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UTSA Neuroscience
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 5 ต.ค. 2020
We are a campus-wide community of researchers at the University of Texas San Antonio who are engaged in discovering the neural bases of experience, behavior and disease. This channel shares scientific events sponsored by the UTSA Neurosciences Institute, including video casts of the long running Neuroscientists Talk Shop podcast and our annual research symposia. See our website for information our investigators' research; the neuroscience training programs UTSA offers to undergraduates, and in masters and doctoral studies; and the resources, events and activities we host that support scientific rigor and training excellence in our neuroscience research community.
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Jonathan Fadok on freezing or escape from danger
On November 21, 2024 we spoke with Jonathan Fadok on the brain circuits that choose whether an animal will freeze or try to escape in the presence of a dangerous stimulus.
Guest:
Jonathan Fadok, Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology and the Brain Institute at Tulane University.
Participating:
Tony Burgos-Robles, Department of Neuroscience, Developmental and Regenerative Biology, UTSA
Matt Wanat, Department of Neuroscience, Developmental and Regenerative Biology, UTSA
Host:
Charles Wilson, Department of Neuroscience, Developmental and Regenerative Biology, UTSA
NTS 299
Guest:
Jonathan Fadok, Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology and the Brain Institute at Tulane University.
Participating:
Tony Burgos-Robles, Department of Neuroscience, Developmental and Regenerative Biology, UTSA
Matt Wanat, Department of Neuroscience, Developmental and Regenerative Biology, UTSA
Host:
Charles Wilson, Department of Neuroscience, Developmental and Regenerative Biology, UTSA
NTS 299
มุมมอง: 17
วีดีโอ
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Claudio Punzo on age-related macular degeneration
มุมมอง 56วันที่ผ่านมา
On November 14, 2024 we spoke with Claudio Punzo on the metabolic interdependence of the retinal pigment epithelium and the photoreceptors of the retina, and its implications for the degenerative process in macular degeneration Guest: Claudio Punzo, Associate Professor in the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Science at the University of Massachusetts Medical School Participating: Erika Ta...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Carlos Bassetto on the operation of ion channels
มุมมอง 13114 วันที่ผ่านมา
On November 7, 2024 we spoke with Carlos Bassetto about the relationship between molecular structure and functional states of the ion channels that underly all electrical signals in the nervous system. Guest: Carlos Bassetto, Assistant Professor, Department of Physics and Astronomy, UTSA Participating: Fidel Santamaria, Department of Neuroscience, Developmental and Regenerative Biology, UTSA Ho...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Raju Metherate on nicotine and auditory processing
มุมมอง 11721 วันที่ผ่านมา
On October 31, 2024 we spoke with Raju Metherate, on the sites of action of nicotine in the auditory pathway and the mechanism by which it enhances cortical responses to sound. Guest: Raju Metherate, Professor, Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, University of California, Irvine Participating: Alfonso Apicella, Department of Neuroscience, Developmental and Regenerative Biology, UTSA Host C...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Eric Fortune on active sensation in electric fish
มุมมอง 345หลายเดือนก่อน
On October 17, 2024 we talked with Eric Fortune about the electric field sensory system in weakly electric fish and its function in social communication, predation and spatial localization. Eric explained how his collaboration with engineers and application of control systems opened a window on the function of the animal's movement in this sensory system. Guest: Eric Fortune, Associate Professo...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Ranmal Samarasinghe on cortical assembloids and seizure disorders.
