; a
two-dimensional elliptical power-law model; multi-core fast-fourier-transform
support; a suite for producing simulated observations of fractional Brownian
Motion fields, including two-dimensional images and optically-thin HI data
cubes; and functions for creating realistic world coordinate system information
for synthetic observations. This paper summarizes the TurbuStat package and
provides representative examples using several different methods. TurbuStat is
an open-source package and we welcome community feedback and contributions.Comment: Accepted in AJ. 21 pages, 8 figure
In vivo robotics: the automation of neuroscience and other intact-system biological fields
Robotic and automation technologies have played a huge role in in vitro biological science, having proved critical for scientific endeavors such as genome sequencing and high-throughput screening. Robotic and automation strategies are beginning to play a greater role in in vivo and in situ sciences, especially when it comes to the difficult in vivo experiments required for understanding the neural mechanisms of behavior and disease. In this perspective, we discuss the prospects for robotics and automation to influence neuroscientific and intact-system biology fields. We discuss how robotic innovations might be created to open up new frontiers in basic and applied neuroscience and present a concrete example with our recent automation of in vivo whole-cell patch clamp electrophysiology of neurons in the living mouse brain.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Single Cell Grant 1 R01 EY023173)Human Frontier Science Program (Strasbourg, France)McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT. Neurotechnology (MINT) ProgramMIT Media Lab ConsortiumNew York Stem Cell Foundation (Robertson Investigator Award)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Director's New Innovator Award 1DP2OD002002)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (EUREKA Award 1R01GM104948)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant 1R01DA029639)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant 1R01NS067199)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (CAREER Award CBET 1053233)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (DMS1042134)Paul G. Allen Family Foundation (Distinguished Investigator in Neuroscience Award)Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technolog
Automated whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology of neurons in vivo
Whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology of neurons is a gold-standard technique for high-fidelity analysis of the biophysical mechanisms of neural computation and pathology, but it requires great skill to perform. We have developed a robot that automatically performs patch clamping in vivo, algorithmically detecting cells by analyzing the temporal sequence of electrode impedance changes. We demonstrate good yield, throughput and quality of automated intracellular recording in mouse cortex and hippocampus.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (NIH EUREKA Award program (1R01NS075421))National Institutes of Health (U.S.) ((NIH) Director′s New Innovator Award (DP2OD002002)National Science Foundation (U.S.) ((NSF) CAREER award (CBET 1053233))New York Stem Cell Foundation (Robertson Neuroscience Award)Dr. Gerald Burnett and Marjorie BurnettNational Science Foundation (U.S.) (grant CISE 1110947)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (grant EHR 0965945)American Heart Association (10GRNT4430029
Assessing the Impact of Astrochemistry on Molecular Cloud Turbulence Statistics
We analyze hydrodynamic simulations of turbulent, star-forming molecular
clouds that are post-processed with the photo-dissociation region
astrochemistry code 3D-PDR. We investigate the sensitivity of 15 commonly
applied turbulence statistics to post-processing assumptions, namely variations
in gas temperature, abundance and external radiation field. We produce
synthetic CO(1-0) and CI(P-P) observations and
examine how the variations influence the resulting emission distributions. To
characterize differences between the datasets, we perform statistical
measurements, identify diagnostics sensitive to our chemistry parameters, and
quantify the statistic responses by using a variety of distance metrics. We
find that multiple turbulent statistics are sensitive not only to the chemical
complexity but also to the strength of the background radiation field. The
statistics with meaningful responses include principal component analysis,
spatial power spectrum and bicoherence. A few of the statistics, such as the
velocity coordinate spectrum, are primarily sensitive to the type of tracer
being utilized, while others, like the delta-variance, strongly respond to the
