Reading List 151

readinglist
Published

March 18, 2022

More than 20 trainees and PIs from the Sensorimotor Superlab at Western University contribute to this reading list. Here are the articles that have interested us this week.

Enjoy!
—the superlab

1

Synapse-type-specific competitive Hebbian learning forms functional recurrent networks
Eckmann S, Gjorgjieva J
bioRxiv:2022.03.11.483899

2

Principles of human movement augmentation and the challenges in making it a reality
Eden J, Bräcklein M, Ibáñez J, Barsakcioglu DY, Di Pino G, Farina D, Burdet E, Mehring C
Nat Commun

3

Cortico-fugal regulation of predictive coding
Lesicko AMH, Angeloni CF, Blackwell JM, De Biasi M, Geffen MN
Elife

4

Texture is encoded in precise temporal spiking patterns in primate somatosensory cortex
Long KH, Lieber JD, Bensmaia SJ
Nat Commun

5

A secondary motor area contributing to interlimb coordination during visually guided locomotion in the cat
Nakajima T, Fortier-Lebel N, Drew T
Cereb Cortex

6

Neural correlates of blood flow measured by ultrasound
Nunez-Elizalde AO, Krumin M, Reddy CB, Montaldo G, Urban A, Harris KD, Carandini M
Neuron

7

Motor cortical output for skilled forelimb movement is selectively distributed across projection neuron classes
Park J, Phillips JW, Guo J-Z, Martin KA, Hantman AW, Dudman JT
Sci Adv

8

Interpreting dynamics of neural activity after dimensionality reduction
Proix T, Perich MG, Milekovic T
bioRxiv:2022.03.04.482986

9

Putting perception into action: Inverse optimal control for continuous psychophysics
Straub D, Rothkopf CA
bioRxiv:2021.12.23.473976

10

Implicit sensorimotor adaptation is preserved in Parkinson’s Disease
Tsay JS, Najafi T, Schuck L, Wang T, Ivry RB
bioRxiv:2022.03.11.484047


Archive

You can look at an archive of our previous posts here: https://superlab.ca

Disclaimer

Articles appear on this list because they caught our eye, but their appearance here is not necessarily an endorsement of the work. We hope that you find something on this list you might not otherwise have come across—but, as always, please read with a critical eye.