Society for Neuroscience - Search

Skip Navigation

  • join logo Join
  • hands shaped like a yellow heart icon Give
  • advocate logo Advocate
  • publish logo Publish
  • Icon with thought bubbles Learn
Shop Sign In
SfN Logo 2025
  • Membership
    • Learn About Membership
      • Individual Member Benefits
      • Institutional Program Member Benefits
      • Sustaining Associate Member Benefits
      • Get Involved at SfN
    • Become a Member
      • Sponsorship Information for New Members
      • Membership Categories & Fees
      • Membership Fees for Developing Countries
      • Renew Individual Membership
    • Member Resources
      • Automatic Renewals
      • Frequently Asked Questions
      • Individual Member Directory
      • Member Obituaries and Memorial Donations
    • Learn About Local Chapters
      • Start or Reactivate a Chapter
      • Resources for Chapters
      • Submit Annual Report
      • Chapter Directory
      • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Meetings
    • Meetings Overview
    • Neuroscience 2025
      • Presenter Resources
      • Itinerary Planner and Mobile App
      • Sessions and Events
      • Registration
      • Housing and Travel
      • Exhibits
      • Advertising and Sponsorship
      • FAQs
    • Global Events
      • SfN Virtual Events
    • Past and Future Annual Meetings
      • Neuroscience 2024
      • Neuroscience 2023
      • Search Past Annual Meeting Abstracts
      • Attendance Statistics
    • Meeting Policies and Guidelines
      • Code of Conduct at SfN Events
      • Growth and Opportunity Strategy
      • Photography & Recording Policy
      • Presenter Guidelines and Policies for SfN Events
    • Meeting Awards
      • Trainee Professional Development Award
      • International Travel Awards
      • FENS Member Awards to SfN Annual Meeting
      • IBRO Member Awards to SfN Annual Meeting
      • JNS Member Awards to SfN Annual Meeting
  • Careers
    • Careers Overview
    • Institutional Program (IP) Directory
    • NeuroJobs Career Center
      • Job Seekers
      • Employers
    • 2025 Graduate School Fair
    • Career Tools and Resources
      • Neuronline
      • Neurobiology of Disease Workshop
      • Responsible Conduct of Research Short Courses
      • Neuroscience Departments and Program Workshop
      • Global Funding Sources
    • Higher Education and Training
      • Core Competencies
      • Neuroscience Training Program Survey
    • Awards
      • Outstanding Career and Research Achievements
      • Early Career
  • Initiatives
    • Initiatives Overview
    • Awards
      • 2024 Award Recipients
      • Awards and Prizes FAQ
      • Trainee Professional Development Award
    • Neuroscience Scholars Program
    • Neuronline
      • Webinars
      • Articles
      • Videos
      • Podcasts
      • Collections
    • Resources to Stay Connected
      • SfN Zoom Backgrounds
    • Community
    • Women and Neuroscience
      • Increasing Women in Neuroscience (IWiN) Courses & Toolkit
      • Celebration of Women in Neuroscience Event
      • Awards
    • Animals in Research
      • Support for Members and Institutions
      • Tools and Resources
      • Resources for Medical Students
    • Public Education Programs
      • Resources for Educators
      • Brain Awareness Video Contest
      • Life of a Neuron Exhibit
  • Advocacy
    • Advocacy Overview
    • Advocacy Response
    • Advocacy Network
      • The NeuroAdvocate Challenge
      • Advocacy Action Center
      • Advocacy Best Practices
      • Advocacy Network News
      • Advocacy Training Seminars
    • US Advocacy Programs
      • Capitol Hill Day
      • Connect with Policymakers
      • Early Career Policy Ambassadors
      • Partner with a Local Chapter
      • Engage the Media
    • Global Advocacy Programs
      • Global Neuroscience Initiatives
      • Global Funding
      • North American Programs
    • Science Funding
      • Advocacy Videos
      • Advocacy Resources
      • US Neuroscience Initiatives
      • Funding Priorities and Processes
    • Policy Positions
      • Statements and Testimony
      • Sign-On Letters
  • Outreach
    • Outreach Overview
    • BrainFacts.org
    • Find a Neuroscientist
    • Brain Awareness Campaign
      • Webinar: The ABC's of BAW
      • How to Get Involved
    • Awards
      • Award for Education in Neuroscience
      • Next Generation Award
      • Chapter of the Year Award
      • Science Educator Award
  • Publications
    • Publications Overview
    • SfN News
    • JNeurosci
    • eNeuro
    • SfN Nexus
    • Neuroscience Quarterly
    • Annual Report
    • History of Neuroscience Autobiographical Chapters
  • About
    • About Overview
    • Mission and Strategic Plan
    • What We Do
      • Annual Report
      • Bylaws
      • Resolutions to the Bylaws
      • Environmental Commitment
      • Strategic Partners
      • History of SfN
    • SfN 50th Anniversary Celebration
    • NIH Public Health Service-Supported Funding Financial Conflict of Interest Policy
    • Volunteer
      • SfN Council
      • SfN Presidents
      • Committees
      • Elections
      • Call for Nominations
    • Professional Conduct
      • SfN Ethics Policy
      • Guidelines for Responsible Conduct Regarding Scientific Communication
      • Code of Conduct at SfN Events
      • Commitment to Scientific Integrity
      • Neuronline Digital Learning Community Guidelines
    • History of Neuroscience
      • Autobiographical Chapters
      • Autobiographical Videos of Prominent Neuroscientists
      • Classic Papers
      • Neuroscience History Resources
      • Robert Doty's Chapter on Neuroscience
    • Careers and Staff
      • Staff List
  1. Search

