Episodes
Friday Jun 18, 2021
The Neurocene-Exploring Developments in the Field of Neuroscience
Friday Jun 18, 2021
Friday Jun 18, 2021
In this podcast Editor in Chief Nino Ramirez and Associate Editor Prof. John Krakauer discuss JNP’s new manuscript type the Neurocene. The Neurocene is a narrative that explores accelerating developments in the field of neuroscience, placing them in their historical and present context. Authors should provide a personalized and thoughtful viewpoint of a topic that does not seek to either provide definitive proof or a final conclusion.
This long-form scientific essay may focus on cultural currents, books and biography, philosophy and the history of science, and on puzzles, paradoxes, and controversies within the field of neuroscience itself. The article is meant to be inclusive, and the only stipulation is that the essay be written with longevity in mind - they should be read with equal pleasure and interest decades after their publication date.
For more information on the Journal of Neurophysiology's manuscript types click here: https://journals.physiology.org/jn/article-types
#neuroscience
Friday Jun 11, 2021
Friday Jun 11, 2021
In this podcast Editor in Chief Nino Ramirez and senior author, Professor Haouzi of Pennsylvania State University discuss the paper titled “Respiratory effects of low and high doses of fentanyl in control and β-arrestin 2 deficient mice”. When life-threatening doses of fentanyl are used in mice, the beta-arrestin2 pathway appears to play a critical role in the recovery from an opioid overdose. This observation calls into question the use of G protein-biased μ-opioid receptor agonists, as a strategy for safer opioid analgesic drugs.
Check out the article here: https://journals.physiology.org/doi/abs/10.1152/jn.00711.2020
#neuroscience
Wednesday Jun 02, 2021
The effect of visual uncertainty on implicit motor adaptation
Wednesday Jun 02, 2021
Wednesday Jun 02, 2021
What is sensorimotor adaptation? Why do the authors use this term rather than motor learning? What are some of the key features of sensorimotor adaptation, and in particular, why is the focus here on error-based learning? How do the author's results change the way we think about how visual uncertainty impacts adaptation?
Out of the University of California, Professor Richard Ivry and JT Tsay discuss their recently published manuscript titled “The effect of visual uncertainty on implicit motor adaptation.” Sensorimotor adaptation is influenced by both the size and variance of error information. In the present study, we varied visual uncertainty and error size in a factorial manner and evaluated their joint effect on adaptation, using a feedback method that avoids inherent limitations with standard visuomotor tasks. Uncertainty attenuated adaptation but only when the error was small. This striking interaction highlights a novel constraint for models of sensorimotor adaptation.
Check out the article here: https://journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/jn.00493.2020
#neuroscience #JNPPodcastSeries
Tuesday May 25, 2021
Music-selective neural populations arise without musical training
Tuesday May 25, 2021
Tuesday May 25, 2021
What features of a sound does the brain perceive as a pitch? What is the role of rhythm in music? In this podcast Dr. Nancy Kanwisher ( Massachusetts Institute of Technology) and PhD candidate Dana Boebinger (Harvard University) discuss how music-selective neural populations are clearly present in people without musical training, demonstrating that they are a fundamental and widespread property of the human brain. The authors then discuss how music-selective neural populations respond strongly to music from unfamiliar genres as well as music with rhythm but little pitch information, suggesting that they are broadly responsive to music as a whole.
Read the article here: https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00588.2020
#neuroscience
Friday May 21, 2021
Friday May 21, 2021
In this podcast Editor in Chief Nino Ramirez discusses JNP’s new article type Neurovision with Prof. John Krakauer of Johns Hopkins University and Prof. Reza Shadmehr of Johns Hopkins University. Neurovision articles aim to move science forward and point out bottlenecks in our understanding of the field. They resemble review articles, but with the inclusion of original data. The presence of new original data is meant to inspire new experiments and ideas. These articles will serve as blueprints, and guides for future research. JNP is inviting leading neuroscientists to write articles in this format, which will serve as templates moving forward.
