All Stories

  1. Interpretable Machine Learning Identifies an Emergent Absence Seizure Mechanism
  2. Reticular thalamic hyperexcitability drives autism spectrum disorder behaviors in the Cntnap2 model of autism
  3. Actions of the antiseizure drug carbamazepine in the thalamic reticular nucleus: Potential mechanism of aggravating absence seizures
  4. Rhythmic Quakes Shock the Cortical Focus Theory
  5. Synaptic cell adhesion molecule Cdh6 identifies a class of sensory neurons with novel functions in colonic motility
  6. Synaptic cell adhesion molecule Cdh6 identifies a class of sensory neurons with novel functions in colonic motility
  7. Reticular Thalamic Hyperexcitability Drives Autism Spectrum Disorder Behaviors in the Cntnap2 Model of Autism
  8. The reuniens thalamus recruits recurrent excitation in the medial prefrontal cortex
  9. Synaptic cell adhesion molecule Cdh6 identifies a class of sensory neurons with novel functions in colonic motility
  10. Actions of the Anti-Seizure Drug Carbamazepine in the Thalamic Reticular Nucleus: Potential Mechanism of Aggravating Absence Seizures
  11. Synaptic cell adhesion molecule Cdh6 identifies a class of sensory neurons with novel functions in colonic motility
  12. Disrupted Development of the mPFC-Thalamic Circuit in the Mouse Shank3−/−model of Autism
  13. Synaptic cell adhesion molecule Cdh6 identifies a class of sensory neurons with novel functions in colonic motility
  14. Cross-regional coordination of activity in the human brain during autobiographical self-referential processing
  15. Reuniens thalamus recruits recurrent excitation in medial prefrontal cortex
  16. Adult Gene Therapy for Epilepsy in a Model of Angelman Syndrome: Hope or Hype?
  17. Cross regional coordination of neural activity in the human brain during autobiographical self-referential processing
  18. A CMOS-based highly scalable flexible neural electrode interface
  19. Prefrontal PV interneurons facilitate attention and are linked to attentional dysfunction in a mouse model of absence epilepsy
  20. A CMOS-based highly scalable flexible neural electrode interface
  21. Author Correction: Precise spatiotemporal control of voltage-gated sodium channels by photocaged saxitoxin
  22. Prefrontal PV interneurons facilitate attention and are linked to attentional dysfunction in a mouse model of absence epilepsy
  23. Precise spatiotemporal control of voltage-gated sodium channels by photocaged saxitoxin
  24. Development and validation of a potent and specific inhibitor for the CLC-2 chloride channel
  25. An Evolving-Dynamic Network Activity Approach to Epileptic Seizure Prediction using Machine Learning
  26. Precise spatiotemporal control of voltage-gated sodium channels by photocaged saxitoxin
  27. Perspective: Is Cortical Hyperexcitability the Only Path to Generalized Absence Epilepsy?
  28. Nonlinearities between inhibition and T-type calcium channel activity bidirectionally regulate thalamic oscillations
  29. Nonlinearities between inhibition and T-type calcium channel activity bidirectionally regulate thalamic network oscillations
  30. Thalamic activity patterns unfolding over multiple time scales predict seizure onset in absence epilepsy
  31. Current Controversy: Spikes, Bursts, and Synchrony in Generalized Absence Epilepsy: Unresolved Questions Regarding Thalamocortical Synchrony in Absence Epilepsy
  32. Differentiation and maturation of oligodendrocytes in human three-dimensional neural cultures
  33. Anatomically Defined and Functionally Distinct Dorsal Raphe Serotonin Sub-systems
  34. Assembly of functionally integrated human forebrain spheroids
  35. Breathing control center neurons that promote arousal in mice
  36. Regulation of Thalamic and Cortical Network Synchrony by Scn8a
  37. Bidirectional Control of Generalized Epilepsy Networks via Rapid Real-Time Switching of Firing Mode
  38. Tapping the Brakes: Cellular and Synaptic Mechanisms that Regulate Thalamic Oscillations
  39. Catching a wave
  40. Two classes of excitatory synaptic responses in rat thalamic reticular neurons
  41. LSPS/Optogenetics to Improve Synaptic Connectivity Mapping: Unmasking the Role of Basket Cell-Mediated Feedforward Inhibition
  42. Early postnatal switch in GABAA receptor α-subunits in the reticular thalamic nucleus
  43. Enhanced phasic GABA inhibition during the repair phase of stroke: a novel therapeutic target
  44. Albumin induces excitatory synaptogenesis through astrocytic TGF-β/ALK5 signaling in a model of acquired epilepsy following blood–brain barrier dysfunction