Filter

  • (43)
  • (35)
  • (14)
  • (2)
  • (1)
  • (22)
  • (2)
  • (91)
  • (1)
  • (1)
  • (115)
  • (2)
  • (2)
  • (6061)
  • (72)
  • (71)
  • (96)
Filter
2101 - 2110 of 33815 results
  • Novel Hypotheses from a Neuropsychological Case Study: Is the Visual Ventral Cortex Critical for Both Category-Generic and Category-Specific Form Perception? | Journal of Neuroscience
    In 1991, Milner et al. described a neurological patient, D.F., who was able to calibrate precise movements toward objects but unable to perceive their visual forms. Despite being able to discriminate basic visual properties (e.g., color, intensity), she was impaired in perceiving geometric shape
    Sep 16, 2009 Johanna C. Goll
  • Acute Stress Contributes to Individual Differences in Pain and Pain-Related Brain Activity in Healthy and Chronic Pain Patients | Journal of Neuroscience
    Individual differences in pain sensitivity and reactivity are well recognized but the underlying mechanisms are likely to be diverse. The phenomenon of stress-induced analgesia is well documented in animal research and individual variability in the stress response in humans may produce corresponding changes in pain. We assessed the magnitude of the acute stress response of 16 chronic back pain (CBP) patients and 18 healthy individuals exposed to noxious thermal stimulations administered in a functional magnetic resonance imaging experiment and tested its possible contribution to individual differences in pain perception. The temperature of the noxious stimulations was determined individually to control for differences in pain sensitivity. The two groups showed similar significant increases in reactive cortisol across the scanning session when compared with their basal levels collected over 7 consecutive days, suggesting normal hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis reactivity to painful stressors in CBP patie...
    Apr 17, 2013 Etienne Vachon-Presseau
  • Callosal Contributions to Simultaneous Bimanual Finger Movements | Journal of Neuroscience
    Corpus callosum (CC) is involved in the performance of bimanual motor tasks. We asked whether its functional role could be investigated by combining a motor behavioral study on bimanual movements in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients with a quantitative magnetic resonance diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) analysis of CC, which is shown to be damaged in this disease. MS patients and normal subjects were asked to perform sequences of bimanual finger opposition movements at different metronome rates; then we explored the structural integrity of CC by means of DTI. Significant differences in motor performance, mainly referred to timing accuracy, were observed between MS patients and control subjects. Bimanual motor coordination was impaired in MS patients as shown by the larger values of the interhand interval observed at all the tested metronome rates with respect to controls. Furthermore, DTI revealed a significant reduction of fractional anisotropy (FA), indicative of microstructural tissue damage, in the CC of ...
    Mar 19, 2008 Laura Bonzano
  • Developmental Changes in Brain Network Hub Connectivity in Late Adolescence | Journal of Neuroscience
    The human brain undergoes substantial development throughout adolescence and into early adulthood. This maturational process is thought to include the refinement of connectivity between putative connectivity hub regions of the brain, which collectively form a dense core that enhances the functional integration of anatomically distributed, and functionally specialized, neural systems. Here, we used longitudinal diffusion magnetic resonance imaging to characterize changes in connectivity between 80 cortical and subcortical anatomical regions over a 2 year period in 31 adolescents between the ages of 15 and 19 years. Connectome-wide analysis indicated that only a small subset of connections showed evidence of statistically significant developmental change over the study period, with 8% and 6% of connections demonstrating decreased and increased structural connectivity, respectively. Nonetheless, these connections linked 93% and 90% of the 80 regions, respectively, pointing to a selective, yet anatomically dis...
