keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38683837/recurrent-neural-networks-that-learn-multi-step-visual-routines-with-reinforcement-learning
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sami Mollard, Catherine Wacongne, Sander M Bohte, Pieter R Roelfsema
Many cognitive problems can be decomposed into series of subproblems that are solved sequentially by the brain. When subproblems are solved, relevant intermediate results need to be stored by neurons and propagated to the next subproblem, until the overarching goal has been completed. We will here consider visual tasks, which can be decomposed into sequences of elemental visual operations. Experimental evidence suggests that intermediate results of the elemental operations are stored in working memory as an enhancement of neural activity in the visual cortex...
April 29, 2024: PLoS Computational Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38683657/visual-preference-for-socially-relevant-spatial-relations-in-humans-and-monkeys
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicolas Goupil, Holly Rayson, Émilie Serraille, Alice Massera, Pier Francesco Ferrari, Jean-Rémy Hochmann, Liuba Papeo
As a powerful social signal, a body, face, or gaze facing toward oneself holds an individual's attention. We asked whether, going beyond an egocentric stance, facingness between others has a similar effect and why. In a preferential-looking time paradigm, human adults showed spontaneous preference to look at two bodies facing toward (vs. away from) each other (Experiment 1a, N = 24). Moreover, facing dyads were rated higher on social semantic dimensions, showing that facingness adds social value to stimuli (Experiment 1b, N = 138)...
April 29, 2024: Psychological Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38679220/six-months-of-voluntary-alcohol-consumption-in-male-cynomolgus-macaques-reduces-intracortical-bone-porosity-without-altering-mineralization-or-mechanical-properties
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amida H Kuah, Lara H Sattgast, Kathleen A Grant, Steven W Gonzales, Rupak Khadka, John G Damrath, Matthew R Allen, David B Burr, Joseph M Wallace, Gianni F Maddalozzo, Mary Lauren Benton, Laura M Beaver, Adam J Branscum, Russell T Turner, Urszula T Iwaniec
Chronic heavy alcohol consumption is a risk factor for low trauma bone fracture. Using a non-human primate model of voluntary alcohol consumption, we investigated the effects of 6 months of ethanol intake on cortical bone in cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis). Young adult (6.4 ± 0.1 years old, mean ± SE) male cynomolgus macaques (n = 17) were subjected to a 4-month graded ethanol induction period, followed by voluntary self-administration of water or ethanol (4 % w/v) for 22 h/d, 7 d/wk...
April 26, 2024: Bone
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38679218/a-comparative-study-of-the-in-vitro-dermal-absorption-of-radiolabeled-benzophenone-through-human-skin
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sadaff Ejaz, Clive Roper, Zoe Finlayson, Kyle S Saitta, Timothy McCarthy, Frank Sun, Michael D Southall
Octocrylene is a common sun filter ingredient used to protect the skin from damaging UV rays. Benzophenone is an impurity found in formulations containing octocrylene. [14 C]-Benzophenone was spiked (0.1 g/L) into 2 commercial sunscreen formulations; Neutrogena® Beach Defense Sunscreen Spray Broad Spectrum SPF 70 Aerosol, Neutrogena® Ultra Sheer Body Mist Sunscreen Broad Spectrum SPF 30 Aerosol, and an acetone vehicle. The formulations were applied (ca 2 μL/cm2 ) to dermatomed human skin mounted in static diffusion cells in vitro...
April 26, 2024: Toxicology in Vitro: An International Journal Published in Association with BIBRA
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38674438/insights-into-the-geographical-origins-of-the-cabo-verde-green-monkey
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lara Almeida, Ivo Colmonero-Costeira, Maria J Ferreira da Silva, Cecilia Veracini, Raquel Vasconcelos
The green monkey Chlorocebus sabaeus , L. 1766, native to West Africa, was introduced to the Cabo Verde Archipelago in the 16th century. Historical sources suggest that, due to the importance of Cabo Verde as a commercial entrepôt in the Atlantic slave trade, establishing the precise place of origin of this introduced species is challenging. Non-invasive fecal samples were collected from feral and captive green monkey individuals in Cabo Verde. Two mitochondrial fragments, HVRI and cyt b , were used to confirm the taxonomic identification of the species and to tentatively determine the geographic origin of introduction to the archipelago from the African continent...
