Ort: MPI für Kognitions- und Neurowissenschaften

Prof. Gabriele Lohmann | Reproducibility, statistical inference and network analysis in fMRI at 3 Tesla and beyond

Gastvortrag

Dr Moritz Köster | Neuronal oscillations as a tool to investigate cognitive processes in adults and children

Gastvortrag

Natalie Schaworonkow | Computational modeling of the effects of transcranial magnetic stimulation

Gastvortrag
Transcranial magnetic stimulation is a promising technique for non-invasive therapeutic treatment of psychiatric and neurological conditions. However, the same stimulation protocol can elicit opposing effects on excitability and plasticity in different subjects. The effects of TMS on neural circuits remain poorly understood, which hinders the development of maximally effective stimulation protocols. In this talk, I discuss computational modeling approaches to understanding the high variability of TMS effects. Detailed electrical field modeling combined with compartmental model neurons can reveal subject-specific excitability response differences to TMS. Additionally, taking spontaneous oscillatory activity into account yields a phase-dependency in a model of TMS-induced I-waves, showing that ongoing brain activity can contribute to observed variability. [mehr]

Sofie L. Valk | The structure of the social brain

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Prof. Yaniv Assaf | The CONNECTOME: structure, function and evolution

Gastvortrag

Tomás Goucha | Conciliating crosslinguistic differences with a universal language faculty in brain structure and function

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Bharath Chandrasekaran, PhD | Neural systems in auditory and speech categorization

Gastvortrag

Dr Falk Eippert | Deconstructing pain processing in the human spinal cord

Gastvortrag
The spinal cord is not only the first part of the central nervous system where somatosensory information is processed, but also plays a substantial role in both acute and chronic forms of pain. Imaging this structure with fMRI faces several unique challenges, but has recently become feasible. Here, I will present several studies that investigate the spinal cord’s resting-state organization, its evoked responses to noxious stimulation and a modulation thereof due to cognitive manipulations. Having laid this ground-work, I will present current and planned studies that are based on the theory of predictive coding and aim to deconstruct the spinal cord pain response into prediction and prediction error signals. My hope is that this will allow for a more mechanistically informed understanding of pain in both its healthy and pathological form. [mehr]

Prof. Stefan Th. Gries | On the interface of corpus linguistics and psycholinguistics

Gastvortrag
For many years, corpus linguistics (the study of language based on ideally large databases of naturally-occurring language) on the one hand and theoretical and/or psycholinguistics on the other have existed side by side, with relatively little contact and mutual influence. Over the last 15-20 or so years, this has changed considerable: theoretical analyses as well as psycholinguistic, or more generally cognitively-inspired, studies now regularly use corpus data; particularly corpus frequencies are often used to, for instance, explain (aspects of) phenomena such language acquisition, processing, and change, or to merely control experimental stimuli with regard to their frequencies in psycholinguistic experimentation. In the first part of this talk, I will first discuss a few aspects in which I believe corpus data have more to offer to researchers who wish to establish a connection between corpus data and psycholinguistic or cognitive mechanisms; in the second part, I will discuss a case study from learner corpus research on _that_-complementation that showcases (i) recently-developed quantitative approaches in corpus linguistics in general as well as (ii) the application of one of several information-theoretic predictors in corpus-based studies of linguistic alternations. [mehr]

Dr Elmar Laistler | The Vienna RF Lab - coil & simulation technology off the beaten track

Gastvortrag
Elmar Laistler graduated in Physics at Vienna University of Technology, Austria, in 2005 and pursued his PhD at University of Paris South and the Medical University of Vienna, receiving his PhD degree from Vienna University of Technology in 2011. During the last year of his thesis, he founded the Radio Frequency Lab at the Medical University, has worked as a guest researcher at Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt Berlin, and has since gathered a team of 8 people. His research focus lies on ultra-high field MR instrumentation, especially non-standard RF coil & simulation concepts, as well as RF safety for parallel transmission. [mehr]

Itamar Ronen, PhD | Diffusion of intracellular metabolites: A cell preferential probe for microstructure and physiology

Gastvortrag

Professor Andrea Kupfer Schneider | Navigating career paths and leadership for women in academia

Workshop

Prof. Dr Lila Davachi | The life of a memory: post-encoding reactivation and reorganization of episodic memory

Gastvortrag

Prof. Kevin Ochsner | Emotion and emotion regulation: From the self to social contexts

Gastvortrag

Prof. Roberto Cabeza | Memory networks and representations

Gastvortrag

Prof. Cristiano Chesi | A competence-based (Top-Down) model for parsing (complex) non-local dependencies

Gastvortrag

Dr Maxim Zaitsev | New Frontiers in MR Imaging

Gastvortrag

PD Dr Valerij G. Kiselev | Diffusion MRI -- Quo vadis?

Gastvortrag

Dr Christian Gaser | Computational Anatomy

Gastvortrag

Prof. Sascha Fruehholz | Neural system for perceiving and producing affective vocalizations

Gastvortrag

Dr Dimo Ivanov | Developments and applications for (ultra) high field neuroimaging

Gastvortrag

Jason Samaha | Oscillatory dynamics supporting visual attention and awareness

Gastvortrag

Dr Veronica Witte | Central mechanisms of obesity and obesity-associated brain damage

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Prof. Trevor W. Robbins | Attention to Action: Fronto-striatal Substrates of Impulsivity and Compulsivity

Gastvortrag

Philipp Haueis | What the brain does by itself A patchwork approach to endogenous brain activity in resting state functional connectivity research

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Meghan Puglia | Epigenetic regulation of brain signal complexity in infancy

Gastvortrag (intern)

Prof. Matt Lambon Ralph | Semantic representation and its disorders

Gastvortrag

Prof. Josiane Broussard | "Pathways linking insufficient sleep to obesity and diabetes risk"

Gastvortrag

Dr. Christine Michel, Ezgi Kayhan & Miriam Langeloh | Face-to-face and brain-to-brain: Hyperscanning in live social interactions

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Dr Daniela Sammler | The Melodic Mind: Neural bases of intonation in speech and music

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Dr Emiliano Zaccarella | Moving beyond complexity: Neuroanatomical considerations on the linguistic merging mechanism in humans

Institutskolloquium (intern)

PhD Andrea Martin | Linking linguistic and cortical computation via hierarchy and time

Gastvortrag

Roland G. Benoit, Philipp C. Paulus, Ann-Kristin Meyer, Davide F. Stramaccia | Simulating the future and forgetting the past

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Tim Kunze | How models of canonical microcircuits implement cognitive functions

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Dr Romi Zäske | Neural correlates of voice learning and recognition

Gastvortrag
Listeners can recognize familiar speakers from their voices alone with remarkable accuracy and across a wide range of utterances. However, itis relatively unknown how, when, and under which conditions voices become familiar. Here, I will give an overview of recent EEG and fMRI studies from our lab using recognition memory paradigms to unravel the neural mechanisms of voice learning and subsequent recognition under conditions pertaining to the speech material, speaker and listener age as well as attentional factors. In two studies we showed that following learning of unfamiliar voices by means of brief sentences, voices can be recognized among novel voices, even from previously unheard sentences. This suggests the successful acquisition of speech-invariant voice representations. In the EEG, learned compared to novel voices elicited a suppression in beta-band oscillations from ~300 ms following voice onset independent of speech content, indicating the detection of newly-learned speaker identities at test. In fMRI, explicit voice recognition independent of speech content recruited both voice-sensitive cortex areas of the right superior temporal gyrus and extra-temporal areas including the right inferior frontal cortex. Furthermore, our research on the role of speaker and listener age shows that both young and old adult listeners are better at learning old compared to young voices – an effect possibly related to the distinctiveness of old voices. Finally, I will present data suggesting that successful voice recognition is enhanced by intentional learning and is partly dissociable from non-intentional learning in ERP patterns during learning (from ~250 sm) and recognition (from ~500 ms). Overall, these studies mutually show that newly-learned voices can be recognized following only a few voice repetitions by means of brief sentence stimuli, and that voice learning is modulated by characteristics of the stimulus material and top-down mechanisms as reflected both in behavioral and neurophysiological measures. [mehr]