    Jun 17, 2015 Simon T.E. Baker
  • Uncovering Intrinsic Connectional Architecture of Functional Networks in Awake Rat Brain | Journal of Neuroscience
    Intrinsic connectional architecture of the brain is a crucial element in understanding the governing principle of brain organization. To date, enormous effort has been focused on addressing this issue in humans by combining resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rsfMRI) with other techniques. However, this research area is significantly underexplored in animals, perhaps because of confounding effects of anesthetic agents used in most animal experiments on functional connectivity. To bridge this gap, we have systematically investigated the intrinsic connectional architecture in the rodent brain by using a previously established awake-animal imaging model. First, group independent component analysis was applied to the rsfMRI data to extract elementary functional clusters of the brain. The connectional relationships between these clusters, as evaluated by partial correlation analysis, were then used to construct a graph of whole-brain neural network. This network exhibited the typical features o...
    Mar 9, 2011 Zhifeng Liang
  • Fragile Mentalizing: Lack of Behavioral and Neural Markers of Social Cognition in an Established Social Perspective Taking Task when Combined with Stress Induction | eNeuro
    The growing field of social neuroscience is reliant on the development of robust, ecologically valid paradigms for simulating social interaction and measuring social cognition in highly controlled laboratory settings. Perspective taking is a key component of social cognition, and accordingly several paradigms aimed at measuring perspective taking exist. A relatively novel paradigm is the ball detection task, in which participants and a virtual agent form independent beliefs about the presence of a target stimulus behind an occluder. Previous studies have shown that incongruent trials (in which the participant's and the agent's beliefs differ) affect participant reaction times and elicit increased neural activity in the so-called mentalizing network. This paradigm has important advantages over previous ones, in that experimental conditions can be fully randomized, and ceiling effects are not found even for adult populations. Here, we combined this paradigm with a stress induction and a nonstressful control ...
    Nov 1, 2024 Simrandeep Cheema
  • Lobular Patterns of Cerebellar Activation in Verbal Working-Memory and Finger-Tapping Tasks as Revealed by Functional MRI | Journal of Neuroscience
    The lobular distributions of functional activation of the cerebellum during verbal working-memory and finger movement tasks were investigated using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Relative to a rest control, finger tapping of the right hand produced ipsilateral-increased activation in HIV/HV [Roman numeral designations based on Larsell’s ([Larsell and Jansen, 1972][1]) nomenclature] and HVI and weaker activation in HVIII that was stronger on the ipsilateral side. For a working-memory task, subjects were asked to remember six (high load) or one (low load) visually presented letters across a brief delay. To assess the motoric aspects of rehearsal in the absence of working memory, we asked the subjects to repeatedly read subvocally six or one letters at a rate that approximated the internally generated rehearsal of working memory (motoric rehearsal task). For both tasks, bilateral regions of the superior cerebellar hemispheres (left superior HVIIA and right HVI) and portions of posterior vermis ...