April 17, 2024: Genes
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38670845/wa-vp4-as-a-candidate-rotavirus-vaccine-induced-homologous-and-heterologous-virus-neutralizing-antibody-responses-in-mice-pigs-and-cynomolgus-monkeys
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Guoxing Luo, Yuanjun Zeng, Roufang Sheng, Zhishan Zhang, Cao Li, Han Yang, Yaling Chen, Feibo Song, Shiyin Zhang, Tingdong Li, Shengxiang Ge, Jun Zhang, Ningshao Xia
Group A rotavirus (RVA) is the primary etiological agent of acute gastroenteritis (AGE) in children under 5 years of age. Despite the global implementation of vaccines, rotavirus infections continue to cause over 120,000 deaths annually, with a majority occurring in developing nations. Among infants, the P[8] rotavirus strain is the most prevalent and can be categorized into four distinct lineages. In this investigation, we expressed five VP4(aa26-476) proteins from different P[8] lineages of human rotavirus in E...
April 25, 2024: Vaccine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38670805/computational-mechanisms-underlying-motivation-to-earn-symbolic-reinforcers
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Diana C Burk, Craig Taswell, Hua Tang, Bruno B Averbeck
Reinforcement learning (RL) is a theoretical framework that describes how agents learn to select options that maximize rewards and minimize punishments over time. We often make choices, however, to obtain symbolic reinforcers (e.g. money, points) that are later exchanged for primary reinforcers (e.g. food, drink). Although symbolic reinforcers are ubiquitous in our daily lives, widely used in laboratory tasks because they can be motivating, mechanisms by which they become motivating are less understood. In the present study, we examined how monkeys learn to make choices that maximize fluid rewards through reinforcement with tokens...
April 26, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38670552/hpn328-a-trispecific-t-cell-activating-protein-construct-targeting-dll3-expressing-solid-tumors
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mary Ellen Molloy, Wade H Aaron, Manasi Barath, Mabel C Bush, Evan C Callihan, Kevin Carlin, Michael Cremin, Thomas Evans, Maria Gamez Guerrero, Golzar Hemmati, Avneel S Hundal, Llewelyn Lao, Payton Laurie, Bryan D Lemon, S Jack Lin, Jessica O'Rear, Purbasa Patnaik, Sony Sotelo Rocha, Linda Santiago, Kathryn L Strobel, Laura B Valenzuela, Chi-Heng Wu, Stephen Yu, Timothy Z Yu, Banmeet S Anand, Che-Leung Law, Liping L Sun, Holger Wesche, Richard J Austin
Delta-like ligand 3 (DLL3) is expressed in more than 70% of small cell lung cancers (SCLCs) and other neuroendocrine-derived tumor types. SCLC is highly aggressive and limited therapeutic options lead to poor prognosis for patients. HPN328 is a tri-specific T cell activating construct (TriTAC) consisting of three binding domains: a CD3 binder for T cell engagement, an albumin binder for half-life extension, and a DLL3 binder for tumor cell engagement. In vitro assays, rodent models and non-human primates were used to assess the activity of HPN328...
April 27, 2024: Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38669271/bayesian-inference-of-structured-latent-spaces-from-neural-population-activity-with-the-orthogonal-stochastic-linear-mixing-model
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rui Meng, Kristofer E Bouchard
The brain produces diverse functions, from perceiving sounds to producing arm reaches, through the collective activity of populations of many neurons. Determining if and how the features of these exogenous variables (e.g., sound frequency, reach angle) are reflected in population neural activity is important for understanding how the brain operates. Often, high-dimensional neural population activity is confined to low-dimensional latent spaces. However, many current methods fail to extract latent spaces that are clearly structured by exogenous variables...
April 26, 2024: PLoS Computational Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38666645/seasonal-patterns-of-mpox-index-cases-africa-1970-2021
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Camille Besombes, Festus Mbrenga, Ella Gonofio, Christian Malaka, Cedric-Stephane Bationo, Jean Gaudart, Manon Curaudeau, Alexandre Hassanin, Antoine Gessain, Romain Duda, Tamara Giles Vernick, Arnaud Fontanet, Emmanuel Nakouné, Jordi Landier
Across 133 confirmed mpox zoonotic index cases reported during 1970-2021 in Africa, cases occurred year-round near the equator, where climate is consistent. However, in tropical regions of the northern hemisphere under a dry/wet season cycle, cases occurred seasonally. Our findings further support the seasonality of mpox zoonotic transmission risk.