background radiation field. Collectively, these findings indicate that more
realistic chemistry impacts the responses of turbulent statistics and is
necessary for accurate statistical comparisons between models and observed
molecular clouds.Comment: 27 pages, 21 figures, accepted to Ap
Acute optogenetic silencing of orexin/hypocretin neurons induces slow wave sleep in mice
Orexin/hypocretin neurons have a crucial role in the regulation of sleep and wakefulness. To help determine how these neurons promote wakefulness, we generated transgenic mice in which orexin neurons expressed halorhodopsin (orexin/Halo mice), an orange light-activated neuronal silencer. Slice patch-clamp recordings of orexin neurons that expressed halorhodopsin demonstrated that orange light photic illumination immediately hyperpolarized membrane potential and inhibited orexin neuron discharge in proportion to illumination intensity. Acute silencing of orexin neurons in vivo during the day (the inactive period) induced synchronization of the electroencephalogram and a reduction in amplitude of the electromyogram that is characteristic of slow-wave sleep (SWS). In contrast, orexin neuron photoinhibition was ineffective during the night (active period). Acute photoinhibition of orexin neurons during the day in orexin/Halo mice also reduced discharge of neurons in an orexin terminal field, the dorsal raphe (DR) nucleus. However, serotonergic DR neurons exhibited normal discharge rates in mice lacking orexin neurons. Thus, although usually highly dependent on orexin neuronal activity, serotonergic DR neuronal activity can be regulated appropriately in the chronic absence of orexin input. Together, these results demonstrate that acute inhibition of orexin neurons results in time-of-day-dependent induction of SWS and in reduced firing rate of neurons in an efferent projection site thought to be involved in arousal state regulation. The results presented here advance our understanding of the role of orexin neurons in the regulation of sleep/wakefulness and may be relevant to the mechanisms that underlie symptom progression in narcolepsy.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01NS057464
Rosetta Brains: A Strategy for Molecularly-Annotated Connectomics
We propose a neural connectomics strategy called Fluorescent In-Situ
Sequencing of Barcoded Individual Neuronal Connections (FISSEQ-BOINC),
leveraging fluorescent in situ nucleic acid sequencing in fixed tissue
(FISSEQ). FISSEQ-BOINC exhibits different properties from BOINC, which relies
on bulk nucleic acid sequencing. FISSEQ-BOINC could become a scalable approach
for mapping whole-mammalian-brain connectomes with rich molecular annotations
Dynamic Stability Instrumentation System (DSIS)
The paper is an operating manual for the Dynamic Stability Instrumentation System in specific NASA Langley wind tunnels. The instrumentation system performs either a synchronous demodulation or a Fast Fourier Transform on dynamic balance strain gage signals, and ultimately computes aerodynamic coefficients. The dynamic balance converts sting motor rotation into pitch or yaw plane or roll axis oscillation, with timing information provided by a shaft encoder. Additional instruments control model attitude and balance temperature and monitor sting vibrations. Other instruments perform self-calibration and diagnostics. Procedures for conducting calibrations and wind-off and wind-on tests are listed
Dopamine Neuron-Specific Optogenetic Stimulation in Rhesus Macaques.
Optogenetic studies in mice have revealed new relationships between well-defined neurons and brain functions. However, there are currently no means to achieve the same cell-type specificity in monkeys, which possess an expanded behavioral repertoire and closer anatomical homology to humans. Here, we present a resource for cell-type-specific channelrhodopsin expression in Rhesus monkeys and apply this technique to modulate dopamine activity and monkey choice behavior. These data show that two viral vectors label dopamine neurons with greater than 95% specificity. Infected neurons were activated by light pulses, indicating functional expression. The addition of optical stimulation to reward outcomes promoted the learning of reward-predicting stimuli at the neuronal and behavioral level. Together, these results demonstrate the feasibility of effective and selective stimulation of dopamine neurons in non-human primates and a resource that could be applied to other cell types in the monkey brain.This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust (Principal Research Fellowship and Programme Grant 095495), European Research Council (ERC Advanced Grant 293549), and NIH Caltech Conte Center (P50MH094258)
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