    Dec 15, 1997 John E. Desmond
  • Spatial Localization after Excision of Human Auditory Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neurophysiological and animal ablation studies concur that primary auditory cortex is necessary for computation of the spatial coordinates of a sound source. Human studies have reported conflicting findings but have often suffered from inadequate psychophysical measures and/or poor lesion localization. We tested patients with unilateral temporal lobe excisions either encroaching on or sparing Heschl's gyrus (HG), quantifying lesion extent using anatomical magnetic resonance imaging measures. Subjects performed two tasks. In the localization task, they heard single clicks in a free-field spatial array subtending 180° of azimuth and indicated the perceived location with a laser pointer. In the discrimination task, two clicks were presented, and subjects indicated if they were in the same or different position. As a group, patients with right temporal excision, either encroaching onto HG or not, were significantly impaired in both hemifields in both tasks, although this was not true for all individuals. Patie...
    Aug 15, 2001 Robert J. Zatorre
  • Abstract
    The relevant nuclei of Parkinson’s disease were elucidated by the quantitative activation-induced manganese-enhanced MRI in MPTP mouse model.
    Despite the biochemical characteristics of Parkinson’s disease (PD) have been well described, physiological properties of PD have been argued. Especially, brain regions related to the severity of the Parkinson’s disease have not been established. To rev...
    Nov 14, 2016
  • Lesions Limited to the Human Thalamic Principal Somatosensory Nucleus (Ventral Caudal) Are Associated with Loss of Cold Sensations and Central Pain | Journal of Neuroscience
    Central pain is neuropathic pain resulting from a lesion of the CNS, such as a stroke [poststroke central pain (CPSP)]. Lesions involving the posterior thalamus lead to reduction or loss of sensation and to CPSP, although the responsible nuclei have not been identified. We now examine the hypotheses that thalamic lesions must extend posterior to the ventral caudal nucleus (Vc) and include ventral medial posterior nucleus (VMpo), to result in loss of cold sensibility and CPSP. Patients with small thalamic strokes associated with CPSP were evaluated by atlas-based mapping of magnetic resonance imaging scans, and by somatosensory testing. All lesions involved posterior Vc; two lesions also involved nuclei posterior to Vc, but not VMpo. All patients tested had alterations of cold pain sensation and tactile sensation, as measured by von Frey hairs. Three patients had altered cool sensation, and the patient with the least involvement of Vc had normal cool thresholds, suggesting that a critical volume of Vc must ...
    May 2, 2007 Jong H. Kim
  • Previous
  • 209
  • 210
  • 211
  • 212
  • 213
  • Next

Featured

  • Apply to be a Neuronline Community Leader
  • Read the Neuroscience Quarterly - Fall 2025
  • Renew your SfN Membership Today!
SfN Websites
  • BrainFacts.org logo
  • eNeuro logo
  • JNeurosci logo
  • Neuronline logo
Engage with SfN
  • join Join
  • give Give
  • advocate Advocate
  • publish Publish
Quick Links
  • SfN News
  • For Press
  • Global Events
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Code of Conduct
  • Jobs at SfN
  • SfN Store
  • Social Media
Follow SfN
  • BlueSky logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Instagram logo
  • LinkedIn logo

  • Threads logo
  • X Logo
  • YouTube logo
SfN logo with "SfN" in a blue box next to Society for Neuroscience in red text and the SfN tag line that reads "Advancing the understanding of the brain and nervous system"
1121 14th Street NW, Suite 1010, Washington, D.C. 20005
(202) 962-4000 | 1-888-985-9246
  • Accessibility Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Notice
  • Contact Us

Copyright ©
Society for Neuroscience