PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Research maze puts images on floor, where rodents look

2014-02-26
(Press-News.org) PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — A rodent in a maze is a staple — even a stereotype — of experimental psychology research. But the maze in the lab of Rebecca Burwell, professor of cognitive, linguistic, and psychological sciences at Brown University, is not your grandfather's apparatus. In a new video article published in the Journal of Visualized Experiments, Burwell's research group demonstrates in full detail how the maze can be used to perform automated visual cognitive research tasks with great efficiency.

The article is available here: http://www.jove.com/video/51316/automated-visual-cognitive-tasks-for-recording-neural-activity-using

The maze is part real and part virtual. There are actual walls – often in the shape of a giant piece of farfalle – but researchers can project any imagery they want onto the floor from below. The use of digital projections makes the maze versatile, but using the floor for projections makes it particularly well-designed for rodent subjects.

"We've known since Lashley's classic studies on the mechanisms of vision that rats pay more attention to stimuli presented near the ground, but the field has persisted in presenting vertical 2-D images or 3-D objects," Burwell said. "What's new is the idea that presentation of images to the ground is the best way to present stimuli to rats and mice. Rodents do not have a fovea [a small depression in the retina where visual acuity is highest] like primates do, but they do have more retinal ganglion cells and photoreceptors in the upper retina, indicating that they can see items in the lower visual field better."

So while human subjects participating in visual psychology experiments look forward — at a screen, for instance — and explore by looking around, the equivalent for a mouse or rat is to look down and explore by moving around.

The system makes a real difference in the speed with which rats learn tasks in the maze, Burwell said. In different experiments, the article notes, rats have learned to respond properly to visual stimuli in a fourth to a sixth the number of trials when stimuli were projected onto the floor rather than onto walls.

While rodents behave in the maze, they are tracked with an overhead camera and software that monitors their behavior. Implanted neural sensors in the rodents' brains allow for precise recording of brain activity during sessions so that it can be correlated with behavior.

Implants also allow for delivery of a rewarding stimulus. Rewards sent directly to the brain can be more effective than food rewards, Burwell said, because rats can be rewarded in the moment of desired performance, and they don't become satiated.

Burwell first published a paper about the floor projection maze in 2009 and has been using it ever since. She owns the intellectual property and said a company is interested in licensing it.

"For anyone interested in using rats or mice as a model for visual information processing, presenting the information on the floor makes good sense behaviorally and biologically," she said.

The Brown University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee must approve research protocols involving animals, including the floow projection maze.

INFORMATION:

The research is supported by the National Science Foundation (grants IOS 1146334, EFRI 0937848, IOS 0522220), and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (N66001-10-C-2010).


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mayo Clinic discovers African-Americans respond better to rubella vaccine

2014-02-26
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Feb. 26, 2014 — Somali Americans develop twice the antibody response to rubella from the current vaccine compared to Caucasians in a new Mayo Clinic study on individualized aspects of immune response. A non-Somali, African-American cohort ranked next in immune response, still significantly higher than Caucasians, and Hispanic Americans in the study were least responsive to the vaccine. The findings appear in the journal Vaccine. "This is fascinating," says Gregory Poland, M.D., Mayo Clinic vaccinologist and senior author of the study. "We don't know ...

JILA physicists discover 'quantum droplet' in semiconductor

JILA physicists discover quantum droplet in semiconductor
2014-02-26
BOULDER, Colo -- JILA physicists used an ultrafast laser and help from German theorists to discover a new semiconductor quasiparticle—a handful of smaller particles that briefly condense into a liquid-like droplet. Quasiparticles are composites of smaller particles that can be created inside solid materials and act together in a predictable way. A simple example is the exciton, a pairing, due to electrostatic forces, of an electron and a so-called "hole," a place in the material's energy structure where an electron could be, but isn't. The new quasiparticle, described ...

Pine forest particles appear out of thin air, influence climate

Pine forest particles appear out of thin air, influence climate
2014-02-26
Pine forests are especially magical places for atmospheric chemists. Coniferous trees give off pine-scented vapors that form particles, very quickly and seemingly out of nowhere. New research by German, Finnish and U.S. scientists elucidates the process by which gas wafting from coniferous trees creates particles that can reflect sunlight or promote cloud formation, both important climate feedbacks. The study is published Feb. 27 in Nature. "In many forested regions, you can go and observe particles apparently form from thin air. They're not emitted from anything, ...

A predictive fitness model for influenza

2014-02-26
Researchers at Columbia University and the University of Cologne have created a new model to successfully predict the evolution of the influenza virus from one year to the next. This advance in our understanding of influenza suggests a new, systematic way to select influenza vaccine strains. The findings appear in Nature on Feb. 26. The flu is one of the major infectious diseases in humans. Seasonal strains of the influenza A virus account for about half a million deaths per year. In a concerted effort, WHO and its Collaborating Centers have closely monitored the evolution ...