  45. Functional cortical neurons and astrocytes from human pluripotent stem cells in 3D culture
  46. Electrical synapses connect a network of gonadotropin releasing hormone neurons in a cichlid fish
  47. Microcircuits and their interactions in epilepsy: is the focus out of focus?
  48. Seizing upon Mechanisms for Impaired Consciousness
  49. Cholinergic Control of Gamma Power in the Midbrain Spatial Attention Network
  50. Optogenetics and Epilepsy: Past, Present and Future
  51. Endozepines
  52. Attentional flexibility in the thalamus: now we're getting SOMwhere
  53. Frequency-Dependent, Cell Type-Divergent Signaling in the Hippocamposeptal Projection
  54. Satb2 Regulates the Differentiation of Both Callosal and Subcerebral Projection Neurons in the Developing Cerebral Cortex
  55. Parallel Midbrain Microcircuits Perform Independent Temporal Transformations
  56. A Local Glutamate-Glutamine Cycle Sustains Synaptic Excitatory Transmitter Release
  57. Spatially Reciprocal Inhibition of Inhibition within a Stimulus Selection Network in the Avian Midbrain
  58. Modulation of Short-Term Plasticity in the Corticothalamic Circuit by Group III Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors
  59. Astrocytes potentiate GABAergic transmission in the thalamic reticular nucleus via endozepine signaling
  60. Sniffer patch laser uncaging response (SPLURgE): an assay of regional differences in allosteric receptor modulation and neurotransmitter clearance
  61. Endogenous Positive Allosteric Modulation of GABAA Receptors by Diazepam binding inhibitor
  62. Reemerging role of cable properties in action potential initiation
  63. Sleep and Epilepsy: A Summary of the 2011 Merritt-Putnam Symposium
  64. Glutamate biosensor imaging reveals dysregulation of glutamatergic pathways in a model of developmental cortical malformation
  65. Closed-loop optogenetic control of thalamus as a tool for interrupting seizures after cortical injury
  66. A call for transparent reporting to optimize the predictive value of preclinical research
  67. Mechanism for Hypocretin-mediated sleep-to-wake transitions
  68. Enhanced NMDA Receptor-Dependent Thalamic Excitation and Network Oscillations in Stargazer Mice
  69. R U OK? the Novel Therapeutic Potential of R Channels in Epilepsy
  70. Gamma Oscillations Are Generated Locally in an Attention-Related Midbrain Network
  71. Increased Excitatory Synaptic Input to Granule Cells from Hilar and CA3 Regions in a Rat Model of Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
  72. Neocortical excitation/inhibition balance in information processing and social dysfunction
  73. Influence of a Subtype of Inhibitory Interneuron on Stimulus-Specific Responses in Visual Cortex
  74. Martinotti Cells: Community Organizers
  75. Mechanisms of excitability in the thalamocortical circuit
  76. Differential effects of Na+–K+ ATPase blockade on cortical layer V neurons
  77. Astrocytes as Gatekeepers of GABABReceptor Function
  78. Desynchronization of Neocortical Networks by Asynchronous Release of GABA at Autaptic and Synaptic Contacts from Fast-Spiking Interneurons
  79. Reorganization of Inhibitory Synaptic Circuits in Rodent Chronically Injured Epileptogenic Neocortex
  80. Focal Cortical Infarcts Alter Intrinsic Excitability and Synaptic Excitation in the Reticular Thalamic Nucleus
  81. Enhanced Infragranular and Supragranular Synaptic Input onto Layer 5 Pyramidal Neurons in a Rat Model of Cortical Dysplasia
