9 results on '"Alexander Thiele"'
Search Results
2. Review for 'Assessing within‐trial and across‐trial neural variability in macaque frontal eye fields and their relation to behavior'
- Author
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Alexander Thiele
- Subjects
Neural variability ,Relation (database) ,biology.animal ,Frontal eye fields ,Biology ,Neuroscience ,Macaque - Published
- 2019
3. Stimulus-induced dissociation of neuronal firing rates and local field potential gamma power and its relationship to the blood oxygen level-dependent signal in macaque primary visual cortex
- Author
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Alexander Thiele, Xing Chen, Marc Alwin Gieselmann, V. Vuksanovic, M. J. Bartolo, David Hunter, Louise S. Delicato, and Li Sun
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0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,Blood-oxygen-level dependent ,genetic structures ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Surround suppression ,General Neuroscience ,Population ,Local field potential ,Stimulus (physiology) ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,medicine ,Premovement neuronal activity ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,education ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
The functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal is regularly used to assign neuronal activity to cognitive function. Recent analyses have shown that the local field potential (LFP) gamma power is a better predictor of the fMRI BOLD signal than spiking activity. However, LFP gamma power and spiking activity are usually correlated, clouding the analysis of the neural basis of the BOLD signal. We show that changes in LFP gamma power and spiking activity in the primary visual cortex (V1) of the awake primate can be dissociated by using grating and plaid pattern stimuli, which differentially engage surround suppression and cross-orientation inhibition/facilitation within and between cortical columns. Grating presentation yielded substantial V1 LFP gamma frequency oscillations and significant multi-unit activity. Plaid pattern presentation significantly reduced the LFP gamma power while increasing population multi-unit activity. The fMRI BOLD activity followed the LFP gamma power changes, not the multi-unit activity. Inference of neuronal activity from the fMRI BOLD signal thus requires detailed a priori knowledge of how different stimuli or tasks activate the cortical network.
- Published
- 2011
4. Cholinergic control of cortical network interactions enables feedback-mediated attentional modulation
- Author
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Alexander Thiele and Gustavo Deco
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General Neuroscience ,Cognition ,Inhibitory postsynaptic potential ,Nicotinic agonist ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Attentional modulation ,Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor ,medicine ,Cholinergic ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Acetylcholine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Attention increases our ability to detect behaviorally relevant stimuli. At the neuronal level this is supported by increased firing rates of neurons representing the attended object. In primary visual cortex an attention-mediated activity increase depends on the presence of the neuromodulator acetylcholine. Using a spiking network model of visual cortex we have investigated how acetylcholine interacts with biased feedback to enable attentional processing. Although acetylcholine affects cortical processing in a multitude of manners, we restricted our analysis to four of its main established actions. These were (i) a reduction in firing rate adaptation by reduction in M-currents (muscarinic), (ii) an increase in thalamocortical synaptic efficacy by nicotinic presynaptic receptors, (iii) a reduction in lateral interactions by muscarinic presynaptic receptors, and (iv) an increase in inhibitory drive by muscarinic receptors located on inhibitory interneurons. We found that acetylcholine contributes to feedback-mediated attentional modulation, mostly by reducing intracortical interactions and also to some extent by increasing the inhibitory drive. These findings help explain why acetylcholine is necessary for top‐down-driven attentional modulation, and suggest a close interdependence of cholinergic and feedback drive in mediating cognitive function.
