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Brain Research Bulletin Jun 2024It is known that Temporal Information Processing (TIP) underpins our cognitive functioning. Previous research has focused on the relationship between TIP efficiency and...
It is known that Temporal Information Processing (TIP) underpins our cognitive functioning. Previous research has focused on the relationship between TIP efficiency and oscillatory brain activity, especially the gamma rhythm; however, non-oscillatory (aperiodic or 1/f) brain activity has often been missed. Recent studies have identified the 1/f component as being important for the functioning of the brain. Therefore, the current study aimed to verify whether TIP efficiency is associated with specific EEG resting state cortical activity patterns, including oscillatory and non-oscillatory (aperiodic) brain activities. To measure individual TIP efficiency, we used two behavioral tasks in which the participant judges the order of two sounds separated by millisecond intervals. Based on the above procedure, participants were classified into two groups with high and low TIP efficiency. Using cluster-based permutation analyses, we examined between-group differences in oscillatory and non-oscillatory (aperiodic) components across the 1-90 Hz range. The results revealed that the groups differed in the aperiodic component across the 30-80 Hz range in fronto-central topography. In other words, participants with low TIP efficiency exhibited higher levels of aperiodic activity, and thus a flatter frequency spectrum compared to those with high TIP efficiency. We conclude that participants with low TIP efficiency display higher levels of 'neural noise', which is associated with poorer quality and speed of neural processing.
PubMed: 38871258
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainresbull.2024.111010 -
IScience Jun 2024adapts to osmotic down-shifts by releasing metabolites through two mechanosensitive (MS) channels, low-threshold MscS and high-threshold MscL. To investigate each...
adapts to osmotic down-shifts by releasing metabolites through two mechanosensitive (MS) channels, low-threshold MscS and high-threshold MscL. To investigate each channel's contribution to the osmotic response, we generated , , and double mutants in O395. We characterized their tension-dependent activation in patch-clamp, and the millisecond-scale osmolyte release kinetics using a stopped-flow light scattering technique. We additionally generated numerical models describing osmolyte and water fluxes. We illustrate the sequence of events and define the parameters that characterize discrete phases of the osmotic response. Survival is correlated to the extent of cell swelling, the rate of osmolyte release, and the completeness of post-shock membrane resealing. Not only do the two channels interact functionally, but there is also an up-regulation of MscS in the strain, suggesting transcriptional crosstalk. The data reveal the role of MscS in the termination of the osmotic permeability response in .
PubMed: 38868203
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.110001 -
Frontiers in Neuroergonomics 2024There is a need to develop a comprehensive account of time-on-task fatigue effects on performance (i.e., the vigilance decrement) to increase predictive accuracy. We...
INTRODUCTION
There is a need to develop a comprehensive account of time-on-task fatigue effects on performance (i.e., the vigilance decrement) to increase predictive accuracy. We address this need by integrating three independent accounts into a novel hybrid framework. This framework unites (1) a motivational system balancing goal and comfort drives as described by an influential cognitive-energetic theory with (2) accumulating microlapses from a recent computational model of fatigue, and (3) frontal gamma oscillations indexing fluctuations in motivational control. Moreover, the hybrid framework formally links brief lapses (occurring over milliseconds) to the dynamics of the motivational system at a temporal scale not otherwise described in the fatigue literature.
METHODS
EEG and behavioral data was collected from a brief vigilance task. High frequency gamma oscillations were assayed, indexing effortful controlled processes with motivation as a latent factor. Binned and single-trial gamma power was evaluated for changes in real- and lagged-time and correlated with behavior. Functional connectivity analyses assessed the directionality of gamma power in frontal-parietal communication across time-on-task. As a high-resolution representation of latent motivation, gamma power was scaled by fatigue moderators in two computational models. Microlapses modulated transitions from an effortful controlled state to a minimal-effort default state. The hybrid models were compared to a computational microlapse-only model for goodness-of-fit with simulated data.
RESULTS
Findings suggested real-time high gamma power exhibited properties consistent with effortful motivational control. However, gamma power failed to correlate with increases in response times over time, indicating electrophysiology and behavior relations are insufficient in capturing the full range of fatigue effects. Directional connectivity affirmed the dominance of frontal gamma activity in controlled processes in the frontal-parietal network. Parameterizing high frontal gamma power, as an index of fluctuating relative motivational control, produced results that are as accurate or superior to a previous microlapse-only computational model.
DISCUSSION
The hybrid framework views fatigue as a function of a energetical motivational system, managing the trade-space between controlled processes and competing wellbeing needs. Two gamma computational models provided compelling and parsimonious support for this framework, which can potentially be applied to fatigue intervention technologies and related effectiveness measures.
PubMed: 38864094
DOI: 10.3389/fnrgo.2024.1375913 -
Optics Express Apr 2024This paper aims to explain when the vaporization or thermal decomposition prevails during laser-induced bubble growth and how they influence bubble morphology. Bubbles...