Lorijn Zaadnoordijk, MSc | Discovering structure in the confusion: The emerging sense of agency

Gastvortrag

Frauke Beyer | Polygenetic risk for common obesity in the brain

Institutskolloquium (intern)
Embedded in an EU supported clinical trial (NISCI), we provide technical legwork concerning the setup of MRI sequences, quality assurence and data processing. The NISCI study concentrates on the treatment of spinalcord injury. Performing brain imaging within that context is supposed toserve as a new biomarker for de- and regeneration. The quantitative MRI technique of multi-parameter mapping will be the main draught horse. The application in clinical contexts requires some modifications. The most important differences to the research routine are (I) the use of vendor sequences instead of custom made ones and (II) the reduction of scanning time and resolution. To evaluate the protocol setup for consistency between and within sites (test-retest) we performed a traveling heads study with healthy subjects at four clinical sites. For processing the data we used the newly published hMRI-toolbox for quantitative MRI data (formerly VBQ-toolbox), which was further developed during the last year. In addition quality assurance scripts were designed to gain access to basic measures from specific brain regions within the processed quantitative maps. Also a promising solution for correcting susceptibility distortions from bipolar readout without the need of additional measurements (e.g. a fieldmap) will be presented. [mehr]

Prof. Gregory Kobele | Relating linguistics and the brain

Gastvortrag

PhD Jongho Lee | Imaging myelin and iron in the brain

Gastvortrag

Dr Andreas Spiegler | Stimulation in large-scale brain network models

Gastvortrag

Prof. Ursula van Rienen | Computational studies on the volume of activated tissue in deep brain stimulation

Gastvortrag

Dr Marie-Luise Brandi | Simulating social gaze: A paradigm to study gaze-based social interaction

Gastvortrag

Dr Yukie Nagai | Predictive Learning: A computational theory that accounts for social cognitive development

Gastvortrag

Dr Bernadette Van Wijk | Normal and abnormal oscillations in the cortico-basal ganglia network revealed by deep brain stimulation recordings

Gastvortrag
Deep brain stimulation treatment allows for the recording of local field potentials in the subthalamic nucleus of patients with Parkinson’s disease. This has revealed that beta band oscillations (13-30Hz) are a hallmark of the disease. In this presentation, I will first show how beta band oscillations relate to Parkinsonian symptoms. Their coupling with high-frequency oscillations (HFO, 150-400Hz) might be an important clue in order to understand how they lead to movement impairment. However, little is known about the neuronal origin of these HFO. We investigated whether they are likely to arise from the same cell populations as beta oscillations using intra-operative recordings. This involved localization of electrode contacts on post-operative MRI scans and warping to MNI space for group-level results. Finally, in the last part of the talk I will present our efforts to study the effect of dopaminergic medication on synaptic coupling strengths within the cortico-basal ganglia circuit using dynamic causal modelling. [mehr]

Dr Nicole Neef | The neural control of speech fluency – where stop meets go

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Dr Naomi Havron | Syntactic adaptation as a mechanism that drives and supports language acquisition

Gastvortrag

Prof. Ingo Bojak | Towards state and parameter estimation in neural populations models (of anaesthesia)

Gastvortrag

Linda Drijvers | The neural mechanisms of how iconic gestures boost degraded speech comprehension in native and non-native listeners

Gastvortrag

Dr Nicola Molinaro | Delta vs. theta speech entrainment: MEG evidence from typical and atypical language users

Gastvortrag

Prof. William F. Colmers | ​​NPY, Stress and Resilience

Gastvortrag
Responding to stress is adaptive for most complex organisms, aiding survival by temporarily mobilizing resources to let the organism better flee or defend itself in response to a perceived threat. Once the threat is ended, the response normally subsides, allowing the organism to pursue other key survival activities. But if the stress response never reverses, or is triggered inappropriately, as with extreme stressors such as trauma, it may lead to psychiatric disorders such as anxiety and PTSD. Some individuals, like Special Forces soldiers, are inherently resilient to most stressors. Such resilient individuals have higher levels of Neuropeptide Y (NPY) in their blood and CSF. Experimental injections of NPY into brain ventricles or into the amygdala of rodents can induce an acute resilience to stress and a prolonged (weeks to months) period of resilience with just a few repeated treatments. Conversely, the stress hormone, Corticotrophin Releasing Factor (CRF), respectively causes acute and prolonged vulnerability to stress when injected acutely or repeatedly into the same brain structures. Activity of projection neurons (PNs) in the basolateral amygdala (BLA) mediates fear and anxiety responses, and reducing PN activity reduces both. Earlier work from the Colmers and Urban laboratories demonstrated opposing actions of NPY and CRF on BLA PN excitability: NPY acutely hyperpolarized these cells, while CRF acutely depolarized them. The mechanism was unusual, in that NPY reduced a membrane ion current, the H-current (Ih), while CRF activated it. Because Ih is hyperpolarization-activated, it is active at the resting potential, so by closing Ih, NPY hyperpolarizes PNs, while CRF opening it depolarizes them. Repeated (5 x daily) injection of NPY causes stress resilience in rats (seen as increased social interaction) persisting longer than 4 weeks. BLA PNs from NPY-treated animals were hyperpolarized at 4W, exhibiting a relative marked loss of Ih and correlating with reductions in mRNA and protein levels for HCN1, the Ih channel subunit in these cells. shRNA knockdown of HCN1 in BLA caused long-term behavioral stress resilience, indicating HCN1’s role in behavior. Using a novel organotypic slice culture system of the BLA, we studied mechanisms underlying long-term changes, mimicking the repeated application of NPY and receptor-selective agonists. Briefly, NPY did reduce Ih in these cells,but more prominently reduced the extent of BLA PN dcendrites, while CRF increased them (as is known to happen in vivo both with CRF and stress). Studies in BLA from NPY-treated rats confirmed the reduction in dendritic trees in vivo. The NPY Y5 receptor mediates the long-term changes, and requires calcineurin and the autophagic pathway to do so, while the CRFR1 receptor is involved in the increase, and requires CaMKII. Because the work wasa all done in male rats, ongoing work is determining if the same actions of NPY and CRF occur in female BLA. [mehr]

Dr Christian Kell | Time after time - endogenous neural clocks serving information coding and perception

Gastvortrag

Hannah Schleihauf | Why do we imitate nonsense? The underlying motivations of overimitation

Institutskolloquium (intern)
When we demonstrate children (or adults) a sequence of visibly causally irrelevant and relevant actions to reach a goal, they tend to imitate both, the irrelevant and the relevant actions - they 'overimitate'. Strikingly, apes don't do so. It is much debated what the underlying motivations for this human-specific apparently inefficient behavior could be. Do we overimitate because we draw erroneous causal conclusions from action observations or is it rather a strategy to affiliate with another person? Do we simply try to follow a social convention or a rule? In this talk we present a set of behavioral experiments, in which we contrasted explanatory models focusing on erroneous causal reasoning or social motivations; and present a new integrative explanatory model for overimitation. [mehr]

Dr Michael Tangermann | Oscillatory and evoked components of the EEG and how to put them to use in stroke rehabilitation