มุมมอง 49หลายเดือนก่อน
On October 10, 2024 we met with Ranmal Samarasinghe to talk about the use of cortical assembloids, three-dimensional cultures containing both excitatory and inhibitory neurons. to explore the development and function of the cerebral cortex. Guest: Ranmal Samarasinghe, an Assistant Professor in the Department of Neurology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. Participating: Sara Mirsad...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Jones Parker on the mechanism of action of antipsychotic drugs
มุมมอง 45หลายเดือนก่อน
On September 26, 2024 we spoke with Jones Parker about dopamine receptors, the changes in neuronal activity produced by various antipsychotic drugs, and their relationship to antipsychotic efficacy in humans. Our video feed went wrong in this one, but the audio is good. Have a listen. Guest: Jones Parker, Assistant Professor in the Departments of Neuroscience, Pharmacology, Psychiatry, and Beha...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Andy Groves on repairing the auditory epithelium
มุมมอง 133หลายเดือนก่อน
On September 23, 2024 we met with Andy Groves to discuss the inner ear and hearing loss, why we can't regenerate our auditory receptors, and how we might someday be able to rebuild our auditory epithelium using gene therapy. Guest: Andy Groves, Professor and Vivian L Smith Endowed Chair in Neuroscience, Departments of Neuroscience and Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine. Pa...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Brian Lundstrom on neural activity and epilepsy
มุมมอง 362 หลายเดือนก่อน
On September 12, 2024 we got to talk with Brian Lundstrom about the origin of epilepsy, the use of electrical recordings in its diagnosis, and brain stimulation as a treatment. Brian explained the difficulties of inferring cortical network function from EEG signals, and the problem of studying a disease whose symptoms manifest rarely and intermittently. Guest: Brian Lundstrom, Associate Profess...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Marina Silveira on the brain's auditory pathways
มุมมอง 1482 หลายเดือนก่อน
On September 9, 2024 we got to talk to Marina Silveira about the inferior colliculus, its place in the auditory pathway, and the effort to understand its cellular makeup, internal structure, and auditory functions. Guest: Marina Silveira, Assistant Professor, Department of Neuroscience, Developmental and Regenerative Biology, UTSA Host: Charles Wilson, Department of Neuroscience, Developmental ...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Melanie Carless on Epigenetics of Alzheimer's Disease
มุมมอง 2422 หลายเดือนก่อน
On August 29, 2024 we spoke with Melanie Carless about cellular models of Alzheimer's disease generated using direct programming of brain cells from fibroblasts derived from patients, which can be used to find epigenetic signatures of the disease. Guest: Melanie Carless, Associate Professor, Department of Neuroscience, Developmental and Regenerative Biology, UTSA Participating: Uchit Bhaskar, D...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Skirmantas Janusonis on the web of brain serotonin axons
มุมมอง 1186 หลายเดือนก่อน
On May 2, 2024 we spoke with Skirmantas Janusonis on the peculiar morphology and spatial distribution of the serotonin innervation of the brain, and his idea that it can be described using the mathematics of fractional Brownian motion. We consider the kind of developmental mechanisms that could be responsible. Guest: Skirmantas Janusonis, Associate Professor, Department of Psychological and Bra...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Epigenetics and Neurodevelopment Symposium Panel Discussion
มุมมอง 2996 หลายเดือนก่อน
On April 25, 2024, we met with the 5 speakers for this year's Annual Neuroscience Symposium at UTSA to discuss epigenetics and nervous system development. We discussed the best-known molecular mechanisms that control patterns of gene expression and current limitations faced in studies of those mechanisms. We also discussed the promise of epigenetics to explain the differentiation of nervous sys...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Nancy Philp on retinal metabolism
มุมมอง 487 หลายเดือนก่อน
On April 18, 2024, we spoke with Nancy Philp about the blood supply to the retina and the cells and membrane transporters that deliver glucose and lactate to photoreceptors and other cells for glycolytic and aerobic metabolism. Guest: Nancy Philp, Professor, Department of Pathology and Genomic Medicine, Sidney Kimmel Medical School, Thomas Jefferson University Participating: Erica Tatiana Camac...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Kara Marshall on mechanoreceptors and the internal senses
มุมมอง 1297 หลายเดือนก่อน
On April 4, 2024 we had a chance to talk to Kara Marshall about the membrane protein PIEZO2, which is responsible for sensory transduction of many of the mechanical senses, including light touch, vibration, and proprioception. We especially focused on its function in sensing internal pressure and movement, including bladder pressure and blood pressure. Guest: Kara Marshall, Assistant Professor,...
