keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25186744/dynamic-representation-of-the-temporal-and-sequential-structure-of-rhythmic-movements-in-the-primate-medial-premotor-cortex
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David A Crowe, Wilbert Zarco, Ramon Bartolo, Hugo Merchant
We determined the encoding properties of single cells and the decoding accuracy of cell populations in the medial premotor cortex (MPC) of Rhesus monkeys to represent in a time-varying fashion the duration and serial order of six intervals produced rhythmically during a synchronization-continuation tapping task. We found that MPC represented the temporal and sequential structure of rhythmic movements by activating small ensembles of neurons that encoded the duration or the serial order in rapid succession, so that the pattern of active neurons changed dramatically within each interval...
September 3, 2014: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25157217/cognitive-modulation-of-local-and-callosal-neural-interactions-in-decision-making
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hugo Merchant, David A Crowe, Antonio F Fortes, Apostolos P Georgopoulos
Traditionally, the neurophysiological mechanisms of cognitive processing have been investigated at the single cell level. Here we show that the dynamic, millisecond-by-millisecond, interactions between neuronal events measured by local field potentials are modulated in an orderly fashion by key task variables of a space categorization task performed by monkeys. These interactions were stronger during periods of higher cognitive load and varied in sign (positive, negative). They were observed both within area 7a of the posterior parietal cortex and between symmetric 7a areas of the two hemispheres...
2014: Frontiers in Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24498311/the-use-of-camera-traps-to-identify-the-set-of-scavengers-preying-on-the-carcass-of-a-golden-snub-nosed-monkey-rhinopithecus-roxellana
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zhi-Pang Huang, Xiao-Guang Qi, Paul A Garber, Tong Jin, Song-Tao Guo, Sheng Li, Bao-Guo Li
There exists very limited information on the set of scavengers that feed on the carcasses of wild primates. Here, we describe, based on information collected using a remote camera trap, carnivores consuming/scavenging the carcass of a wild golden snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus roxellana) in the Laohegou Nature Reserve, Sichuan, China. During a 3 month behavioral and ecology study of a band of golden snub-nosed monkeys (March through May 2013), we encountered the carcass of an adult male (male golden snub-nosed monkeys weigh approximately 12-16 kg)...
2014: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24101633/elongation-as-a-factor-in-artefacts-of-humans-and-other-animals-an-acheulean-example-in-comparative-context
#24
REVIEW
J A J Gowlett
Elongation is a commonly found feature in artefacts made and used by humans and other animals and can be analysed in comparative study. Whether made for use in hand or beak, the artefacts have some common properties of length, breadth, thickness and balance point, and elongation can be studied as a factor relating to construction or use of a long axis. In human artefacts, elongation can be traced through the archaeological record, for example in stone blades of the Upper Palaeolithic (traditionally regarded as more sophisticated than earlier artefacts), and in earlier blades of the Middle Palaeolithic...
November 19, 2013: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23995071/prefrontal-neurons-transmit-signals-to-parietal-neurons-that-reflect-executive-control-of-cognition
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David A Crowe, Shikha J Goodwin, Rachael K Blackman, Sofia Sakellaridi, Scott R Sponheim, Angus W MacDonald, Matthew V Chafee
Prefrontal cortex influences behavior largely through its connections with other association cortices; however, the nature of the information conveyed by prefrontal output signals and what effect these signals have on computations performed by target structures is largely unknown. To address these questions, we simultaneously recorded the activity of neurons in prefrontal and posterior parietal cortices of monkeys performing a rule-based spatial categorization task. Parietal cortex receives direct prefrontal input, and parietal neurons, like their prefrontal counterparts, exhibit signals that reflect rule-based cognitive processing in this task...
October 2013: Nature Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23355813/thinking-in-spatial-terms-decoupling-spatial-representation-from-sensorimotor-control-in-monkey-posterior-parietal-areas-7a-and-lip
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew V Chafee, David A Crowe
Perhaps the simplest and most complete description of the cerebral cortex is that it is a sensorimotor controller whose primary purpose is to represent stimuli and movements, and adaptively control the mapping between them. However, in order to think, the cerebral cortex has to generate patterns of neuronal activity that encode abstract, generalized information independently of ongoing sensorimotor events. A critical question confronting cognitive systems neuroscience at present therefore is how neural signals encoding abstract information emerge within the sensorimotor control networks of the brain...
2012: Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22933666/serological-cross-reactions-between-four-polyomaviruses-of-birds-using-virus-like-particles-expressed-in-yeast
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anja Zielonka, Alma Gedvilaite, Jochen Reetz, Uwe Rösler, Hermann Müller, Reimar Johne
Polyomaviruses are aetiological agents of fatal acute diseases in various bird species. Genomic analysis revealed that avian polyomavirus (APyV), crow polyomavirus (CPyV), finch polyomavirus (FPyV) and goose hemorrhagic polyomavirus (GHPyV) are closely related to each other, but nevertheless form separate viral species; however, their serological relationship was previously unknown. As only APyV can be grown efficiently in tissue culture, virus-like particles (VLPs) were generated by expression of the genomic regions encoding the major structural protein VP1 of these viruses in yeast; these were used to elicit type-specific antibodies in rabbits and as antigens in serological reactions...
