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  4. Imaging the Dynamics of Neocortical Population Activity in Behaving and Freely Moving Mammals
 
book part or chapter

Imaging the Dynamics of Neocortical Population Activity in Behaving and Freely Moving Mammals

Grinvald, Amiram
•
Petersen, Carl C. H.  
Canepari, M
•
Zecevic, D
Show more
2015
Membrane Potential Imaging In The Nervous System And Heart

The development of functional imaging techniques applicable to neuroscience and covering a wide range of spatial and temporal scales has greatly facilitated the exploration of the relationships between cognition, behaviour and electrical brain activity. For mammals, the neocortex plays a particularly profound role in generating sensory perception, controlling voluntary movement, higher cognitive functions and planning goal-directed behaviours. Since these remarkable functions of the neocortex cannot be explored in simple model preparations or in anesthetised animals, the neural basis of behaviour must be explored in awake behaving subjects. Because neocortical function is highly distributed across many rapidly interacting regions, it is essential to measure spatiotemporal dynamics of cortical activity in real-time. Extensive work in anesthetised mammals has shown that in vivo Voltage-Sensitive Dye Imaging (VSDI) reveals the neocortical population membrane potential dynamics at millisecond temporal resolution and subcolumnar spatial resolution. Here, we describe recent advances indicating that VSDI is also already well-developed for exploring cortical function in behaving monkeys and mice. The first animal model, the non-human primate, is well-suited for fundamental exploration of higher-level cognitive function and behavior. The second animal model, the mouse, benefits from a rich arsenal of molecular and genetic technologies. In the monkey, imaging from the same patch of cortex, repeatedly, is feasible for a long period of time, up to a year. In the rodent, VSDI is applicable to freely moving and awake head-restrained mice. Interactions between different cortical areas and different cortical columns can therefore now be dynamically mapped through VSDI and related to the corresponding behaviour. Thus by applying VSDI to mice andmonkeys one can begin to explore how behaviour emerges from neuronal activity in neuronal networks residing in different cortical areas.

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
book part or chapter
DOI
10.1007/978-3-319-17641-3_11
Web of Science ID

WOS:000361821900012

Author(s)
Grinvald, Amiram
Petersen, Carl C. H.  
Editors
Canepari, M
•
Zecevic, D
•
Bernus, O
Date Issued

2015

Publisher

Springer-Verlag Berlin

Publisher place

Berlin

Published in
Membrane Potential Imaging In The Nervous System And Heart
ISBN of the book

978-3-319-17641-3

978-3-319-17640-6

Total of pages

24

Start page

273

End page

296

Series title/Series vol.

Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology

Volume
859
Subjects

Cat

•

Cortical response field

•

Evoked response

•

Horizontal connections

•

Lateral spread

•

Monkey

•

Mouse

•

Orientation map

•

Orientation selectivity

•

Sensorimotor cortex

•

Spatiotemporal response

•

Spikes

•

Spontaneous activity

•

Subthreshold response

•

V1

•

V2

•

Visual cortex

•

Whisker

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LSENS  
Available on Infoscience
December 2, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/121368
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