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Dennis Sparta on understanding circuitry of reward
มุมมอง 698 หลายเดือนก่อน
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Dennis Sparta on understanding circuitry of reward
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Lynn Dobrunz on neuropeptide Y and anxiety
มุมมอง 1598 หลายเดือนก่อน
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Lynn Dobrunz on neuropeptide Y and anxiety
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Dwight Bergles on spontaneous activity in the developing auditory system
มุมมอง 1368 หลายเดือนก่อน
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Dwight Bergles on spontaneous activity in the developing auditory system
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Janko Gospocic on gene expression and social behavior
มุมมอง 4079 หลายเดือนก่อน
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Janko Gospocic on gene expression and social behavior
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Yarimar Carrasquillo on brain circuits for pain
มุมมอง 1109 หลายเดือนก่อน
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Yarimar Carrasquillo on brain circuits for pain
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Josh Neunuebel on social vocal communication in mice
มุมมอง 809 หลายเดือนก่อน
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Josh Neunuebel on social vocal communication in mice
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Lori Holt on perception of speech sounds
มุมมอง 2859 หลายเดือนก่อน
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Lori Holt on perception of speech sounds
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Michael Long on language and vocalization from birds to humans.
มุมมอง 22410 หลายเดือนก่อน
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Michael Long on language and vocalization from birds to humans.
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Itamar Lerner on sleep and learning
มุมมอง 18010 หลายเดือนก่อน
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Itamar Lerner on sleep and learning
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Rebecca Shansky on brain circuits of fear learning.
มุมมอง 9611 หลายเดือนก่อน
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Rebecca Shansky on brain circuits of fear learning.
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Erica Korb on histone modifications and variants.
มุมมอง 13011 หลายเดือนก่อน
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Erica Korb on histone modifications and variants.
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Ben Clark on grid cells, place cells and cognitive maps.
มุมมอง 166ปีที่แล้ว
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Ben Clark on grid cells, place cells and cognitive maps.
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: MacKenzie Howard on neuropathology of Dravet syndrome epilepsy.
มุมมอง 93ปีที่แล้ว
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: MacKenzie Howard on neuropathology of Dravet syndrome epilepsy.
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Jose Rodriguez-Romaguera on brain circuits for arousal
มุมมอง 51ปีที่แล้ว
Neuroscientists Talk Shop: Jose Rodriguez-Romaguera on brain circuits for arousal
It isn't age-related. It didn't exist 100 years ago. It's diet-related. Get those vegetable oils out of your diet!
This is great, thank you
notes for this interesting conversation: Transcranial electric stimulation, TES, probably changes the spike threshold by half a millivolt or so. Very small amount! How does DBS (100-200 Hz, 90-160 microseconds) work? Nobody knows for sure. One possible mechanism is: "ionic currents in the extracellular space" instead of "affecting the membrane potential". People agree that some stimulation causes some neurons to fire. It is not that you are silencing neurons. We want spatial specificity and long-lasting plastic changes.
Disclaimer: I'm a science writer with focus on linguistics and cognition from an Evolutionary Biology perspective. Anyway, I think I can solve this problem from this Cross-discipline. First, I think it would be helpful to remember the original use of the phrase in its entirety is more limiting. While "Cognitive Map" alone removes itself from the confines of Neuroscience, since "Cognition" is a basic Human Function. (I focus on Public Domain Meta Human Research.) Even so, the more limiting complete Original "Cognitive Map of Location" may not be limiting enough, but it does have two critical self-limiting linguistic clues that define it functionally - it's singular in two places, both Map and Location. This limiting linguistic feature has gotten confused by lack of explicit examination to mean its opposite intent of a *UNIVERSAL* Map of Location. This is of course impossible, but that is what is the point of confusion being expressed without being caught by a writing coach-advisor. Secondly, the Original Term is implicitly tied to Hippocampus "tissues", known to be the seat of (per-se) memory based thought. When seen in this way we start with a more focused perspective and can better appreciate the significance of the findings, as shedding light on the details of how this works. Finally, after going through this I can suggest a first pin of redirection by using the Adverb "MAPPING" instead of the Noun Map. Thus "Cognitive Mapping of Location" I think "nails" the actual mouse-out process.
First
Thank you for a great conversation. Short neuropeptide F, an ortholog of NPY plays a critical role in sleep, and calcium-phases in Drosophila. Understanding the patterns of neural activity required to trigger the release of both neuropeptides and small-molecule neurotransmitters in vertebrates (e.g., NPY) or insects (Neuropeptide F) is a difficult task. The release of these neuropeptides, driven by different Ca2-dependent signals that reflect firing pattern-dependency, appears to be a general feature of co-localization and co-transmission!
Great episode! Two of my favourite cellular systems thinkers discussing their thoughts about subcortical systems. You love to see it!