Sunburns strike twice

2014-02-26
Melanoma is particularly dangerous because it can form metastases in vital organs such as the lungs, liver or brain. UV radiation is considered to be the most significant triggering factor. An interdisciplinary team of researchers from the University Hospital and the LIMES Institute of the University of Bonn has now discovered that sunburns contribute to the development of this malignant disease not only through direct alteration of pigment cell genomes but also indirectly through inflammatory processes in the surrounding tissue. The results are now being published online ...

Major enigma solved in atmospheric chemistry

2014-02-26
According to their results, these extremely low-volatile organic compounds consist of relatively large molecules which contain an almost equal number of carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms. The scientists present a plausible explanation supported by numerous experimental findings of how these vapours are formed almost immediately when plant emissions (e.g. monoterpenes) are released into the air. The vapours can then condense on small aerosol particles (starting from clusters of only a few nanometres in diameter) suspended in the air, causing them to grow to around 100 nanometres ...

Is therapeutic hypothermia beneficial in all patients following cardiac arrest?

Is therapeutic hypothermia beneficial in all patients following cardiac arrest?
2014-02-26
New Rochelle, NY, February 26, 2014–Whole body cooling in comatose patients who have suffered a heart attack can limit the damage to brain tissue caused by the restoration of blood flow and oxygen. But new data indicate that in certain patients therapeutic hypothermia is less effective and may even worsen neurological outcomes, as described in an article in Therapeutic Hypothermia and Temperature Management, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the Therapeutic Hypothermia and Temperature Management website at ...

Researchers find virtual computer-based world an effective learning environment

2014-02-26
(Boston)--Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) researchers have demonstrated the potential of using a virtual computer environment for distance healthcare education for an international audience that often has limited access to conventional teaching and training. In this pilot project led by John Wiecha, MD, corresponding author of the study and associate professor of family medicine at BUSM, a virtual world was created in which participants engaged in a learning activity by creating virtual avatars of themselves to navigate through a three-dimensional computer environment ...

Can a simple handshake predict cancer survival rates?

2014-02-26
Montreal, February 26, 2014 — New acquaintances are often judged by their handshake. Research has now recognized the simple squeeze as an important diagnostic tool in assessing strength and quality of life among critical care patients. In a study published in the journal, Support Care Cancer, Concordia professor Robert Kilgour and his colleagues at the McGill Nutrition and Performance Laboratory confirmed a link between handgrip strength and survival rates. The test was simple: 203 patients fighting advanced-stage cancers squeezed a device known as a dynamometer with ...

Ambitious new pollution targets needed to protect Lake Erie from massive 'dead zone'

2014-02-26
ANN ARBOR—Reducing the size of the Lake Erie "dead zone" to acceptable levels will require cutting nutrient pollution nearly in half in coming decades, at a time when climate change is expected to make such reductions more difficult. That's one of the main conclusions of a comprehensive new study that documents recent trends in Lake Erie's health. It offers science-based guidance to policymakers seeking to reduce the size of toxic algae blooms and oxygen-starved regions called hypoxic zones, or dead zones—two related water-quality problems that have seen a resurgence ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Just the smell of lynx can reduce deer browsing damage in recovering forests

Hidden struggles: Cambridge scientists share the truth behind their success

Cellular hazmat team cleans up tau. Could it prevent dementia?

Innovation Crossroads startup revolutionizes wildfire prevention through grid hardening

ICCUB astronomers lead the most ambitious study of runaway massive stars in the Milky Way

Artificial Intelligence can generate a feeling of intimacy

Antidepressants not associated with serious complications from TBI

Evasive butterfly mimicry reveals a supercharged biodiversity feedback loop

Hearing angry or happy human voices is linked to changes in dogs’ balance

Microplastics are found in a third of surveyed fish off the coasts of remote Pacific Islands

De-stigmatizing self-reported data in health care research

US individuals traveling from strongly blue or red US counties may favor everyday travel to like-minded destinations

Study reveals how superionic state enables long-term water storage in Earth's interior

AI machine learning can optimize patient risk assessments

Efficacy of immunosuppressive regimens for survival of stem cell-derived grafts

Glowing bacterial sensors detect gut illness in mice before symptoms emerge

GLP-1 RAs and prior major adverse limb events in patients with diabetes

Life-course psychosocial stress and risk of dementia and stroke in middle-aged and older adults

Cells have a built-in capacity limit for copying DNA, and it could impact cancer treatment

Study finds longer hospital stays and higher readmissions for young adults with complex childhood conditions

Study maps how varied genetic forms of autism lead to common features

New chip-sized, energy-efficient optical amplifier can intensify light 100 times

New light-based platform sets the stage for future quantum supercomputers

Pesticides significantly affect soil life and biodiversity

Corals sleep like us, but their symbiosis does not rest

Huayuan biota decodes Earth’s first Phanerozoic mass extinction

Beyond Polymers: New state-of-the-art 3D micro and nanofabrication technique overcomes material limitations

New platform could develop vaccines faster than ever before

TF-rs1049296 C>T variant modifies the association between hepatic iron stores and liver fibrosis in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease

ASH publishes clinical practice guidelines on diagnosis of light chain amyloidosis

[Press-News.org] Research maze puts images on floor, where rodents look