How Functional brain states impinge on the fundamental functional organization of the brain in health and disease
In this podcast authors Prof. Albrecht Stroh of the University Medical Center and Leibniz Institute for Resilience Research in Mainz and Dr. Miriam Schwalm of Massachusetts Institute of Technology discuss their recently published manuscript Functional States Shape the Spatiotemporal Representation of Local and Cortex-wide Neural Activity in Mouse Sensory Cortex with Editor-in-Chief, Prof. Nino Ramirez. The authors work, which was conducted in collaboration with researchers from the University of Washington, compares the cortical representation of two distinct functional states, based on optical and electrophysiological signals, locally recorded in the primary visual and somatosensory area, and wide-field camera imaging of the entire mouse cortex. The authors examined intrinsic and stimulus-evoked neuronal activity under both states and show state-dependent signal propagation modes. As different types of anesthesia as well as different behavioral states show characteristics similar to the two states the authors described, these experiments serve as a model for cortical information processing and explain response variability of neural networks under seemingly constant conditions, which is relevant for a variety of neurophysiological studies.
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