Go SAVA
Thank you for the great conversation! It is fascinating how analogous networks (endocrine and genetic?) in very distant social species shape the main aspects of social behavior, social status, and their effects on longevity. Yes, oxytocin expressed in the ant brain may have the same function (creating social bonds) as in humans. However, there are also differences. For example, workers initiate a tournament after the death of their queen, during which they engage in aggressive behaviors, like antennal dueling. Shared dominance and negotiation help to lower the level of aggression. The violent nature of dueling contrasts with the behaviors of some vertebrates that foster shared dominance. This is very intriguing.
Awesome.....
Google Lara Hwa. Her field is rife with bullshitters. Herbert Fingarette had it right.
This is so fascinating! Thank you.
P R O M O S M 😣
It's been pointed out (and unfortunately I don't remember by whom) that the brain itself resides in a quiet, dark, closed space and, in and of itself, does not "know" anything either. The brain receives nerve signals from the rest of the body, and never actually hears, sees or touches anything. My study (many years ago) of Ludwig Wittgenstein's later work leads me to suggest that only the human (or other animal) organism as a whole can properly be said to "know" the world. But Wittgenstein might have discouraged us from persistently asking such questions, as he would probably say they are unanswerable. Since ChatGPT came out, I've been studying its operation intensively, including how it is constructed internally. Based on that study, and my observations of what it does, I think ChatGPT is probably reading, writing and learning similarly to the way our brains do. However, it seems clear that the brain does not actually use, for example, "back-propagation" in anything like the physical way these language models strengthen or weaken connection weights between artificial neurons, though the net effect appears be the same in many respects.
Thanks for that comment. It is possible to argue that "meaning" is less than we sometimes think it is, and a machine that knows language but has no experience in the world (and no associations of the words with perceptions and actions) knows the meanings of the words just as well as we do, just by their associations with other words. In that case what we call meanings might be only clusters of related words. That is one of the possibilities we meant to consider. One of Kara's points was the possibility that meanings (as associations of words with memories of perceptions and actions, not just other words) might be very beneficial in language comprehension and production.
@@utsaneuro Thank you for your reply. I was deeply surprised, shocked really, by ChatGPT's abilities. I firmly believed that no entity without some human experience would ever be able to process and create text that well. Maybe It should have been obvious to me before that any pattern that is present in a text corpus could potentially be imitated in new text. What still amazes me is that a machine could learn exactly when to imitate what, so that meaning so well seems to portray understanding of what a conversation partner is, well, thinking. Encountering ChatGPT by way of a lot of sometimes intense dialog now leads me to wonder what our own human language abilities really signify. I'm hoping to reach some conclusions about that in time. For now I'm still pretty flabbergasted.
Yes, Professor Chang, as you said we are highly competitive primates. We want to be tigers and winners and not lose a milligram of juice. Nobody wants to be a sheep; few wants to be a bird and fly in neuroscience or neuro-AI at a responsible pace. Even our "pro-social" neurons (for oxytocin and dopamine) compete with our "anti-social" neurons (amygdala?) in a paradoxical way (Gómez, Gómez, Restrepo 2012). The discipline of mathematics and science should not give us success, grants, power, "juice" or happiness but the moral condition to deserve it.
great conversation and very interesting complexity of multiple nested levels of antagonistic effects! Can reinforcement learning describe them as dopamine-dependent desinhibitions? : short-range mutual inhibition between D1R-D2R within a local functional unit for a motor pattern selection; large-range antagonism between D1-D1, D2-D2 to inhibit non selected actions (see Veronica Alvarez video); cortical effects of Dynorphin vs. Enkephalin to slow down/ speed up execution; aversive /elusive vs. pro-motivational / social behaviors (see my sister model with oxytocin Gómez 2012, 😊)! 😁
Dr. Starr gives people with movement disorders a new lease on life. Dr. Starr is a miracle performing surgeon. Dr. Starr is a fantastic human being and it was an honor and a pleasure to meet Dr. Starr. I was told, nothing can be done to help you, that was until I met Dr. Starr - who skillfully solved the problem performing surgery, other surgeons said was not possible. Until I met Dr. Starr, I thought I was just another statistic. Thank you 🙏 Dr. Starr, for giving me my life back.