This paper aims to explain when the vaporization or thermal decomposition prevails during laser-induced bubble growth and how they influence bubble morphology. Bubbles were generated by irradiating a 304 stainless steel plate submerged in degassed water using millisecond lasers with a pulse width of 0.4 ms and powers of 1.6 kW and 3.2 kW, respectively. The dynamic evolution of bubbles was recorded by a high-speed camera. Moreover, the numerical models were developed to obtain a vaporization model and a decomposition model by incorporating the source terms due to the vaporization and decomposition mass fluxes into the governing equations, respectively. The simulated dynamic bubble evolution is consistent with the experimental results. When the laser power is 1.6 kW, a thin-layer bubble is formed, which gradually shrinks and eventually disappears after the laser stops irradiating. When the laser power is 3.2 kW, a spherical bubble is formed, and its volume decreases significantly after the laser stops irradiating. Subsequently, it remains relatively stable during the observation period. The fundamental reason for the difference between the bubble morphologies obtained from the vaporization model and the decomposition model lies in the presence of a condensation zone in the gas phase. When water vaporization or thermal decomposition dominates, the temperatures obtained from the models align with the decomposition ratios at varying temperatures reported in the literature. Our findings are significant for understanding the dynamic behavior of bubbles, with implications for various laser processing underwater.
PubMed: 38859214
DOI: 10.1364/OE.521849 -
Optics Express May 2024Quantum key distribution (QKD) provides future-proof security for data communications over optical networks. Currently, sophisticated QKD systems are developed and the...
Quantum key distribution (QKD) provides future-proof security for data communications over optical networks. Currently, sophisticated QKD systems are developed and the scale of QKD-secured optical networks (QKD-ONs) becomes larger. Given the complex network conditions and dynamic end-to-end security services in QKD-ONs, autonomic management and control becomes a promising paradigm to support end-to-end quality-of-service (QoS) assurance in an efficient and stable way without requiring human intervention. Hence, to enable and utilize the autonomic functionalities over QKD-ONs for realizing the end-to-end QoS assurance becomes a challenge. This work enhances the software defined networking (SDN) technique to tackle this challenge because SDN can add programmability and flexibility for QKD-ON's management and control. A new architecture of SDN-based QKD-ONs supporting autonomic end-to-end QoS assurance is designed, where a knowledge engine with autonomic control loops is developed in the SDN controller. We present the autonomic end-to-end QoS assurance procedure, and the cross-layer collaborative QoS assurance (CLC-QA) strategy for implementing the autonomic functionalities in the network level over QKD-ONs. We also establish an experimental testbed of SDN-based QKD-ONs supporting autonomic end-to-end QoS assurance, and perform the numerical simulation to verify our proposed approaches. Experimental results demonstrate that our presented approaches can achieve the millisecond-level overall latency of 337 ms and 618 ms, during the first and second autonomic adjustment without human intervention in case of the autonomic QoS protection. Moreover, the CLC-QA strategy is evaluated under different traffic loads by being compared with the baseline strategy without cross-layer collaboration. It can improve 22.5% protection success ratio and save 5.7% average key consumption.
PubMed: 38858991
DOI: 10.1364/OE.516443 -
Optics Express May 2024This study introduces an advanced approach for assessing the damage state of charge-coupled devices (CCDs) caused by laser interactions, leveraging a multi-source and...
This study introduces an advanced approach for assessing the damage state of charge-coupled devices (CCDs) caused by laser interactions, leveraging a multi-source and multi-feature information fusion technique. We established an experimental system that simulates laser damage on CCDs and collects diverse data types including echo information from active laser detection based on the 'cat's eye' effect, plasma flash data, and surface image characteristics of the CCD. A probabilistic neural network (PNN) was utilized to integrate these data sources effectively. Our analysis demonstrated that using multiple features from single sources significantly improves the accuracy of the damage assessment compared to single-feature evaluations. The error rates using dual features from each information type were 10.65% for cat's eye echo, 7.3% for plasma flash, and 7.17% for surface image analysis. By combining all three information sources and six features, we successfully reduced the error rate to 0.85%, with the evaluation time under 60 milliseconds. These findings confirm that our multi-source, multi-feature fusion method is highly effective for the online and real-time evaluation of CCD damage, offering significant improvements in the operational reliability and safety of devices in high-energy environments.
PubMed: 38858982
DOI: 10.1364/OE.515567 -
BioRxiv : the Preprint Server For... May 2024Whether the fast temporal dynamics of neural activity in brain circuits causally drive perception and cognition remains one of most longstanding unresolved questions in...
