Reading List 265
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.
This week we continue our new feature (see below): the Sensorimotor Superlab Journal Club. In our lab meeting we discuss a paper from the list, and invite one of the authors to give a presentation and answer questions. We post a video of the meeting on YouTube, and we post a link to the video here.
Enjoy!
—the superlab
1
Rewiring movements: A single neuronal population in the spinal cord is crucial to restore walking after paralysis
Kathe C
Science 385:1429
2
Long-term memory formation for voices during sleep in three-month-old infants
Bastian L, Kurz E-M, Näher T, Zinke K, Friedrich M, Born J
Neurobiol Learn Mem 215:107987
3
Mental programming of spatial sequences in working memory in the macaque frontal cortex
Tian Z, Chen J, Zhang C, Min B, Xu B, Wang L
Science 385:eadp6091
4
Visual effects on tactile texture perception
Roberts RD, Li M, Allen HA
Sci Rep 14:632
5
Nonlinear dynamics of multi-omics profiles during human aging
Shen X, Wang C, Zhou X, Zhou W, Hornburg D, Wu S, Snyder MP
Nat Aging
6
Differential formation of motor cortical dynamics during movement preparation according to the predictability of go timing
Chae S, Sohn J-W, Kim S-P
J Neurosci 44
7
Haptic perception and its relation to action
Klatzky RL
Annu Rev Psychol
8
Initial and corrective submovement encoding differences within primary motor cortex during precision reaching
Schwartze KC, Lee W-H, Rouse AG
J Neurophysiol 132:433–445
9
Potentiation of active locomotor state by spinal-projecting serotonergic neurons
Fenstermacher S, Vonasek A, Gattuso H, Chaimowitz C, Dymecki S, Jessell T, Dasen J
bioRxiv:2024.09.26.615260
10
Millisecond-scale motor control precedes sensorimotor learning in Bengalese finches
Pascual LM, Vusirikala A, Nemenman I, Sober SJ, Pasek MJ
bioRxiv:2024.09.27.615500
11
Tracking neurons across days with high-density probes
van Beest EH, Bimbard C, Fabre JMJ, Dodgson SW, Takács F, Coen P, Lebedeva A, Harris KD, Carandini M
Nat Methods
12
Cortically disparate visual features evoke content-independent load signals during storage in working memory
Jones HM, Thyer WS, Suplica D, Awh E
J Neurosci
13
Potentiation of cortico-spinal output via targeted electrical stimulation of the motor thalamus
Ho JC et al.
Nat Commun 15
14
Distributed and specific encoding of sensory, motor, and decision information in the mouse neocortex during goal-directed behavior
Oryshchuk A, Sourmpis C, Weverbergh J, Asri R, Esmaeili V, Modirshanechi A, Gerstner W, Petersen CCH, Crochet S
Cell Rep 43:113618
15
Variations in clustering of multielectrode local field potentials in the motor cortex of macaque monkeys during a reach-and-grasp task
Chambellant F, Falaki A, Moreau-Debord I, French R, Serrano E, Quessy S, Dancause N, Thomas E
eNeuro 11:ENEURO.0047-24.2024
16
Acquiring musculoskeletal skills with curriculum-based reinforcement learning
Chiappa AS, Tano P, Patel N, Ingster A, Pouget A, Mathis A
Neuron
17
Neural manifolds: Latest buzzword or pathway to understand the brain?
Perich M
The Transmitter: Neuroscience News and Perspectives
Superlab Papers
A hierarchical atlas of the human cerebellum for functional precision mapping
Nettekoven C, Zhi D, Shahshahani L, Pinho AL, Saadon-Grosman N, Buckner RL, Diedrichsen J
Nat Commun 15:8376
Journal Club
This week in the sensorimotor superlab lab meeting we welcomed Silas Busch to present his work from Christian Hansel’s lab at the University of Chicago:
Climbing fiber multi-innervation of mouse Purkinje dendrites with arborization common to human
Busch SE, Hansel C
Science 381:420–427
Video: https://youtu.be/1iH1dvyKXIs?si=1PDXrt8lrDKvYkW1
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.