Gastvortrag
Interacting with an individual brain in closed loop can open the door for detailed introspection into sensorimotor and cognitive processes. However, closed-loop paradigms require data analysis methods capable of decoding neural components of interest in single-trial, despite of low signal-to-noise ratio and non-stationarity. In my talk, I will report on two novel algorithmic developments of my lab. The methods allow for the robust supervised regression of informative oscillatory components of the EEG and the unsupervised classification of evoked potentials. Then I will show, how the derived components can be exploited in two brain state informed stroke therapy paradigms, which are designed to train up (1) hand motor performance and (2) the language network of chronic aphasic patients after stroke. [mehr]

Prof. Soyoung Park | The motives and modulators of decision making

Gastvortrag
To optimally adapt to our ever-changing environments, our brain continuously integrates exteroceptive and interoceptive information, that is, signals received from external (e.g., through vision or touch) and internal sources (e.g., through viscerosensation or proprioception). Particularly the coupling between the heart and the brain or - more generally - between the autonomic and the central nervous system plays a major role for mental processes and behavior. I will present studies, in which we found (1) an association between resting heart rate variability (HRV) and resting-state functional connectivity, (2) task-related HRV changes in response to emotion or stress, and (3) that perception and behavior vary across the cardiac cycle. Showing the psychological relevance of both directions of the heart-brain axis suggests the "rest of the body’s" importance for the mind and contributes to a more comprehensive investigation of mind-brain-body interactions. [mehr]

Maximilian Friehs | Neuromodulation via tDCS - Modification of cognitive control processes

Gastvortrag

Sanne Rutten | Contextual effects on the neural encoding of speech in the auditory cortex

Gastvortrag
The way speech is processed is under influence of acoustic attention; however how attention modulates the processing of specific acoustic information embedded in speech sounds remains largely unknown. During this talk I will present the results of a 7 Tesla fMRI study in which we examined how top-down effects change the neural representations of task-relevant acoustic information during the processing of speech. Additionally, I will show how we currently apply the same approach to examine functional alterations in the processing of speech in dyslexic individuals. [mehr]

Dr Stefan Elmer | The multifaceted influence of music training on speech processing and word learning

Gastvortrag

Professor Gil Gregor Westmeyer | Towards molecular reporters for MR neuroimaging in preclinical models

Gastvortrag

Prof. Charles Yang | The Learning of Linguistic Rules

Gastvortrag

Dr Steffen R. Hage | Neural and behavioral correlates for cognitive control of vocal output in non-human primates

Gastvortrag

Dr Guido Seddone | Mind as an Embodied Faculty: on the Biological Interdependence of Mind and Brain

Gastvortrag

Hermann Sonntag | The effect of uncertainty in MEG-to-MRI co-registrations on MEG inverse problems

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Dr Robert Nadon | Incentives, transparency, and personal responsibility in biomedical research

Gastvortrag

Prof. Andrea Moro | Inner Speech, Generalized Merge and the Architecture of the Language Faculty.

Gastvortrag
When is sound paired with meaning during language production? The exploration of inner speech offers a unique opportunity to approach this fundamental question, allowing a general reflection on the architecture of human language structure and its evolution. Recent experiments based on awake surgery techniques show that during language production the code exploited by neurons contains acoustic information even in non-acoustic areas such as Broca’s area and even during inner speech (Magrassi et al. 2014), that is without externalization (Chomsky 2013, Friederici et al. 2018). After illustrating these results and their implications I will highlight the surprising convergence with an independent proposal predicting these findings from the point of view of a purely formal theory aiming at explaining some apparently idiosyncratic morphological properties of the English verb system (Kayne 2016). Further speculation on Merge and clause structure will be addressed according to the results described here (Moro 2004). [mehr]

Prof. Gareth Barnes | A new generation of MEG scanners

Gastvortrag
I will talk about collaborative work between University College London and the University of Nottingham to use optically pumped magnetometers (OPMs) for human brain imaging. These sensors have comparable sensitivity to current cryogenic devices but do not require cooling. This means that the sensor array can be worn (rather than climbed into) and the smaller separation between sensor and brain means optimal (and improved) signal to noise ratio in all subject cohorts. I will talk about our initial modelling and experimental work with these new sensors. One of the exciting advances has been to keep these arrays operational during head-movement through a static magnetic field. This has opened up many new clinical and neuroscientific possibilities and I will talk about some of our experiences with these new paradigms. [mehr]

Prof. Cornelius Borck | From neuroimaging to in-vivo histology: does a new realism in visualization threaten critical neuroscience?

Gastvortrag
Over the last couple of years, the public fascination about colorful brain images seems to have a little waned and also expectations that social neuroscience will soon replace psychology. In this situation, the availability of in-vivo histology – in itself certainly a highly valuable method to validate imaging data and to search for objective pathological criteria – may have a problematic sociopolitical effect: Offering in-vivo anatomical information of new quality may foster unjustified trust in more problematic applications of neuroimaging. The talk will discuss this issue in light of shifting trends over the last decades: The availability of new technologies for visualizing brain activity generated some 25 years ago expectations to identify the centers responsible for all psychic states and to “reduce” mental processes to neuronal states – a project spurring harsh critiques from philosophy and cultural studies. With the visualization of more sophisticated phenomena, social and cultural neuroscience emerged, replacing overstated reductionist claims by integrating sociocultural aspects into neuroimaging but kindling “critical neuroscience” to question implicit essentialist assumptions. The new realism of in-vivo histology poses the question whether it will undermine concerns about the societal applications of neuroimaging. [mehr]

Prof. Christoph S. Herrmann | Transcranial alternating current stimulation: Models, EEG/MEG, and cognition

Gastvortrag

PhD Guido Nolte | Understanding Phase Amplitude Coupling from Bi-spectral Analysis

Gastvortrag

Dr Uku Vainik | Unifying the many neurocognitive traits associated with obesity: Uncontrolled Eating

Gastvortrag
Many eating-related psychological constructs have been proposed to explain obesity and over-eating. However, these constructs, including food addiction, disinhibition, hedonic hunger, emotional eating, binge eating, and the like all have similar definitions, emphasising loss of control over intake. As questionnaires measuring the constructs correlate strongly (r>0.5) with each other, we propose that these constructs should be reconsidered to be part of a single broad phenotype: Uncontrolled Eating (UE). Such an approach enables reviewing and meta-analysing evidence obtained with each individual questionnaire. Here, we describe robust associations between UE, body mass index (BMI), food intake, psychological traits, and brain systems. Reviewing cross-sectional and longitudinal data, we show that UE is phenotypically and genetically intertwined with BMI and food intake. We also review evidence on how three independent psychological constructs may contribute to UE: heightened food reward sensitivity, lower self-control, and higher negative affect. UE mediates all three constructs’ associations with BMI and food intake. Finally, we review and meta-analyse brain systems subserving UE: namely, (i) the dopamine mesolimbic circuit associated with reward sensitivity, (ii) frontal cognitive networks sustaining dietary self-control, and (iii) the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis, amygdala and hippocampus supporting stress reactivity. While there are limits to the explanatory and predictive power of the UE phenotype, we conclude that treating different eating-related constructs as a single concept, UE, enables drawing robust conclusions on the relationship between food intake and BMI, psychological variables, and brain structure and function. [mehr]

Prof. Ralf Deichmann | MR Imaging methods for measuring brain tissue parameters: Technical challenges and applications

Gastvortrag
There is an increasing number of research studies that are based on quantitative MR imaging (qMRI) techniques for the direct mapping of brain tissue properties. The parameters most frequently mapped are the water content or proton density (PD) and the relaxation times (T1, T2, T2*). An important application of qMRI is the construction of synthetic anatomical data sets with novel contrasts. In clinical studies, the careful evaluation of qMRI data allows for the detection of diffuse pathologies in normal appearing brain tissue. However, the design of reliable mapping methods is technically challenging as various secondary effects have to be compensated for to avoid a residual bias in the data. In the presentation, some of the most prominent qMRI techniques will be shortly described. There will be a special focus on the application of qMRI in clinical research, in particular for Tumour Imaging, in Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and in Epilepsy. [mehr]