- Published
- 2011
5. Sexual Problems After Total or Partial Laryngectomy
- Author
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Jens Oeken, Alexander Thiele, Susanne Singer, Reinhold Schwarz, E. F. Meister, Friedemann Pabst, Andreas Dietz, Ulrike Kienast, and Helge Danker
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cross-sectional study ,Libido ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Laryngectomy ,Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale ,Postoperative Complications ,Erectile Dysfunction ,Quality of life ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Internal medicine ,Adaptation, Psychological ,medicine ,Humans ,Sexual Dysfunctions, Psychological ,Laryngeal Neoplasms ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Gynecology ,Hypopharyngeal Neoplasms ,Depression ,business.industry ,Head and neck cancer ,Age Factors ,Sick Role ,Hypopharyngeal cancer ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Sexual dysfunction ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Quality of Life ,Neck Dissection ,Female ,Tracheotomy ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Objectives: To investigate sexual problems that can occur after laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer surgery and to specify possible influencing factors. Study Design: Multi-institutional cross-sectional study. Methods: Two hundred six patients were interviewed in person using the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer, Quality of Life Questionnaire, Head and Neck Module (EORTC QLQ-H&N35), the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, and a structured interview assessing alcohol and tobacco consumption, sociodemographic data, and specific sexual problems. Type of surgery, tumor site, and tumor stage were documented according to the participants' medical records. Multivariate analysis of variance was used to assess the independent impact of each factor. Results: More than half of the patients in our study reported having reduced libido and sexual enjoyment after treatment. Sixty percent considered it an important issue for their contentment with life. Sexual difficulties were found to be unrelated with gender, formal education, alcohol and tobacco consumption, type of surgery (partial vs. total laryngectomy), radiotherapy, and tumor site. Psychological distress (F = 46.27, P < .001) was seen to have a strong independent impact on the occurrence of sexual difficulties and stage of disease (F = 4.50, P < .05) and age (F = 4.79, P < .05), a moderate independent impact. Conclusions: Reduced libido and sexual enjoyment is a common problem after laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer surgery. However, it is not caused by the oncological treatment but rather by the cancer itself. Depression is often associated with sexual problems. Both should be discussed in medical consultations with head and neck cancer patients when appropriate to provide adequate treatment.
- Published
- 2008
6. Spatio-temporal prediction and inference by V1 neurons
- Author
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Maribel Pulgarin, Alexander Thiele, Stefano Panzeri, Angel Nevado, Malcolm P. Young, Robert Robertson, and Kun Guo
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genetic structures ,business.industry ,Photic Stimulation ,General Neuroscience ,Inference ,Pattern recognition ,Brain mapping ,Signal ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Receptive field ,medicine ,Artificial intelligence ,Normal vision ,CRFS ,business ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
In normal vision, visual scenes are predictable, as they are both spatially and temporally redundant. Evidence suggests that the visual system may use the spatio-temporal regularities of the external world, available in the retinal signal, to extract information from the visual environment and better reconstruct current and future stimuli. We studied this by recording neuronal responses of primary visual cortex (area V1) in anaesthetized and paralysed macaques during the presentation of dynamic sequences of bars, in which spatio-temporal regularities and local information were independently manipulated. Most V1 neurons were significantly modulated by events prior to and distant from stimulation of their classical receptive fields (CRFs); many were more strongly tuned to prior and distant events than they were to CRFs bars; and several showed tuning to prior information without any CRF stimulation. Hence, V1 neurons do not simply analyse local contours, but impute local features to the visual world, on the basis of prior knowledge of a visual world in which useful information can be distributed widely in space and time.
- Published
- 2007
7. Cholinergic modulation of response properties and orientation tuning of neurons in primary visual cortex of anaesthetized Marmoset monkeys
- Author
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Robert Robertson, Alexander Thiele, Kun Guo, Wolfgang Zinke, JS McDonald, and Mark Roberts
- Subjects
C850 Cognitive Psychology ,Photic Stimulation ,Normal Distribution ,Action Potentials ,Context (language use) ,C860 Neuropsychology ,Article ,Orientation (mental) ,Orientation ,biology.animal ,Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor ,medicine ,Animals ,Anesthesia ,Visual Cortex ,Neurons ,biology ,Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,Marmoset ,Callithrix ,C830 Experimental Psychology ,biology.organism_classification ,C800 Psychology ,Acetylcholine ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neuroscience ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Cortical processing is strongly influenced by the actions of neuromodulators such as acetylcholine (ACh). Early studies in anaesthetized cats argued that acetylcholine can cause a sharpening of orientation tuning functions and an improvement of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of neuronal responses in primary visual cortex (V1). Recent in vitro studies have demonstrated that acetylcholine reduces the efficacy of feedback and intracortical connections via the activation of muscarinic receptors, and increases the efficacy of feed-forward connections via the activation of nicotinic receptors. If orientation tuning is mediated or enhanced by intracortical connections, high levels of acetylcholine should diminish orientation tuning. Here we investigate the effects of acetylcholine on orientation tuning and neuronal responsiveness in anaesthetized marmoset monkeys. We found that acetylcholine caused a broadening of the orientation tuning in the majority of cells, while tuning functions became sharper in only a minority of cells. Moreover, acetylcholine generally facilitated neuronal responses, but neither improved signal-to-noise ratio, nor reduced trial-to-trial firing rate variance systematically. Acetylcholine did however, reduce variability of spike occurrences within spike trains. We discuss these findings in the context of dynamic control of feed-forward and lateral ⁄ feedback connectivity by acetylcholine.
