Gambino, Frédéric Kneib, Marie Pavlowsky, Alice Skala, Henriette Heitz, Stéphane Vitale, Nicolas Poulain, Bernard Khelfaoui, Malik Chelly, Jamel Pierre Billuart
...
Published in
European Journal of Neuroscience
Abnormalities in the formation and function of cerebellar circuitry potentially contribute to cognitive deficits in humans. In the adult, the activity of the sole output neurons of the cerebellar cortex - the Purkinje cells (PCs) - is shaped by the balance of activity between local excitatory and inhibitory circuits. However, how this balance is es...
Stagg, C J O'Shea, J Kincses, Z T Woolrich, M Matthews, P M Johansen-Berg, H
Published in
The European journal of neuroscience
Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is currently attracting increasing interest as a tool for neurorehabilitation. However, local and distant effects of tDCS on motor-related cortical activation patterns remain poorly defined, limiting the rationale for its use. Here we describe the results of a functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI...
Franken, Paul Kopp, Caroline Landolt, Hans-Peter Lüthi, Anita
Published in
The European journal of neuroscience
Here we report on The Satellite Symposium on Sleep Function that was held in Lausanne during 6(th) FENS forum and brought together neuroscientists from basic and clinical sleep research. We illustrate the principal questions that arose during this interdisciplinary gathering and introduce the contents of nine review articles on aspects of sleep tha...
Vassalli, Anne Dijk, Derk-Jan
Published in
The European journal of neuroscience
The mammalian brain oscillates through three distinct global activity states: wakefulness, non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep and REM sleep. The regulation and function of these 'vigilance' or 'behavioural' states can be investigated over a broad range of temporal and spatial scales and at different levels of functional organization, i.e. from gen...
Franken, P Dijk, D-J
Published in
The European journal of neuroscience
Circadian and sleep-homeostatic processes both contribute to sleep timing and sleep structure. Elimination of circadian rhythms through lesions of the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN), the master circadian pacemaker, leads to fragmentation of wakefulness and sleep but does not eliminate the homeostatic response to sleep loss as indexed by the increase ...
Leknes, Siri Brooks, Jonathan C W Wiech, Katja Tracey, Irene
Published in
The European journal of neuroscience
Relief from pain in humans is frequently measured by computing the reduction on an 11-point pain intensity scale. However, this definition of relief may be insufficient to capture the utility of pain relief for the individual. Based on pain literature and evidence from studies examining relief and reward, it is clear that pain relief is a broad con...
Braissant, Olivier Cagnon, Laurène Monnet-Tschudi, Florianne Speer, Oliver Wallimann, Theo Honegger, Paul Henry, Hugues
Published in
The European journal of neuroscience
Hyperammonemic disorders in pediatric patients lead to poorly understood irreversible effects on the developing brain that may be life-threatening. We showed previously that some of these NH4+-induced irreversible effects might be due to impairment of axonal growth that can be protected under ammonium exposure by creatine co-treatment. The aim of t...
Wilson, C R E Baxter, M G Easton, A Gaffan, D
Published in
The European journal of neuroscience
Both frontal-inferotemporal disconnection and fornix transection (Fx) in the monkey impair object-in-place scene learning, a model of human episodic memory. If the contribution of the fornix to scene learning is via interaction with or modulation of frontal-temporal interaction--that is, if they form a unitary system--then Fx should have no further...
Hauk, Olaf Davis, Matthew H Kherif, Ferath Pulvermüller, Friedemann
Published in
The European journal of neuroscience
Category-specific brain activation distinguishing between semantic word types has imposed challenges on theories of semantic representations and processes. However, existing metabolic imaging data are still ambiguous about whether these category-specific activations reflect processes involved in accessing the semantic representation of the stimuli,...
Van Humbeeck, Cindy Waelkens, Etienne Corti, Olga Brice, Alexis Vandenberghe, Wim
Published in
The European journal of neuroscience
Mutations in the gene for parkin, a 52-kDa E3 ubiquitin ligase, are a major cause of hereditary Parkinson's disease (PD). In vitro studies have identified a large number of parkin-interacting proteins. Whether parkin exists as a monomer or as part of a stable protein complex in vivo is uncertain. Here we demonstrate that endogenous parkin occurs in...