Dr Guido Seddone | On the Neurobiological Requisites of Language Codification

Gastvortrag
In this talk I will focus on the relation between the biological premises of the mind and the appropriate use of the languages. I will maintain that language acquisition and its correct deployment do not merely rely on the cerebral activities but that they are rather determined by a self-conscious process of codification of practices, uses and information about the outer world by which the rational subject masteries the brain processing itself. Consequently, the brain activities that can be empirically observed and described by natural laws are the outcome of a self-aware governance of the biological requisites by the codification of both the formal and the natural languages and by the constitution of the person as an individual whose linguistic competencies are acknowledged. The advantage of this approach consists in avoiding to represent the brain features as a bare natural phenomenon determined by external causes and to deliver a conception of the cognitive and linguistic faculties as the outcome of the autonomous, social and self-aware embodiment of cognitive skills ruling from within the biological cerebral activity. I will eventually challenge the idea that language understanding is computational and underlie the autonomous and self-aware character of the cognitive disposition. [mehr]

Dr Natalie Uomini | Paleoneurology and functional brain imaging to study the evolution of tools and language

Gastvortrag

Dr Stephanie Wong | A new framework for conceptualizing symptoms in frontotemporal dementia: From animal models to the clinic

Gastvortrag

Dr Thorsten O. Zander | Towards Neuroadaptive Technology: An outlook on the potential impact of Passive Brain‐Computer Interfaces on Technology, Neuroscience and Society

Gastvortrag

Prof. Martin von Bergen | Multi-omics analysis of microbiome mediated health effects

Gastvortrag

Pia Schroeder | Neural basis of somatosensory target detection: From local interactions to frontoparietal networks

Gastvortrag
The scientific study of somatosensory awareness has yielded highly diverse findings with putative neural correlates ranging from local interactions within somatosensory cortices to activation of widely distributed frontoparietal networks. A potential source of these divergent results may reside in latent cognitive processes that often coincide with stimulus awareness in experimental settings. In fact, the most commonly employed experimental paradigm, the near-threshold somatosensory detection task, may conflate somatosensory awareness with processing of stimulus uncertainty, overt reports, and motor planning. To elucidate the contribution of these processes to neural activity commonly assumed to reflect somatosensory awareness, we employed a novel somatosensory detection task in combination with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Participants received electrical target stimuli at intensities spanning the full range of their psychometric functions to vary stimulus uncertainty while maintaining spontaneous fluctuations in stimulus awareness. Instead of directly reporting target detection, participants assessed the congruence of their somatosensory percepts with simultaneously presented visual reference cues and reported a match or mismatch by making saccadic eye movements, such that target detection was decorrelated from overt reports and motor planning. Using a Bayesian analysis approach, we track the transformation from physical to perceptual stimulus representations along the somatosensory hierarchy. We show that the emergence of stimulus awareness is largely restricted to somatosensory regions, whereas activity in frontal and parietal areas is best explained by stimulus uncertainty and overt reports. Our results emphasize the role of early sensory cortex for conscious perception and dissect the contribution of the frontoparietal network to classical detection tasks. [mehr]
The medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) is part of a core network that not only supports the recollection of past episodes but also the imagining of prospective events (e.g., meeting a person at a particular place). Here, we use such episodic simulation and fMRI to provide insights into the exact functions supported by the mPFC. In the first part, RMWJB reports graph analytical evidence that the ventral mPFC acts as a hub that coordinates whole-brain connectivity. This region thus seems to support episodic simulation by effectively integrating distributed information (e.g., about the people and places featuring in an imagined event). In the second part, PCP uses representational-similarity analysis to examine the nature of the representations in the mPFC. Specifically, he tests the hypothesis that this region codes for affective associative representations of our environment. Together, the two parts will shed light on the functions supported by the mPFC by highlighting both, its internal representations and its influence on the brain’s overall functional connectivity. [mehr]

Dr Julian Keil | Neuronale Korrelate audiovisueller Illusionen: Die nächsten Schritte

Gastvortrag
Aus unserer Umwelt nehmen wir ständig Informationen auf, die eingeordnet und bewertet werden müssen, damit in unserem Bewusstsein ein individuell kohärentes Bild erschaffen werden kann. Eine Reihe empirischer Befunde in den letzten Jahren hat Hinweise erbracht, die darauf hindeuten, dass der funktionelle Zustand des Gehirns diese Informationsverarbeitung beeinflusst. So konnte beispielsweise gezeigt werden, dass die Amplitude und Phase kortikaler Aktivität, sowie die Kommunikation zwischen kortikalen Arealen relevant sind für die Verarbeitung unisensorischer und multisensorischer Reize. In diesem Vortrag werde ich die aktuelle Literatur zu den neuronalen Mechanismen multisensorischer Verarbeitung zusammenfassen und dabei vor Allem auf neuronale Oszillationen eingehen. Dabei schlage ich vor, dass unterschiedliche Frequenzbänder ergänzende Mechanismen multisensorischer Verarbeitung abbilden. Im Anschluss werde ich offene Fragen in diesem Forschungsfeld diskutieren, mit einem besonderen Augenmerk auf der Rolle kognitiver Prozesse, Aufmerksamkeit, Erwartungen und Emotionen. [mehr]

Dr Elena Kleban | Probing the myelin water and venous compartments using non-linear signal phase evolution

Gastvortrag
The arrangement, length, and microstructural properties of long-range connections in the central nervous system determine how information is distributed across the brain. To date, diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI)-based tractography is the only in vivo technique for mapping structural connections in the human brain. However, mapping from diffusion to fiber pathways is still ill-posed. As a result, tractography algorithms can take "wrong turns" and produce false positive and/or false negative connections. To address this problem, microstructure-informed tractography has been suggested. It is an emerging computational framework that associates each computed fiber tract with microstructural properties, e.g., metrics for axon diameter or density, using the dMRI technique. Our highly inter-disciplinary project with the above title is funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) under the Priority Programme "Computational Connectomics" (SPP 2041). Four Principal Investigators (Siawoosh Mohammadi, Univ. Hamburg; Alfred Anwander & Stefan Geyer, MPI CBS Leipzig; Markus Morawski, Univ. Leipzig) plan to develop a computational framework for microstructure-informed tractography that addresses these limitations using multi-modal quantitative MRI at ultra-high spatial resolution. Moreover, we will develop an advanced ex vivo histology analysis strategy based on complementary 2-D (high-resolution semithin and ultrathin sectioning) and 3-D (CLARITY) techniques. We will combine histology with MRI ex vivo to validate the model at central junctions of long-range fiber pathways within the well characterized human voluntary motor control network. Our project aims at innovative new insights into MRI-based computational models for in vivo tractography. Funding started in May 2018. In this Institute Colloquium I will elaborate on the conceptual background from a neuroanatomical point of view and present first microstructural results. [mehr]

Dr Vanessa Scholz | Understanding motivational biases in decision making – Individual differences and the role of psychiatric symptoms

Gastvortrag

Prof. Felix Blankenburg | From Tactile Perception via Working Memory to Decision Making and Action

Gastvortrag

PhD Masaki Fukunaga | Brain microstructure and function using ultra high field MRI