For more information on the Journal of Neurophysiology's manuscript types click here: https://journals.physiology.org/jn/article-types
#neuroscience
Friday May 07, 2021
Spatial receptive field structure of double-opponent cells in macaque V1
Friday May 07, 2021
Friday May 07, 2021
In this podcast Dr. Greg Horwitz of the University of Washington discuses double-opponent cells in macaque area V1, a class of neurons that respond to spatial chromatic contrast in visual scenes. What information they carry is debated because their receptive field organization has not been characterized thoroughly. Using white noise analysis and statistical model comparisons, De and Horwitz show that many double-opponent receptive fields can be captured by either a Gabor model or a center-with-an-asymmetric-surround model but not by a difference-of-Gaussians model.
Read the article here:
https://journals.physiology.org/doi/abs/10.1152/jn.00547.2020
Friday Mar 12, 2021
Friday Mar 12, 2021
In this episode Editor in Chief Prof. Ramirez is joined by Prof Stroh of the University of Mainz and Prof. Totah of the University of Helsinki to discus the manuscript titled "Synchronous spiking associated with prefrontal high gamma oscillations evokes a 5 Hz-rhythmic modulation of spiking in locus coeruleus." Prof. Nelson Totah highlights the main conceptual advances in their paper and talks about what motivated them to focus on top down control exerted by PFC on LC. The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is thought to control activity in the noradrenergic locus coeruleus (LC). Prior anatomical and prefrontal stimulation studies demonstrated the potential for PFC-LC interactions; however, it is unknown what types of PFC activity affect the LC. In this podcast, the author talks about the transient increases in PFC high gamma power and associated changes in PFC unit-pair synchrony that are a potential sign of top-down control over the LC.
Nelson K. Totah, Nikos K. Logothetis, Oxana Eschenko
Also discussed: McCormick, D. A., Nestvogel, D. B. & He, B. J. Neuromodulation of Brain State and Behavior. Annu Rev Neurosci 43, 1–25 (2020)
Wednesday Mar 03, 2021
Development and plasticity of complex movement representations
Wednesday Mar 03, 2021
Wednesday Mar 03, 2021
The topographic organization of skilled movements seem to be particularly plastic. The author describes how they addressed this issue in their study, and what methods they used. The motor cortex is topographically organized into maps of different body parts. We used to think that the function of motor cortex was to drive individual muscles, but more recently we have learned that it is also organized to make complex movements. In this podcast Prof. Cam Teskey of the University of Calgary discuses in detail the emergence and topography of complex movement representation, as well as their plasticity during development.
#neuroscience #JNPPodcastSeries
https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00531.2020
Friday Feb 26, 2021
The execution of movement - a spinal affair
Friday Feb 26, 2021
Friday Feb 26, 2021
What does it take to recover walking after a spinal cord injury? If you could replicate this supraspinal control – what aspects would you need? In this podcast Prof Sten Grillner talks about the spinal mechanisms that coordinate locomotion and the interaction between the different sensory mechanisms that help coordinate the locomotor movements and the central locomotor network.
Sten Grillner
https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00656.2020 @neuroscience
Tuesday Feb 16, 2021
Regulation of Vocal Precision by Noradrenergic Modulation of a Motor Nucleus
Tuesday Feb 16, 2021
Tuesday Feb 16, 2021
In this podcast, Editor-in-Chief, Nino Ramirez talks with Dr. Marc Schmidt (University of Pennsylvania) about his Research Article which explores recent theories of norepinephrine (NE) function regarding the stimulation of the norepinephrine function that NE can act directly on the motor system to influence the transition between exploratory and exploitative behavioral strategies. Learn how the songbird can act directly on a "cortical" motor area and cause a switch between exploratory and exploitative behavior. Read the article:
"Regulation of vocal precision by noradrenergic modulation of a motor nucleus"
Marc F Schmidt, Zachary Phillip Sheldon, Christina B. Castelino, Chris M. Glaze, Steve Bibu, Elvina Yau
https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00154.2020