Whether the fast temporal dynamics of neural activity in brain circuits causally drive perception and cognition remains one of most longstanding unresolved questions in neuroscience . While some theories posit a 'timing code' in which dynamics on the millisecond timescale is central to brain function, others instead argue that mean firing rates over more extended periods (a 'rate code') carry most of the relevant information. Existing tools, such as optogenetics, can be used to alter temporal structure of neural dynamics , but they invariably change mean firing rates, leaving the interpretation of such experiments ambiguous. Here we developed and validated a new approach based on balanced, bidirectional optogenetics that can alter temporal structure of neural dynamics while mitigating effects on mean activity. Using this new approach, we found that selectively altering cortical temporal dynamics substantially reduced performance in a sensory perceptual task. These results demonstrate that endogenous temporal dynamics in the cortex are causally required for perception and behavior. More generally, this new bidirectional optogenetic approach should be broadly useful for disentangling the causal impact of different timescales of neural dynamics on behavior.
PubMed: 38853943
DOI: 10.1101/2024.05.30.596706 -
BioRxiv : the Preprint Server For... Jun 2024The design of bioelectronics capable of stably tracking brain-wide, single-cell, and millisecond-resolved neural activities in the developing brain is critical to the...
The design of bioelectronics capable of stably tracking brain-wide, single-cell, and millisecond-resolved neural activities in the developing brain is critical to the study of neuroscience and neurodevelopmental disorders. During development, the three-dimensional (3D) structure of the vertebrate brain arises from a 2D neural plate . These large morphological changes previously posed a challenge for implantable bioelectronics to track neural activity throughout brain development . Here, we present a tissue-level-soft, sub-micrometer-thick, stretchable mesh microelectrode array capable of integrating into the embryonic neural plate of vertebrates by leveraging the 2D-to-3D reconfiguration process of the tissue itself. Driven by the expansion and folding processes of organogenesis, the stretchable mesh electrode array deforms, stretches, and distributes throughout the entire brain, fully integrating into the 3D tissue structure. Immunostaining, gene expression analysis, and behavioral testing show no discernible impact on brain development or function. The embedded electrode array enables long-term, stable, brain-wide, single-unit-single-spike-resolved electrical mapping throughout brain development, illustrating how neural electrical activities and population dynamics emerge and evolve during brain development.
PubMed: 38853924
DOI: 10.1101/2024.05.29.596533 -
BioRxiv : the Preprint Server For... May 2024The auditory brainstem response (ABR) is an acoustically evoked EEG potential that is an important diagnostic tool for hearing loss, especially in newborns. The ABR...
The auditory brainstem response (ABR) is an acoustically evoked EEG potential that is an important diagnostic tool for hearing loss, especially in newborns. The ABR originates from the response sequence of auditory brainstem nuclei, and a click-evoked ABR typically shows three positive peaks ('waves') within the first six milliseconds. However, an assignment of the waves of the ABR to specific sources is difficult, and a quantification of contributions to the ABR waves is not available. Here, we exploit the large size and physical separation of the barn owl first-order cochlear nucleus magnocellularis (NM) to estimate single-cell contributions to the ABR. We simultaneously recorded NM neurons' spikes and the EEG, and found that ≳ 5, 000 spontaneous single-cell spikes are necessary to isolate a significant spike-triggered average response at the EEG electrode. An average single-neuron contribution to the ABR was predicted by convolving the spike-triggered average with the cell's peri-stimulus time histogram. Amplitudes of predicted contributions of single NM cells typically reached 32.9 ± 1.1 nV (mean ± SE, range: 2.5 - 162.7 nV), or 0.07 ± 0.02% (median ± SE range: 0.01 - 4.0%) of the ABR amplitude. The time of the predicted peak coincided best with the peak of the ABR wave II, and this coincidence was independent of the click sound level. Our results suggest that wave II of the ABR is shaped by a small fraction of NM units.
PubMed: 38853863
DOI: 10.1101/2024.05.29.596509 -
Cortex; a Journal Devoted To the Study... May 2024Extensive research has documented the brain networks that play an integral role in bias, or the alteration and filtration of information processing in a manner that... (Review)
Review
Extensive research has documented the brain networks that play an integral role in bias, or the alteration and filtration of information processing in a manner that fundamentally favors an individual. The roots of bias, whether self- or other-oriented, are a complex constellation of neural and psychological processes that start at the most fundamental levels of sensory processing. From the millisecond information is received in the brain it is filtered at various levels and through various brain networks in relation to extant intrinsic activity to provide individuals with a perception of reality that complements and satisfies the conscious perceptions they have for themselves and the cultures in which they were reared. The products of these interactions, in turn, are dynamically altered by the introduction of others, be they friends or strangers who are similar or different in socially meaningful ways. While much is known about the various ways that basic biases alter specific aspects of neural function to support various forms of bias, the breadth and scope of the phenomenon remains entirely unclear. The purpose of this review is to examine the brain networks that shape (i.e., bias) the self-concept and how interactions with similar (ingroup) compared to dissimilar (outgroup) others alter these network (and subsequent interpersonal) interactions in fundamental ways. Throughout, focus is placed on an emerging understanding of the brain as a complex system, which suggests that many of these network interactions likely occur on a non-linear scale that blurs the lines between network hierarchies.
PubMed: 38848651
DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2024.05.002