Gastvortrag
The observation of the living body by the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) depends on the spatial resolution and signal noise ratio (SNR), as well as relaxation time and contrast which is a tissue parameter. The advent of 7 tesla (T) ultra high field MR technology provides unprecedented capabilities for non-invasive imaging of human and animal model brain. This technical ability encompasses a range of functional and structural domains, as well as new opportunities for quantifying neurochemicals using spectroscopic techniques. In addition, increasing the static magnetic field strength promotes signal phase dispersion and shift. Predicted benefits included a stronger Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent (BOLD) effect which is used for detecting brain activity, improved signal and contrast-to-noise (CNR) ratio. By using optimal measurement techniques, improved CNR provides the delineation of the brain microstructure including laminar structure in cortex in vivo. In this talk, I'd like to present our experiences of 7T human brain imaging, especially in high resolution susceptibility imaging and somatotopic fMRI studies. [mehr]

Julia Sacher & Rachel G Zsido | Leveraging knowledge of sex-steroid hormones towards improved clinical translation in depression

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Prof. Michael T. Ullman | Language learning relies on brain circuits that predate humans: Evidence from typical and atypical language development

Gastvortrag

Dr Tim B. Dyrby | Multi-scale imaging of the brain network: From brain networks to microstructure

Gastvortrag
Diffusion MRI enables insights into brain structure at different anatomical length scales. Although of its relative coarse millimetre image resolution it can provide a direct insight into the brain network via tractography. However, the microstructural environment such as axons can only be observed indirectly from a combination of the MRI sequence and biophysical modelling. Validation allows us to questioning the MRI sequence-biophysical modelling framework and its results that are based on assumptions on what we believe to be the ground truth. In this lecture, I will first discuss if it is possible simply by changing key sequence parameters of dMRI (b-value, directions and image resolution) to improve structural connectivity (SC) compared with tracers? Then, I will discuss axon diameter estimation with diffusion MRI, and the validation challenges we have to understand its observed deviation between the ground truth of today being 2D validation methods. [mehr]

Dr Wojciech Samek | Interpretable Deep Learning & its Applications in the Neurosciences

Gastvortrag

Dr Romy Lorenz | Towards a neurobiologically-derived cognitive taxonomy

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Dr Giacomo Novembre | Saliency detection as a reactive process: unexpected sensory events evoke cortico-muscular coupling

Gastvortrag

Prof. Gerd Schulte-Körne | Neurobiological and genetic origins of developmental dyslexia.

Gastvortrag

Prof. Andreas Nieder | The role of frontal lobe areas in controlling vocalizations in primates

Gastvortrag

Dr Radoslaw Martin Cichy | Dynamics of visual cognition: A spatio-temporally resolved and algorithmically explicit account

Gastvortrag

Dr Gesa Hartwigsen | Modulation of language networks: Novel insight from neurostimulation and neuroimaging

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Dr Stefanie Peykarjou | Employing FPVS tasks to study cognitive development

Gastvortrag

Prof. Vadim Nikulin | Long-Range Temporal Correlations in Neuronal Oscillations

Institutskolloquium (intern)
Compared to the spatial synchronization, temporal dynamics of neuronal activity only recently gained a widespread attention in neuroscience. A particularly interesting discovery was a demonstration of Long-Range Temporal Correlations (LRTC) in the amplitude dynamics of neuronal oscillations. Neuronal LRTC might indicate a presence of a critical state in neuronal dynamics which was previously shown to be beneficial for the optimal processing of information in the brain. In my talk I will review studies showing relevance of LRTC for cognitive and motor tasks. Moreover, I will show that LRTC can serve as clinical biomarkers sensitive to pathological neuronal activations in Schizophrenia, Depression and Parkinson’s Disease. [mehr]

Professor Christian Doeller | Space for cognition

Institutskolloquium (intern)

PhD Markus D. Schirmer | Spatial effects of white matter hyperintensity disease burden from clinical stroke populations

Gastvortrag
The identification of biomarkers. which can help predict disease outcome. remains one of the most promising research areas across a variety of diseases. Particularly. studying the spatial distribution of underlying disease burden may provide important insights into pathological patterns. Stroke is one of the leading causes of death and disability worldwide. however. it remains largely understudied in the acute setting due to time restrictions during data acquisition and the resulting low resolution magnetic resonance images. This has made outcome prediction particularly difficult. as it leads to heterogeneity in the data and/or methodologies between studies. One of the key phenotypes of stroke research is a patient's white matter hyperintensity (WMH) burden. most commonly assessed using FLAIR images. which has been linked to stroke outcome. Studies often rely on measuring the total burden and summarize it as a single number: it’s volume. based on manual outlines on a patient’s scan. The lack of an automated segmentation methodology for clinical data has so far hindered large-scale. reproducible investigations. In the first part of this talk. we present an automated pipeline for monomodal automatic WMH segmentation. which can alleviate some of these challenges. Specifically. we demonstrate it's efficacy for volume estimation in a cohort of 2.533 patients. showing the association between higher WMH burden and poorer outcome after stroke (p<0.001). In the second half of this talk. we demonstrate the use of WMH segmentations for investigating spatial WMH disease burden and how other clinical variables can modify these patterns. In particular. we demonstrate effects for hypertension and smoking status. and show that these clinical variables lead to a shift of disease burden from posterior to anterior vascular regions (p<0.05 and p<0.01. respectively). This illustrates the potential of uncovering spatial variations of disease patterns by using large-scale cohorts. [mehr]

Dr. Ruth Percik | A Novel Therapeutic Approach to Obesity: CNS Modification by N.I.R. H.E.G. Neurofeedback

Gastvortrag
Despite the thorough mapping of brain pathways involved in eating behavior, no treatment aimed at modulating eating dysregulation has been established yet. Aiming for a feasible brain-modulation tool, we evaluated N.I.R. H.E.G. (Near Infra-Red Hemoencephalography) neurofeedback training on appetite control, weight and food-related brain activity. Following the intervention, we observed trends of increased self-control related to food, weight reduction and increased activation of sOFC during a response-inhibition fMRI task. N.I.R. H.E.G. holds a promising potential as a feasible neurofeedback platform for modulation of cortical brain circuits involved in self-control and eating behavior. This is an invitation for further evaluation and development of N.I.R. H.E.G. as a brain modifying device for the treatment and prevention of obesity. Based on: A pilot study of a novel therapeutic approach to obesity: CNS modification by N.I.R. H.E.G. neurofeedback Clin Nutr. 2018 Feb 7. pii: S0261-5614(18)30043-8. Percik R, Cina J, Even B, Gitler A, Geva D, Seluk L, Livny A [mehr]

Prof. David Copland | Testing neurobiological predictors and principles of aphasia recovery

Gastvortrag

Prof. Bernard Mazoyer | Brain hemispheric specialization: recent advances with the BIL&GIN database

Gastvortrag

Prof. Thomas Suddendorf | Emerging foresight

Gastvortrag

Dr Gunnar Waterstraat | Evoked somatosensory high-frequency oscillations as model potentials to study human cortical population spikes non-invasively

Gastvortrag

PD Dr Gabriele Lohmann | Statistical inference and new approaches to eigenvector centrality mapping for fMRI at 3T and beyond

Gastvortrag

Prof. Gustaf Gredebäck | Infant’s actions broaden their mind

Gastvortrag

Prof. Stefan Heim | If so few are "many" – how many are "few"? The neurocogntion of quantifier processing

Gastvortrag

Prof. Peter Gärdenfors | Conceptual spaces as a model of mental representations

Mind Meeting

PD Dr Daniela Sammler | Neural bases of music production: EEG and fMRI evidence for a hierarchy of musical action planning in expert pianists

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Sliman Bensmaia, PhD | Biological and Bionic hands: Natural neural coding and artificial perception

Gastvortrag

G. Allan Johnson, Ph.D. | Connectomic Histology

Gastvortrag

Dr Romina Mizrahi | Molecular imaging studies in psychosis and psychosis risk

Gastvortrag

Dr Ian Charest | Tracking object representations in the brain

Gastvortrag

Dr Zsolt Turi | Prospective electric field estimation method for dosing repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation in humans

Gastvortrag

| Zukunftstag "Auf ins Gehirn!"