Super interesting conversation. Thank you for sharing. Notes to research further: Para brachial / hyper polarize GABA (I always thought GABA was very positive; curious about the thought process re: suppressing it) Locus Cerrilius (sp?) Neuropeptides Corticotropus releasing factor=(-)?
Protein accumulations: when are they toxic or physiological? It depends on their size, their surface, cell activity at that moment/age and other protein accumulations that can induce compensation in the first ones! Alzheimer's disease is, then, not caused when one or two proteins (e.g. Tau, amyloid) reach certain rigid levels of accumulation (oligomers of certain size) but when these levels are relatively inappropriate to each other, so they become toxic... It is what I can understand, at least (😁)... great debate; thanks to all!
Are there videos of the seminars preceding the podcasts? Sometimes its hard to follow the conversation without having been able to attend the talk.
Sorry, our seminar series is not recorded. We try to fill in enough background, but the topics are technical and it is sometimes difficult.
great 👍 handling of the deepest problems on the nature of probability, randomness and noise...! An issue that touch the hard of quantum physics (e.g. radioactive decay, Heisenberg's principle) and the biophysics of neurons (Po in ion channels, statistics of spontaneous neurotransmitter release and firing)! "Frequentis" believe in objective ratios and statistical distributions, whereas "Bayesian" believe only in arbitrary, subjective priors! An issue that James Bower pointed out at the Alamo-meeting, San Antonio, TX, in his critical view about non biologically realistic models... randomness: is it a intrinsic property of neural oscillations (R. Llinás) or is it only our ignorance of unknown subthreshold fluctuations? You have all noticed the big problem we are having in Biomedicine with reproducibility and the arbitrary threshold of p-values... great conversation, congratulations to all for the beauty of mathematical debate that emerged!
Thanks. This is a large topic, I know we can only scratch the surface.
A new and complex astrocyte-network biochemistry that adjust gain and neural electric circuitry: activation/inhibition of astrocytes, calcium waves that responds to neural activity and regulate synapses, NO/ROS release for synaptic-specific action, calcium events en astrocytes that diverge to specific neurons, cortical-layer specificity of glia function, glia regulation of circuits, unknown neurochemical substances released between astrocytes generating calcium oscillations!! ...exploring all of this by using virus that propagate in axons and astrocytes!
The dynamics of actin is so hard to understand that its role in stable pathological process can be more mysterious...!
This is so true. A better understanding of actin dynamics in general would be very beneficial for understanding cell pathology.
great, thanks!! (algorithm vs data...what is the neural implementation of it? spikes, connections, networks, phase? )
Yes, exactly. Those are our questions too! We will be looking for more answers (and more questions) as we go along.
Thank you so much for this talk. Very interesting, very informative. Really nicely explained, no visual aids was necessary. I wonder if cannabis and other taste enhancing drugs would affect the brainstem using the same connections.
great talk! not sure if the brain is, or is not, one or many equations but the more simple change of a single molecule or ion channel can be linked to a computation or mathematical operation. In a broad sense, math is about structures, concepts and logic, and it will give us a very beautiful light on what we are!
I have friend who has ONLY working neural organoid model - patented. He has all biomarkers for all CNS diseases. FYI, microglia are critical. Nothing will ever be published to protect trade secrets but the data already exists and patent is public record.
Very thoughtful and interesting!
Thanks! Stay tuned, we have a great lineup of discussions coming for the Fall
Smartest biologist I know says the genome is only biological entity which is 1st cause of behavior and has any agency.
Reminds me how far we are away from coherent ideas/models of lab animal behavior so primates-humans? We are a looooong ways away - centuries? Decades for sure.
Good lord, can we get a real mic next time!? My go to for all brain > behavior matters is Paul Cizek in Montreal. Gee, what happened to the old "representation" models? Of course, all this must be coded in the genome, across time and cells, by definition. Can't wait until we move from brain tissue/phenotype analysis to genomics.
Thanks
"New data suggests 1 in 44 US children affected by autism"
Boy this all is a loooooong ways away from clinical applications...al that taxpayer money...poor overloaded clinicians get ...? Paul Cizek in Montreal has pointed out that mouse brains/behavior without predators present is entirely different from what the mouse genome evolved for.
🕊
Are all these mouse models? Doesn't the "memory" have to be encoded in the genome and transcriptome? Mouse genome will not translate to humans.