December 2012: Journal of General Virology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21897811/top-down-spatial-categorization-signal-from-prefrontal-to-posterior-parietal-cortex-in-the-primate
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hugo Merchant, David Andrew Crowe, Melissa S Robertson, Antonio Francisco Fortes, Apostolos P Georgopoulos
In the present study we characterized the strength and time course of category-selective responses in prefrontal cortex and area 7a of the posterior parietal cortex during a match-to-sample spatial categorization task. A monkey was trained to categorize whether the height of a horizontal sample bar, presented in rectangular frame at one of three vertical locations, was "high" or "low," depending on whether its position was above or below the frame's midline. After the display of this sample bar, and after a delay, choice bars were sequentially flashed in two locations: at the top and at the bottom of the frame ("choice" epoch)...
2011: Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20881120/hierarchical-auditory-processing-directed-rostrally-along-the-monkey-s-supratemporal-plane
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yukiko Kikuchi, Barry Horwitz, Mortimer Mishkin
Connectional anatomical evidence suggests that the auditory core, containing the tonotopic areas A1, R, and RT, constitutes the first stage of auditory cortical processing, with feedforward projections from core outward, first to the surrounding auditory belt and then to the parabelt. Connectional evidence also raises the possibility that the core itself is serially organized, with feedforward projections from A1 to R and with additional projections, although of unknown feed direction, from R to RT. We hypothesized that area RT together with more rostral parts of the supratemporal plane (rSTP) form the anterior extension of a rostrally directed stimulus quality processing stream originating in the auditory core area A1...
September 29, 2010: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20810885/rapid-sequences-of-population-activity-patterns-dynamically-encode-task-critical-spatial-information-in-parietal-cortex
#30
COMPARATIVE STUDY
David A Crowe, Bruno B Averbeck, Matthew V Chafee
We characterized the temporal dynamics of population activity in parietal cortex of monkeys as they solved a spatial cognitive problem posed by an object construction task. We applied pattern classification techniques to characterize patterns of activity coding object-centered side, a task-defined variable specifying whether an object component was located on the left or right side of a reference object, regardless of its retinocentric position. During a period in which the value of object-centered side, as defined by task events, remained constant, parietal cortex represented this variable using a dynamic neural code by activating neurons with the same spatial preference in rapid succession so that the pattern of active neurons changed dramatically while the spatial information they collectively encoded remained stable...
September 1, 2010: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20550568/understanding-the-parietal-lobe-syndrome-from-a-neurophysiological-and-evolutionary-perspective
#31
REVIEW
Roberto Caminiti, Matthew V Chafee, Alexandra Battaglia-Mayer, Bruno B Averbeck, David A Crowe, Apostolos P Georgopoulos
In human and nonhuman primates parietal cortex is formed by a multiplicity of areas. For those of the superior parietal lobule (SPL) there exists a certain homology between man and macaques. As a consequence, optic ataxia, a disturbed visual control of hand reaching, has similar features in man and monkeys. Establishing such correspondence has proven difficult for the areas of the inferior parietal lobule (IPL). This difficulty depends on many factors. First, no physiological information is available in man on the dynamic properties of cells in the IPL...
June 2010: European Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18640669/differential-contribution-of-superior-parietal-and-dorsal-lateral-prefrontal-cortices-in-copying
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bruno B Averbeck, David A Crowe, Matthew V Chafee, Apostolos P Georgopoulos
In this study we examined the differential contribution of superior parietal cortex (SPC) and caudal dorsal-lateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) to drawing geometrical shapes. Monkeys were trained to draw triangles, squares, trapezoids and inverted triangles while we recorded the activity of small ensembles of neurons in caudal area 46 and areas 5 and 2 of parietal cortex. We analyzed the drawing factors encoded by individual neurons by fitting a step-wise general-linear model using as our dependent variable the firing rate averaged over segments of the produced trajectories...
March 2009: Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18480278/neural-ensemble-decoding-reveals-a-correlate-of-viewer-to-object-centered-spatial-transformation-in-monkey-parietal-cortex
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David A Crowe, Bruno B Averbeck, Matthew V Chafee
The parietal cortex contains representations of space in multiple coordinate systems including retina-, head-, body-, and world-based systems. Previously, we found that when monkeys are required to perform spatial computations on objects, many neurons in parietal area 7a represent position in an object-centered coordinate system as well. Because visual information enters the brain in a retina-centered reference frame, generation of an object-centered reference requires the brain to perform computation on the visual input...