Wissenschaft für alle

Prof. Markus Kiefer | Grounded cognition: Foundations of conceptual representations in the sensory and motor systems

Gastvortrag

Dr Nicolas Schuck | The role of task states and offline sampling in decision making and learning

Mind Meeting

Professor Carlos A. Aguilar-Salinas | "Peculiarities of diabetes in Mexico"

Gastvortrag

Dr Claudia Männel | Finding words and rules: Neurobiological markers of typical and atypical language development

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Prof. Aviv Mezer | Identifying white-matter pathways using quantitative MRI

Gastvortrag

Dr Martin Hebart | Towards a comprehensive understanding of mental representations and categorical decisions about real-world objects

Gastvortrag
Organizers are Prof. Nikolaus Weiskopf, Prof. Harald Moeller, Dr Esther Kuehn, Dr Robert Trampel, and Daniel Haenelt. [mehr]

Prof. John T. Hale | Modeling neural time courses with linguistic structure

Gastvortrag

Dr Caswell Barry | Contribution of grid cells to spatial navigation

Mind Meeting

Dr.-Ing. Konstantin Weise | A novel approach to localize cortical TMS effects

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Prof. Markus Werkle-Bergner | Towards understanding the triage of sleep, memory, and brain development: Potentials and challenges

Gastvortrag

Toni Muffel | Effects of tDCS on Kinematics of Sensorimotor Functions in Healthy Ageing and Stroke

Institutskolloquium (intern)
Stroke is a leading cause of life-long disability. The improvement of acute treatment has increased stroke survival, leaving more people in rehabilitative care than ever. Here, the recovery of function typically reaches a plateau after initial progress. Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) has been suggested to facilitate recovery beyond this plateau, even in the chronic stage. However, no clear pattern of tDCS-induced effects could be established in patients yet, likely due to inconsistent experimental designs in previous studies. In this talk I will present data from two studies I performed during my PhD here at the MPI CBS. The first (pilot) study covers differential effects of tDCS on proprioception in healthy ageing and introduces and applies an individualised current modelling approach to explain differences between age groups. In the second study, we have investigated a large array of sensorimotor functions in chronic stroke patients and the impact of two different tDCS protocols on the kinematics of those functions. [mehr]

Prof. Dirk Ostwald | The neurocomputational mechanisms of human sequential decision making under uncertainty in a spatial search task

Gastvortrag

Prof. Dominik R. Bach | Action-selection under threat: Algorithms and neural circuits for survival

Gastvortrag

Dr Marc Tittgemeyer | Food Intake in Control of Cognition or Cognition in Control of Food Intake? A bottom-up perspective on cognitive processes underlying food intake regulation

Gastvortrag

Dr Maria Wimber | Tracking the neural footprints of memories over time

Mind Meeting

Dr Christoph Korn | Modelling multistep reward-based decisions and social learning about other persons’ character traits

Gastvortrag

Dr Carmen Vidaurre | Brain-computer interface and sensorimotor oscillations: novel perspectives and methods

Gastvortrag

Jacob Bellmund | Entorhinal maps for human memory

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Dr Mariam Aly | How hippocampal memory shapes, and is shaped by, attention

Mind Meeting

Dr Eric Schulz | Using structure to explore efficiently

Gastvortrag

PhD Johanna Vannesjo | Magnetic field matters in ultra-high field neuroimaging

Gastvortrag

Dr Alain Dagher | Models of neurodegeneration in Parkinson’s Disease: testing the prion hypothesis

Gastvortrag

Prof. Kenneth Norman | Computational principles of event memory

Mind Meeting

Nace Mikus | Computational phenotyping of dopaminergic manipulations

Gastvortrag
The dopaminergic circuits lie at the core of learning and motivational processes through which we are able to form predictions about the future and take action accordingly. Studies in animals have shown that midbrain dopaminergic neurons projecting to the striatum signal events in the environment that deviate from what we expect. A prevalent model of the dopaminergic function suggests that these so-called prediction errors –propagated by the D1 dopamine receptors to cortical areas – modulate synaptic plasticity and thereby facilitate learning and initiation of action. While D2 dopamine receptors in the striatum as well as prefrontal striatal projection regulate and modulate this signal propagation. How this neurobiological model of dopaminergic activity relates to behaviour has been difficult to address. In my talk I will present several pharmacogenetic studies that map manipulations of the dopaminergic system on to various computational phenotypes. First of all, we are interested in the role of dopamine in updating beliefs in a social as well as a non-social context. And second, we explored dopamine’s involvement in model-based decision making. Specifically, how does blocking D2 transmission affect our ability to keep the regularities and knowledge about the world online as we make decisions and learn about the states of the world that are not directly observed? [mehr]

Prof. Karen Emmorey | Neural effects (and non-effects) of iconicity in sign language

Gastvortrag

Prof. Soyoung Q Park | Motives and modulators of human decision making

Gastvortrag
What drives us to trust someone we just met? Did we eat spaghetti for lunch because we saw our colleague eat spaghetti? Can we become happier when we are nicer to our neighbors? How does the content of our breakfast have anything to do with our social interactions throughout the day? Research from different disciplines such as economics, psychology and neuroscience have attempted to investigate the motives and modulators of human decision making. Our decisions can be flexibly modulated by the different experiences we have in our daily lives. These modulations can occur through our social networks, through the impact of our own behavior on the social environment, but also simply by the food we have eaten. Here, I will present a series of recent studies from my lab in which we shed light on the psychological, neural and metabolic motives and modulators of human decision making. [mehr]

Dr Els C.M. van Rooij | The mental health crisis in doctoral education

Gastvortrag

Prof. Nicholas Turk-Browne | Rethinking memory systems for statistical learning

Mind Meeting

Dr Lei Zhang | Multiple facets of social influence in goal-directed learning

Gastvortrag

Dr. David Carmichael | Quantitative mapping using MRI in children with focal epilepsy

Gastvortrag (intern)
In this talk I will introduce epilepsy treatment using surgery in children, which can be highly effective when drug therapy fails. Many of these patients have cortical abnormalities that are termed focal cortical dysplasia's. In this context, the identification and classification of abnormal tissue that is performed using MRI has important implications for treatment. However, there is also a unique scientific opportunity to validate MRI measures by comparison to tissue samples obtained during surgery. In this talk I show some of our results using diffusion-based MRI maps and some preliminary analysis of MPM maps. Sara Lorio will then describe our work using quantitative susceptibility maps to characterise abnormalities in cortical structure in focal cortical dysplasia. [mehr]

Dr Patricia Lockwood | Neurocomputational basis of social learning and decision-making

Gastvortrag

Dr Nikolai I. Avdievich | Improvement of Central SNR and Transmit Coverage of a Human Head Phased Array at Ultra-High Field Using Dipole Antennas