  82. Glutamine Is Required for Persistent Epileptiform Activity in the Disinhibited Neocortical Brain Slice
  83. Maintenance of Thalamic Epileptiform Activity Depends on the Astrocytic Glutamate-Glutamine Cycle
  84. Modeling Voltage-Dependent Channels
  85. Resting Our Cortices by Going DOWN to Sleep
  86. Who let the spikes out?
  87. Synergistic Roles of GABAA Receptors and SK Channels in Regulating Thalamocortical Oscillations
  88. Robust Short-Latency Perisomatic Inhibition onto Neocortical Pyramidal Cells Detected by Laser-Scanning Photostimulation
  89. Neurons that Fire Together Also Conspire Together: Is Normal Sleep Circuitry Hijacked to Generate Epilepsy?
  90. A gain in GABA A receptor synaptic strength in thalamus reduces oscillatory activity and absence seizures
  91. Sequential Changes in AMPA Receptor Targeting in the Developing Neocortical Excitatory Circuit
  92. The Endocannabinoid 2-Arachidonoylglycerol Is Responsible for the Slow Self-Inhibition in Neocortical Interneurons
  93. Normal sleep homeostasis and lack of epilepsy phenotype in GABAA receptor α3 subunit-knockout mice
  94. Absence seizures in C3H/HeJ and knockout mice caused by mutation of the AMPA receptor subunit Gria4
  95. Imaging of glutamate in brain slices using FRET sensors
  96. Intrinsic Excitability of Cholinergic Neurons in the Rat Parabigeminal Nucleus
  97. GABA Affinity Shapes IPSCs in Thalamic Nuclei
  98. Thalamic synchrony and dynamic regulation of global forebrain oscillations
  99. PKC and polyamine modulation of GluR2‐deficient AMPA receptors in immature neocortical pyramidal neurons of the rat
  100. Gender and age differences in expression of GABAA receptor subunits in rat somatosensory thalamus and cortex in an absence epilepsy model
  101. Giant Spontaneous Depolarizing Potentials in the Developing Thalamic Reticular Nucleus
  102. Recurrent Circuits in Layer II of Medial Entorhinal Cortex in a Model of Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
  103. Modulation of epileptiform activity by glutamine and system A transport in a model of post-traumatic epilepsy
  104. NPY signaling through Y1 receptors modulates thalamic oscillations
  105. A Thalamic Sleep Tonic
  106. Distinct Electrical and Chemical Connectivity Maps in the Thalamic Reticular Nucleus: Potential Roles in Synchronization and Sensation
  107. Electrophysiological Classification of Somatostatin-Positive Interneurons in Mouse Sensorimotor Cortex
  108. Selective changes in thalamic and cortical GABAA receptor subunits in a model of acquired absence epilepsy in the rat
  109. Chronic Valproic Acid Treatment Triggers Increased Neuropeptide Y Expression and Signaling in Rat Nucleus Reticularis Thalami
  110. Enhanced Excitatory Synaptic Connectivity in Layer V Pyramidal Neurons of Chronically Injured Epileptogenic Neocortex in Rats
  111. Intrinsic and Synaptic Dynamics Interact to Generate Emergent Patterns of Rhythmic Bursting in Thalamocortical Neurons
  112. Fast IPSCs in rat thalamic reticular nucleus require the GABAA receptor β1 subunit
  113. Barrel Cortex Microcircuits: Thalamocortical Feedforward Inhibition in Spiny Stellate Cells Is Mediated by a Small Number of Fast-Spiking Interneurons
  114. Enhancement of Spike-Timing Precision by Autaptic Transmission in Neocortical Inhibitory Interneurons
  115. Thalamic, Thalamocortical, and Corticocortical Models of Epilepsy with an Emphasis on Absence Seizures
  116. Inhibitory coupling specifically generates emergent gamma oscillations in diverse cell types
  117. Reorganization of barrel circuits leads to thalamically-evoked cortical epileptiform activity
  118. Modulation of neocortical interneurons: extrinsic influences and exercises in self-control
  119. Polyamines Modulate AMPA Receptor–Dependent Synaptic Responses in Immature Layer V Pyramidal Neurons
  120. Impaired Cl−Extrusion in Layer V Pyramidal Neurons of Chronically Injured Epileptogenic Neocortex
  121. Long-lasting self-inhibition of neocortical interneurons mediated by endocannabinoids
  122. T-Channel Defects in Patients with Childhood Absence Epilepsy
  123. Corrigenda
  124. Neurotransmitter Supply and Demand in Epilepsy
  125. Actions of U-92032, a T-Type Ca2+ Channel Antagonist, Support a Functional Linkage Between I T and Slow Intrathalamic Rhythms
  126. Differential modulation of synaptic transmission by neuropeptide Y in rat neocortical neurons
  127. Baseline Glutamate Levels Affect Group I and II mGluRs in Layer V Pyramidal Neurons of Rat Sensorimotor Cortex
  128. Prolactin-releasing peptide (PrRP) promotes awakening and suppresses absence seizures
  129. Reciprocal inhibition controls the oscillatory state in thalamic networks
  130. Block of T -Type Ca2+ Channels Is an Important Action of Succinimide Antiabsence Drugs
  131. Resilient RTN Fast Spiking in Kv3.1 Null Mice Suggests Redundancy in the Action Potential Repolarization Mechanism
  132. Sodium Channels
  133. It Takes T to Tango
  134. The role of H-current in regulating strength and frequency of thalamic network oscillations
  135. Clonazepam suppresses oscillations in rat thalamic slices
  136. Differential regulation of GABA release and neuronal excitability mediated by neuropeptide Y1 and Y2 receptors in rat thalamic neurons
  137. Neuropeptide Y receptors differentially modulate G‐protein‐activated inwardly rectifying K+ channels and high‐voltage‐activated Ca2+ channels in rat thalamic neurons