May 14, 2008: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18364318/cooperative-problem-solving-in-rooks-corvus-frugilegus
#34
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Amanda M Seed, Nicola S Clayton, Nathan J Emery
Recent work has shown that captive rooks, like chimpanzees and other primates, develop cooperative alliances with their conspecifics. Furthermore, the pressures hypothesized to have favoured social intelligence in primates also apply to corvids. We tested cooperative problem-solving in rooks to compare their performance and cognition with primates. Without training, eight rooks quickly solved a problem in which two individuals had to pull both ends of a string simultaneously in order to pull in a food platform...
June 22, 2008: Proceedings. Biological Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17762942/do-common-ravens-corvus-corax-rely-on-human-or-conspecific-gaze-cues-to-detect-hidden-food
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christian Schloegl, Kurt Kotrschal, Thomas Bugnyar
The ability of non-human animals to use experimenter-given cues in object-choice tasks has recently gained interest. In such experiments, the location of hidden food is indicated by an experimenter, e.g. by gazing, pointing or touching. Whereas dogs apparently outperform all other species so far tested, apes and monkeys have problems in using such cues. Since only mammalian species have been tested, information is lacking about the evolutionary origin of these abilities. We here present the first data on object-choice tasks conducted with an avian species, the common raven...
April 2008: Animal Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17702575/spontaneous-metatool-use-by-new-caledonian-crows
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alex H Taylor, Gavin R Hunt, Jennifer C Holzhaider, Russell D Gray
A crucial stage in hominin evolution was the development of metatool use -- the ability to use one tool on another [1, 2]. Although the great apes can solve metatool tasks [3, 4], monkeys have been less successful [5-7]. Here we provide experimental evidence that New Caledonian crows can spontaneously solve a demanding metatool task in which a short tool is used to extract a longer tool that can then be used to obtain meat. Six out of the seven crows initially attempted to extract the long tool with the short tool...
September 4, 2007: Current Biology: CB
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17389630/representing-spatial-relationships-in-posterior-parietal-cortex-single-neurons-code-object-referenced-position
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew V Chafee, Bruno B Averbeck, David A Crowe
The brain computes spatial relationships as necessary to achieve behavioral goals. Loss of this spatial cognitive ability after damage to posterior parietal cortex may contribute to constructional apraxia, a syndrome in which a patient's ability to reproduce spatial relationships between the parts of an object is disrupted. To explore neural correlates of object-relative spatial representation, we recorded neural activity in parietal area 7a of monkeys performing an object construction task. We found that neurons were activated as a function of the spatial relationship between a task-critical coordinate and a reference object...
December 2007: Cerebral Cortex
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17098976/avian-virulence-and-thermostable-replication-of-the-north-american-strain-of-west-nile-virus
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard M Kinney, Claire Y-H Huang, Melissa C Whiteman, Richard A Bowen, Stanley A Langevin, Barry R Miller, Aaron C Brault
The NY99 genotype of West Nile virus (WNV) introduced into North America has demonstrated high virulence for American crows (AMCRs), whilst a closely related WNV strain (KEN-3829) from Kenya exhibits substantially reduced virulence in AMCRs [Brault, A. C., Langevin, S. A., Bowen, R. A., Panella, N. A., Biggerstaff, B. J., Miller, B. R. & Nicholas, K. (2004). Emerg Infect Dis 10, 2161-2168]. Viruses rescued from infectious cDNA clones of both the NY99 and KEN-3829 strains demonstrated virulence comparable to that of their parental strains in AMCRs...
December 2006: Journal of General Virology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16157282/dynamics-of-parietal-neural-activity-during-spatial-cognitive-processing
#39
COMPARATIVE STUDY
David A Crowe, Bruno B Averbeck, Matthew V Chafee, Apostolos P Georgopoulos
Dynamic neural processing unrelated to changes in sensory input or motor output is likely to be a hallmark of cognitive operations. Here we show that neural representations of space in parietal cortex are dynamic while monkeys perform a spatial cognitive operation on a static visual stimulus. We recorded neural activity in area 7a during a visual maze task in which monkeys mentally followed a path without moving their eyes. We found that the direction of the followed path could be recovered from neuronal population activity...
September 15, 2005: Neuron
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15985372/semi-automated-preparation-of-the-dopamine-transporter-ligand-18-f-fecnt-for-human-pet-imaging-studies
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ronald J Voll, Jonathan McConathy, Michael S Waldrep, Ronald J Crowe, Mark M Goodman
The fluorine-18 labeled dopamine transport (DAT) ligand 2 beta-carbomethoxy-3beta-(4-chlorophenyl)-8-(2-fluoroethyl)nortropane (FECNT) has shown promising properties as an in vivo DAT imaging agent in human and monkey PET studies. A semi-automated synthesis has been developed to reliably produce [(18)F]FECNT in a 16% decay corrected yield. This method utilizes a new [(18)F]fluoralkylating agent and provides high purity [(18)F]FECNT in a formulation suitable for human use.
September 2005: Applied Radiation and Isotopes
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