Gastvortrag
The first part of the presentation deals with an improvement of the central SNR of human head array at ultra-high magnetic fields (UHF, > 7T). Increasing the number of surface loops in a human head receive (Rx) array improves the peripheral signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), while SNR near the brain center doesn’t substantially change. Recent theoretical works demonstrated that an optimal central SNR at UHF requires contribution of two current patterns associated with a combination of surface loops and dipole antennas. Use of various dipole antennas as MRI RF detectors has been recently introduced and successfully implemented mostly for imaging human body sized objects. In this work, we evaluated and compared several Rx dipole-like elements for use within human head UHF Rx-array. We constructed and characterized novel single-row and double-row phased arrays, which consisted of transceiver (TxRx) surface loops and Rx-dipoles. We demonstrated that combining surface loops and dipole-like elements substantially (> 30%) improve SNR near the brain center as compare to arrays consisted of surface loops only. The second part of the presentation discusses an improvement of the transmit (Tx) coverage of the human head array coils. Due to a substantial shortening of the RF wave length (below 15 cm at 7 T), RF magnetic field at UHF has a specific Tx excitation pattern with strongly decreased (more than 2 times) values at the periphery of a human head. This effect is seen not only in the transversal slice but also in the coronal and sagittal slices, which considerably limits the longitudinal Tx-coverage (along the magnet’s axis) of conventional surface loop head arrays. In this work, we developed a novel human head UHF array consisted of 8 TxRx folded dipole antennas circumscribing a head. Due to an asymmetrical shape of dipole elements, the array couples to the intrinsic “dielectric resonance” mode of the head. Due to this interaction, firstly, the new array provides for a simple way of minimizing the maximum local SAR. Secondly, it provides for a longitudinal coverage better than that achieved by a similar array consisted of unfolded dipoles as well as by an 8-element single-row and 16-element double-row surface loop arrays. [mehr]

Dr Denis A. Engemann | Large-scale analysis of electrophysiology data in cognitive neurology

Gastvortrag

PhD Juergen Dukart | Improving reliability, replicability and interpretability of neuroimaging research – Bridging neuroimaging and underlying biology

Gastvortrag
Recent studies have questioned the reliability of many functional neuroimaging findings reported in the literature over the past decades. In my talk I will illustrate how novel analytic workflows (Dukart et al., 2018, Scientific Reports; Holiga et al. 2019, Science Translational Medicine) may overcome some of the critical limitations of functional neuroimaging analyses improving the reliability of the methods as well as providing an improved interpretation of potential signals with respect to underlying biology and for identification of biomarkers for neurological and psychiatric diseases. [mehr]
Today only seven percent of the subcortical structures listed by the Federative Community on Anatomical Terminology (FCAT, 1998) are depicted in available standard MRI-atlases (Forstmann et al., 2016). As a consequence, the remaining 423 subcortical structures cannot be studied using automated analysis protocols available for MRI and therefore require trained anatomists for the study of subcortical brain areas: The human subcortex is notoriously difficult to visualize and analyze with functional magnetic resonance imaging. In this talk, exciting technical advances are presented that allow charting terra incognita; the human subcortex. Closing the knowledge-gap of the human subcortex has already resulted in the re-evaluation of prominent models in the cognitive neurosciences such as the functional role of cortico-basal ganglia loops in decision-making. I will discuss the emerging possibilities of novel human neuroanatomical approaches and directions for the incorporation of these data within the field of model-based cognitive neuroscience. [mehr]

Dr Yifei He | Exploring gesture-speech interaction using multimodal neuroscientific methods: a translational perspective

Gastvortrag

Prof. Chet Sherwood | Great Apes as Models for Understanding Human Brain Evolution

Gastvortrag

Prof. Jan Born | About the memory function of sleep

Mind Meeting

PhD Yasemin Vardar | Tactile perception of electrovibration displayed on touchscreens

Gastvortrag

Dr Gabriel Ziegler | Brain changes during the transition from adolescence into adulthood

Gastvortrag

Prof. Costantino Iadecola | The Vascular Biology of Dementia

Gastvortrag

Dr Heidrun Schultz | Functional memory dissociations within the human medial temporal lobe at 3T and 7T

Institutskolloquium (intern)
The human medial temporal lobe (MTL) is essential for episodic memory, but the roles of its individual subregions remain a matter of debate. Anatomical and functional evidence suggests a division of labour based on stimulus domain: The MTL cortex may process domain-specific aspects of memory, with the anterior MTL cortex [perirhinal and anterolateral entorhinal cortices (PRC, alEC)] supporting object-related memory, and the posterior MTL cortex [parahippocampal and posteriormedial entorhinal cortices (PHC, pmEC)] supporting spatial memory. The hippocampus, on the other hand, may contribute to memory in a domain-general fashion. Here, I present data from three studies. Studies 1 and 2 investigated the domain-specificity of episodic memory using 3T fMRI. During incidental encoding (study 1) and associative recall (study 2), PRC and PHC contributed to object and scene memory, respectively. Study 3 utilised the ultra-high spatial resolution afforded by 7T fMRI to investigate the role of alEC, pmEC, and hippocampal subfields during associative encoding and retrieval of objects and scenes. Here, I will present preliminary results and highlight methodological challenges. In sum, these studies emphasise the role of the human MTL in episodic memory, with subregional differences that depend on stimulus domain. [mehr]

PD Dr Eike Budinger | From birth until old age: Anatomy and development of cortical multisensory connections

Gastvortrag
Multisensory integration does not only recruit higher-level association cortex, but also primary sensory cortices like A1 (auditory), S1 (somatosensory), and V1 (visual). The underlying anatomical pathways, which might preferentially serve short-latency integration processes, include direct thalamocortical and corticocortical connections across the senses. We investigated how these multisensory connections develop over the individual’s lifespan and how early sensory deprivation alters them. Using tracer injections into A1, S1, and V1 of a rodent model (Mongolian gerbil) we could show that multisensory thalamocortical connections emerge before corticocortical connections but mostly disappear towards the end of the critical sensory period. Early auditory, somatosensory, or visual deprivation increases multisensory connections via axonal reorganization processes mediated by non-lemniscal thalamic nuclei and the primary areas themselves. Functional imaging reveals a mostly reduced stimulus-induced activity but a higher functional connectivity specifically between primary areas in deprived animals. In adult animals, primary sensory cortices receive substantial inputs from thalamic nuclei and cortical areas of non-matched sensory modalities. In very old animals, these multisensory connections strongly decrease in number or vanish entirely. This is likely due to a retraction of the projection neuron axonal branches and is accompanied by changes in anatomical correlates of inhibition and excitation in the sensory thalamus and cortex. Together, we show that during early development, intracortical multisensory connections are formed as a consequence of sensory driven multisensory thalamocortical activity and that during aging, multisensory processing is probably shifted from primary cortices towards other sensory brain areas. [mehr]

Prof. György Buzsáki | Mind the brain: What do we want to understand

Mind Meeting

PhD Hadas Okon-Singer | Cognitive-Emotional Biases in Psychopathology: Searching for New Treatment Strategies

Gastvortrag
Various psychological disorders are characterized by pronounced cognitive biases, including biased orienting of attention to certain stimuli, distorted expectation of the likelihood to encounter specific objects, biased interpretation of ambiguous information and biased perception. Although these biases are common in psychopathology, most of the studies so far focused on one bias by employing traditional analysis methods. Therefore, little is known about the correlational and causal relations between different biases and about combined patterns that may characterize certain disorders. In this talk, I will discuss recent behavioral, fMRI and autonomic data showing links between biases, as well as modulation of biased emotional processing in different populations. Moreover, by employing machine-learning based analysis, we managed to specify specific behavioral patterns that characterize anxiety vs. depression, two disorders that share many characteristics and show high comorbidity. Finally, I will discuss recent evidence for abnormalities in the blood pressure reaction to aversive pictures among individuals with pre- hypertension, a population that is usually not studied in the context of psychological reactions. Taken together, these findings suggest new strategies to explore and treat maladaptive behaviors that have fundamental implications on the patients’ life. [mehr]

PhD Peter Johannes Uhlhaas | Using Magnetoencephalography to Identify Circuit Dysfunctions and Biomarkers in Schizophrenia