  138. Which Formalism to Use for Modeling Voltage- Dependent Conductances?
  139. Nonlinear Thermodynamic Models of Voltage-Dependent Currents
  140. Reliability of axonal propagation: The spike doesn't stop here
  141. Circuit Mechanisms of Spike‐Wave Discharge: Are There Similar Underpinnings for Centrotemporal Spikes?
  142. Reciprocal inhibitory connections produce desynchronizing phase lags during intrathalamic oscillations
  143. Long-range connections synchronize rather than spread intrathalamic oscillatory activity: Computational modeling and in vitro electrophysiology
  144. Reciprocal Inhibitory Connections and Network Synchrony in the Mammalian Thalamus
  145. Low-voltage-activated (T-type) calcium-channel genes identified
  146. Cholinergic Switching Within Neocortical Inhibitory Networks
  147. GABAA receptor‐mediated currents in interneurons and pyramidal cells of rat visual cortex
  148. Dendritic Calcium Currents in Thalamic Relay Cells
  149. Nucleus reticularis neurons mediate diverse inhibitory effects in thalamus
  150. γ-Aminobutyric acid type B receptor-dependent burst-firing in thalamic neurons: A dynamic clamp study
  151. Low-Threshold Calcium Currents in Central Nervous System Neurons
  152. Heterogeneous axonal arborizations of rat thalamic reticular neurons in the ventrobasal nucleus
  153. Heterogeneous axonal arborizations of rat thalamic reticular neurons in the ventrobasal nucleus
  154. Low-Threshold Calcium Currents in Central Nervous System Neurons
  155. A model of spike initiation in neocortical pyramidal neurons
  156. Thalamocortical Interactions
  157. Purinergic inhibition of GABA and glutamate release in the thalamus: Implications for thalamic network activity
  158. 32. In vitro studies of intrinsic and synaptic mechanisms underlying slow (3 Hz) oscillations in the rat thalamus
  159. Neurotransmitter Control of Neocortical Neuronal Activity and Excitability
  160. Determination of State-Dependent Processing in Thalamus by Single Neuron Properties and Neuromodulators
  161. Mechanism of Block of Thalamic T-Type Ca2+ Channels by Petit Mal Anticonvulsants
  162. Patch-Clamp Studies of Voltage-Gated Currents in Identified Neurons of the Rat Cerebral Cortex
  163. Properties of the Low-Threshold Calcium Current in Thalamic Relay Neurons: Recovery from Inactivation in Relation to the Control of Repetitive Burst Generation
  164. Differential effects of petit mal anticonvulsants and convulsants on thalamic neurones: GABA current blockade
  165. Differential effects of petit mal anticonvulsants and convulsants on thalamic neurones: calcium current reduction
  166. Cellular Actions of Petit Mal Anticonvulsants: Implication of Thalamic Low-Threshold Calcium Current in Generation of Spike-Wave Discharge
  167. Physiology of Thalamic Relay Neurons: Properties of Calcium Currents Involved in Burst-Firing
  168. Characterization of ethosuximide reduction of low‐threshold calcium current in thalamic neurons
  169. Sodium channels in dendrites of rat cortical pyramidal neurons.
  170. Specific petit mal anticonvulsants reduce calcium currents in thalamic neurons
  171. Development of GABA responsiveness in embryonic turtle cortical neurons
  172. Role of Ornithine Decarboxylase in Cardiac Growth and Hypertrophy