May 2024: Emerging Infectious Diseases
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38666382/regeneration-of-nonhuman-primate-hearts-with-human-induced-pluripotent-stem-cell-derived-cardiac-spheroids
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hideki Kobayashi, Shugo Tohyama, Hajime Ichimura, Noburo Ohashi, Shuji Chino, Yusuke Soma, Hidenori Tani, Yuki Tanaka, Xiao Yang, Naoko Shiba, Shin Kadota, Kotaro Haga, Taijun Moriwaki, Yuika Morita-Umei, Tomohiko C Umei, Otoya Sekine, Yoshikazu Kishino, Hideaki Kanazawa, Hiroyuki Kawagishi, Mitsuhiko Yamada, Kazumasa Narita, Takafumi Naito, Tatsuichiro Seto, Koichiro Kuwahara, Yuji Shiba, Keiichi Fukuda
BACKGROUND: The clinical application of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (CMs) for cardiac repair commenced with the epicardial delivery of engineered cardiac tissue; however, the feasibility of the direct delivery of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived CMs into the cardiac muscle layer, which has reportedly induced electrical integration, is unclear because of concerns about poor engraftment of CMs and posttransplant arrhythmias. Thus, in this study, we prepared purified human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiac spheroids (hiPSC-CSs) and investigated whether their direct injection could regenerate infarcted nonhuman primate hearts...
April 26, 2024: Circulation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38664566/iswi-catalyzes-nucleosome-sliding-in-condensed-nucleosome-arrays
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Petra Vizjak, Dieter Kamp, Nicola Hepp, Alessandro Scacchetti, Mariano Gonzalez Pisfil, Joseph Bartho, Mario Halic, Peter B Becker, Michaela Smolle, Johannes Stigler, Felix Mueller-Planitz
How chromatin enzymes work in condensed chromatin and how they maintain diffusional mobility inside remains unexplored. Here we investigated these challenges using the Drosophila ISWI remodeling ATPase, which slides nucleosomes along DNA. Folding of chromatin fibers did not affect sliding in vitro. Catalytic rates were also comparable in- and outside of chromatin condensates. ISWI cross-links and thereby stiffens condensates, except when ATP hydrolysis is possible. Active hydrolysis is also required for ISWI's mobility in condensates...
April 25, 2024: Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38664243/decline-in-the-conception-rate-of-wild-japanese-monkeys-after-the-fukushima-daiichi-nuclear-power-plant-accident
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shin-Ichi Hayama, Setsuko Nakanishi, Aki Tanaka, Takuya Kato, Chinatsu Watanabe, Nobutaka Kikuchi, Risa Danjo, Ayano Matsuda, Wakako Mori, Yuki Kawabata, Hikari Akiba, Fumiharu Konno, Yoshi Kawamoto, Toshinori Omi
We examined the conception rate of wild Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata) in Fukushima City that were exposed to radiation as a result of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident in March 2011. The conception rate in the year of delivery from 2009 to 2022 was estimated by dissecting individuals that were euthanized by the government for population control as a countermeasure against crop damage. To evaluate the effects of exposure, the cumulative exposure dose for each individual was calculated using the concentration of radiocesium deposited in the soil at the capture site and the concentration of radiocesium in muscle estimated from the aggregated transfer factor...
April 25, 2024: Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661544/radiation-biological-toximetry-using-circulating-cell-free-dna-cfdna-for-rapid-radiation-nuclear-triage
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paul Okunieff, Steven G Swarts, Bruce Fenton, Stephen B Zhang, Zhenhuan Zhang, Lori Rice, Daohong Zhou, France Carrier, Lurong Zhang
Optimal triage biodosimetry would include risk stratification within minutes, and it would provide useful triage despite heterogeneous dosimetry, cytokine therapy, mixed radiation quality, race, and age. For regulatory approval, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Biodosimetry Guidance requires suitability for purpose and a validated species-independent mechanism. Circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) concentration assays may provide such triage information. To test this hypothesis, cfDNA concentrations were measured in unprocessed monkey plasma using a branched DNA (bDNA) technique with a laboratory developed test...