- Published
- 2006
8. Prediction of upper aerodigestive tract cancer by slide-based cytometry
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Attila Tárnok, Anette Weber, Alexander Thiele, Friedrich Bootz, Andreas O. H. Gerstner, and Andrea Tannapfel
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Pilot Projects ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Malignancy ,medicine.disease ,Respiratory Tract Neoplasms ,Laser Scanning Cytometry ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Cytokeratin ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Liquid-based cytology ,Cytology ,Immunology ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Mouth Neoplasms ,Histopathology ,Cytometry - Abstract
Aim: To evaluate slide-based cytometry in screening for and following up of carcinoma of the upper aerodigestive tract using swabs for a minimal-invasive approach. Methods: Laser scanning cytometry (LSC) was used for multiparametric analysis of cells stained for cytokeratin and DNA to determine the DNA-index (DI) of the tumor cells. Histograms with 0.95 < DI < 1.05 and 1.9 < DI < 2.1 were defined as DNA euploid and any other DI as DNA aneuploid. After subsequent HE-staining, single cells were relocalized in order to document morphology. Conventional cytology was also performed on a subset of the slides. Routine histopathology of parallel biopsies served as gold standard in all cases. Results: 115 swabs from 109 patients were obtained from the entire upper aerodigestive tract. 16 swabs were classified as insufficient for LSC. In the remaining 99 specimens, 1 benign lesion was misclassified as malignant, while 61 of the 75 malignant lesions were correctly identified. This corresponds to predictive values of 98.4% and 62.2% for the detection of malignant and benign samples by LSC. Conclusion: This pilot study demonstrates the validity of LSC screening for the identification of tumor malignancy in the upper aerodigestive tract from swab collected cytological material. © 2005 International Society for Analytical Cytology
- Published
- 2006
9. Decision-related activity in the macaque dorsal visual pathway
- Author
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Alexander Thiele, Klaus-Peter Hoffmann, and Claudia Distler
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Visual perception ,genetic structures ,Visual N1 ,biology ,General Neuroscience ,Sensory system ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Macaque ,Visual processing ,biology.animal ,Premovement neuronal activity ,Second-order stimulus ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Brain areas at higher levels of cortical organization are thought to be more involved in decision processes than are earlier, i.e. lower, sensory areas. Hence, neuronal activity correlated with decisions should vary with an area’s position in the cortical hierarchy. To test this proposal, we investigated whether a change in neuronal activity during error trials depends in a systematic way on cortical hierarchical position. While macaque monkeys discriminated the direction of moving visual stimuli, the activity of direction-selective neurons was recorded in four extrastriate visual areas: V3A, the middle temporal area, the middle superior temporal area and the posterior part of the superior temporal polysensory area. Neuronal activity was significantly reduced in all areas when the monkeys made errors in judging the direction of stimuli moving in the preferred direction with low and intermediate luminance contrast. The amount of activity reduction was » 50% in all of the visual areas. Thus, the activity on error trials is reduced in early visual processing, independent of the hierarchy in the dorsal visual pathway. The activity reduction depended on stimulus contrast and the direction of the decision relative to the stimulus motion. It was profound and significant in all areas at low stimulus contrast. However, it was nonsignificant at high stimulus contrast. Our data suggest that activity reduction on error trials is due to lack of attention in association with stimulus expectation.
- Published
- 1999
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