Gastvortrag
A considerable body of work over the last 10 years combining non-invasive electrophysiology (electroencephalography/magnetoencephalography) in patient populations with preclinical research has contributed to the conceptualization of schizophrenia as a disorder associated with aberrant neural dynamics and disturbances in excitation/inhibition (E/I) balance parameters. Specifically, I will propose that recent technological and analytic advances in MEG provide novel opportunities to address these fundamental questions as well as establish important links with translational research. We have carried out several studies which have tested the importance of neural oscillations in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia through a combination of MEG-measurements in ScZ-patients and pharmacological manipulations in healthy volunteers which target the NMDA-receptor. These results highlight a pronounced impairment in high-frequency activity in both chronic and unmedicated patients which could provide novel insights into basic circuit mechanisms underlying cognitive and perceptual dysfunctions. However, acute Ketamine only partly recreates abnormalities observed in both resting-state and task-related neural oscillations in ScZ, suggesting potentially shortcoming of this pharmacological model for capturing large-scale network dysfunctions. Our recent work has employed MEG to develop a biomarker for early detection and diagnosis of ScZ. We have obtained MEG- and MRS-data from 125 participants meeting clinical high-risk criteria (CHR), 90 controls and 30 FEP-patients. We found marked changes in the synchrony of gamma-band oscillations in visual and auditory cortices during sensory processing which predicted clinical outcomes. In addition, CHR-participants were characterized by elevated broad-band gamma-band activity at rest which correlated with increased glutamate levels. Together, these findings highlight the potential of MEG-based biomarkers for the early diagnosis of ScZ in at-risk populations. [mehr]

Open Science Initiative | Monthly meeting

Event Open Science Initiative (internal)
The Open Science Initiative is a joint effort. What we can do depends on everyone's engagement. Our monthly meetings are a platform where you can bring in your open science ideas and take an active role in making ideas happen. Be it your own ideas or those of others. Whether it is the organization of a particular workshop, inviting a speaker, writing a wiki-page on how to preregister studies, lobbying for changes within the institute that help us practice science more openly, our monthly meeting is the place to pitch ideas and get engaged. [mehr]

Dr Monika Schönauer | Imaging memory consolidation in wakefulness and sleep

Mind Meeting

Daniel Hänelt | Cortical depth-dependent fMRI in the human visual cortex at ultra-high magnetic fields

Institutskolloquium (intern)
Advances in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) promise detailed non-invasive probing of neural activity in the human brain. However, since the measured MR signal depends on the hemodynamic response following neural activation, we have only indirect access to the signal source of interest. Especially at higher resolutions, the actual source of the measured signal gets important which depends on the vascular architecture of the cerebral cortex. The venous side of the cortical vascular tree consists of a capillary bed within the cortex and larger intracortical veins draining the blood to large pial veins located on top of the cortical surface. To be closest to the source of neural activation, it is desirable that the acquired MR signal is most sensitive to the capillary bed. Different fMRI methods like GE-BOLD, SE-BOLD or VASO inherently differ in terms of their sensitivity and specificity to the wanted signal source. In our work, we try to get further insights about the signal dependencies of different fMRI methods at ultra-high magnetic fields (≥ 7 T) to the macrovasculature, especially to large pial veins. Currently, we run two experiments which both target the human visual cortex as model system. In one experiment, we map ocular dominance columns (ODCs) in the primary visual cortex (V1) and aim to infer the vascular induced spread of the MR signal by analyzing the topography of ODCs across cortical depth. In another experiment, we use the retinotopical ordering of V1 to get a more general understanding of the signal spread across cortical depth. [mehr]

Rasmus Bruckner | Adaptive learning under uncertainty: Computational mechanisms and lifespan differences

Gastvortrag
Learning often takes place in environments, in which it is impossible to exactly know current and future outcomes. To successfully behave in such uncertain environments, humans have to learn appropriate beliefs from past experiences that can be used to predict desirable and undesirable outcomes. Drawing on optimal inference models and behavioural learning tasks, I will illustrate how learning under uncertainty should be regulated from a normative perspective and how learning deficits may emerge from deviations from these computations. I will show how human participants learn in the face of perceptual uncertainty and to which extent the ability to adjust learning in dynamically changing environments differs between age groups across the lifespan. Moreover, I will explore the possibility that the intricate computations to optimally adjust learning may often be simplified by resorting to heuristic strategies that are guided by previous choices. Finally, I will discuss some future directions that follow from these results. [mehr]

Prof. Margaret A. Sheridan | Deprivation and threat, testing conceptual model of adversity exposure and developmental outcomes

Gastvortrag
Exposure to childhood adversity is common and associated with a host of negative developmental outcomes as well as differences in neural structure and function. It is commonly posited that these social experiences “get under the skin” in early childhood, increasing long-term risk through disruptions to biology. In this talk I propose a novel approach to studying the link between adversity, brain development, and risk for psychopathology, the dimensional model of adversity and psychopathology (DMAP). In this model we propose that adversity exposure can be defined according to different dimensions which we expect to impact health and well-being through different neural substrates. Whereas we expect deprivation to primarily disrupt function and structure of lateral association cortex (e.g., dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and superior parietal cortex) and thus complex cognitive processing such as executive functioning. In contrast, we expect threat to alter structure and function of subcortical structures such as the hippocampus and amygdala and midline regions associated with emotion regulation such as the ventral medial prefrontal cortex and thus, associated emotion reactivity and automatic regulation processes. In a series of studies I test the basic tenants of the DMAP concluding that initial evidence, using both a priori hypothesis testing and data-driven approaches is consistent with the proposed model. I conclude by describing future work addressing multiple dimensions of adversity and potential adjustments to the model. [mehr]
A recent analysis of publicly released data accompanying published papers in Cognition showed that not all published numbers could be reproduced, even though the data and code were available (https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rsos.180448). The authors state that: "...suboptimal data curation, unclear analysis specification and reporting errors can impede analytic reproducibility, undermining the utility of data sharing and the credibility of scientific findings." In this workshop, I will suggest one way to minimize the chances of producing irreproducible results, focusing on repeated measures 2x2 factorial designs as a case study. [mehr]

Prof. Ingolf Sack, Helge Herthum, Dr. Stefan Hetzer | Magnetic resonance elastography of the brain

Gastvortrag

Professor Dr Bradley C. Love | A common mechanism for spatial and concept learning

Mind Meeting

Open Science Initiative | Monthly meeting

Event Open Science Initiative (internal)
The Open Science Initiative is a joint effort. What we can do depends on everyone's engagement. Our monthly meetings are a platform where you can bring in your open science ideas and take an active role in making ideas happen. Be it your own ideas or those of others. Whether it is the organization of a particular workshop, inviting a speaker, writing a wiki-page on how to preregister studies, lobbying for changes within the institute that help us practice science more openly, our monthly meeting is the place to pitch ideas and get engaged. [mehr]

Stan van der Burght | Dissociable effects of prosody on sentence comprehension – evidence from behavioural and neuroimaging studies

Institutskolloquium (intern)

Dr H.G.E. (Hil) Meijer | On activation functions and spatio-temporal patterns in neural fields

Gastvortrag

Prof. Alison R. Preston | Hippocampal-prefrontal hierarchical representations of experience guide generalization and inference

Mind Meeting
Talk will be postponed [mehr]

Dr Erhan Genc | Breaking new ground in neuroscientific intelligence research: General knowledge and genetic correlates

Gastvortrag

Open Science Initiative | Regular meeting

Event Open Science Initiative (internal)
The Open Science Initiative is a joint effort. What we can do depends on everyone's engagement. Our regular meetings are a platform where you can bring in your open science ideas and take an active role in making ideas happen. Be it your own ideas or those of others. Whether it is the organization of a particular workshop, inviting a speaker, writing a resource page on how to preregister studies, lobbying for changes within the institute that help us practice science more openly, our meeting is the place to pitch ideas and get engaged. [mehr]

Prof. Ulrike Krämer | Impact of the stress system on eating behavior

Gastvortrag
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