April 25, 2024: Radiation Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38659781/chronic-alcohol-consumption-alters-sex-dependent-bnst-neuron-function-in-rhesus-macaques
#15
Kristen E Pleil, Kathleen A Grant, Verginia C Cuzon Carlson, Thomas L Kash
Repeated alcohol drinking contributes to a number of neuropsychiatric diseases, including alcohol use disorder and co-expressed anxiety and mood disorders. Women are more susceptible to the development and expression of these diseases with the same history of alcohol exposure as men, suggesting they may be more sensitive to alcohol-induced plasticity in limbic brain regions controlling alcohol drinking, stress responsivity, and reward processing, among other behaviors. Using a translational model of alcohol drinking in rhesus monkeys, we examined sex differences in the basal function and plasticity of neurons in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST), a brain region in the extended amygdala shown to be a hub circuit node dysregulated in individuals with anxiety and alcohol use disorder...
April 15, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38659185/long-range-projections-of-oxytocin-neurons-in-the-marmoset-brain
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Arthur Lefevre, Jazlynn Meza, Cory T Miller
The neurohormone oxytocin (OT) has become a major target for the development of novel therapeutic strategies to treat psychiatric disorders such as autism spectrum disorder because of its integral role in governing many facets of mammalian social behavior. Whereas extensive work in rodents has produced much of our knowledge of OT, we lack basic information about its neurobiology in primates making it difficult to interpret the limited effects that OT manipulations have had in human patients. In fact, previous studies have revealed only limited OT fibers in primate brains...
April 24, 2024: Journal of Neuroendocrinology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38658139/acute-neuropixels-recordings-in-the-marmoset-monkey
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicholas M Dotson, Zachary W Davis, Patrick Jendritza, John H Reynolds
High-density linear probes, like Neuropixels, provide an unprecedented opportunity to understand how neural populations within specific laminar compartments contribute to behavior. Marmoset monkeys, unlike macaque monkeys, have a lissencephalic (smooth) cortex that enables recording perpendicular to the cortical surface, thus making them an ideal animal model for studying laminar computations. Here we present a method for acute Neuropixels recordings in the common marmoset ( Callithrix jacchus ). The approach replaces the native dura with an artificial silicon-based dura that grants visual access to the cortical surface, which is helpful in avoiding blood vessels, ensures perpendicular penetrations, and could be used in conjunction with optical imaging or optogenetic techniques...
April 24, 2024: ENeuro
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38656866/multimodal-connectivity-based-individual-parcellation-and-analysis-for-humans-and-rhesus-monkeys
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yue Cui, Chengyi Li, Yuheng Lu, Liang Ma, Luqi Cheng, Long Cao, Shan Yu, Tianzi Jiang
Individual brains vary greatly in morphology, connectivity and organization. Individualized brain parcellation is capable of precisely localizing subject-specific functional regions. However, most individualization approaches examined single modality of data and have not generalized to nonhuman primates. The present study proposed a novel multimodal connectivity-based individual parcellation (MCIP) method, which optimizes within-region homogeneity, spatial continuity and similarity to a reference atlas with the fusion of personal functional and anatomical connectivity...
April 24, 2024: IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38654419/successful-surgical-management-of-a-pyothorax-in-a-guinea-baboon-papio-papio
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anaïs Sailler, Sylvie Laidebeure, Alexis Lécu
A 16-year-old male Guinea baboon (Papio papio) was evaluated for weakness and focal wet fur of 1-week duration. A pyothorax caused by Streptococcus anginosus was diagnosed. A surgical approach was chosen, combined with a systemic antibiotic therapy. Medical imaging and C-reactive protein follow-up revealed the resolution of the pyothorax.
June 2024: Journal of Medical Primatology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653230/african-green-monkeys-maintain-zika-virus-neutralizing-antibodies-for-at-least-1-427-days-postinfection
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew D Haddow, Stephanie V Trefry, Farooq Nasar, Joshua D Shamblin, M Louise M Pitt
We report strong Zika virus (ZIKV) neutralizing antibody responses in African green monkeys (Chlorocebus sabaeus) up to 1,427 days after ZIKV exposure via the subcutaneous, intravaginal, or intrarectal routes. Our results suggest that immunocompetent African green monkeys previously infected with ZIKV are likely protected from reinfection for years, possibly life, and would not contribute to virus amplification during ZIKV epizootics.
April 23, 2024: American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
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