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

Different visual experiences give rise to different neural wiring

2026-02-11
(Press-News.org) The visual system is hierarchically organised into different areas. The lower visual areas see small parts of the visual field, and they are sensitive to very simple features, such as edges and their orientation. Higher up the hierarchy, the visual areas start encoding more abstract representations of the world, expanding their visual field to respond to stimuli such as objects and faces.  

At the same time, the areas that see “the big picture” send back information to the lower visual areas, called “feedback” connections. Feedback connections are considered essential for integrating contextual information, namely by providing information to lower visual areas about the broader scene, rather than just the small, specific part of the image they are looking at. 

For example, a neuron in a higher visual area that responds to tables would send feedback to a neuron in a lower level area that encodes just a part of the table, such as its legs. 

However, surprisingly, neurons in higher visual areas of the brain can also sometimes send back information to neurons in lower visual areas that have nothing to do with tables.

But do feedback connections reflect relationships between the "parts" and the "whole " learned from experience?, asks Leopoldo Petreanu, principal investigator of the Champalimaud Foundation's Cortical Circuits lab. 

In a previous study in mice, Petreanu and his team had shown that the organization of feedback connections depended on having visual experience. (https://www.fchampalimaud.org/news/pink-elephants-brain-how-experience-shapes-neural-connectivity)

To do this, they compared the feedback connections in normal mice with those in mice reared in the dark, and found that in the second case, due to the lack of visual experience, the organization of the feedback connections was disrupted. This showed that the organisaton of feedback depended on experience, consistent with the hypothesis that it might reflect a learned relation between the big picture, encoded in high-order areas, and the lower-order features, encoded in the lower areas.

But one thing that was still not clear was whether this organization is passive or what the researchers call “instructive”. In other words, does any experience just trigger the same organization of feedback connections, or do different experiences result in different neural wiring? A new study by the same team, published today (11/02/2026) in the journal Current Biology, aimed at tackling this question.

Another way to phrase the issue is to ask whether feedback connections wire themselves to specific, content-related subsets of neurons in lower visual areas, or whether they do so generically, independently of context. The new study shows that these connections do, in fact, play an instructive role. Their organization is not generic. 

Mice with little goggles

To show this, the researchers reared mice fitted with miniature goggles that biased their perception of the visual world. One group of animals only saw edges oriented at a certain angle, while the other saw edges oriented at a different angle. “For some mice, the world looked like elongated lines in some direction, and for the other, it also looked elongated, but in a different way”, says Petreanu.

Using a microscopy technique called dual-color two photon imaging, first co-authors Radhika Rajan and Rodrigo Dias measured the tuning properties and the organisation of feedback inputs from a higher visual area back to a lower one.

What they found is that the animals with different visual experiences had very different tuning properties and patterns of organisation in these feedback connections, shaped by what they had seen since birth. “The feedback connections reflected the visual experience of the mice, supporting the idea that these connections capture associations between visual features, represented in different areas, formed through experience”, says Petreanu.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Wearable trackers can detect depression relapse weeks before it returns, study finds

2026-02-11
Could a smart watch act as an early‑warning system for depression relapse? New research from McMaster University suggests that disruptions in a person’s sleep and daily activity routine, as detected through a simple wrist-worn device, can signal when there is increased risk of relapsing into major depression. The new research highlights a simple, yet powerful way to passively monitor relapse risk in people living with major depressive disorder (MDD), often detecting the probability of a relapse weeks or months before the episode occurs. Approximately 60 per cent of people with MDD relapse within five years, even with treatment.  “Advances ...

Air pollution and the progression of physical function limitations and disability in aging adults

2026-02-11
About The Study: The findings of this study suggest that reducing air pollution levels may help to delay and mitigate physical disability in aging adults. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Sara D. Adar, ScD, email sadar@umich.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.58699) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support. #  #  ...

Historically Black college or university attendance and cognition in US Black adults

2026-02-11
About The Study: In this cohort study using a national dataset, historically Black college or university attendance was associated with better cognition compared with predominantly white institution attendance for aging Black adults, which held for those attending college before and after legal racial segregation and sanctioned racial discrimination in education. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Marilyn D. Thomas, PhD, MPH, email marilyn.thomas@ucsf.edu. To access the embargoed ...

New “crucial” advance for quantum computers: researchers manage to read information stored in Majorana qubits

2026-02-11
“This is a crucial advance,” explains Ramón Aguado, a CSIC researcher at the Madrid Institute of Materials Science (ICMM) and one of the study's authors. “Our work is pioneering because we demonstrate that we can access the information stored in Majorana qubits using a new technique called quantum capacitance,” continues the scientist, who explains that this technique “acts as a global probe sensitive to the overall state of the system.” To better understand this achievement, Aguado explains that topological qubits are “like safe boxes for quantum ...

7,000 years of change: How humans reshaped Caribbean coral reef food chains

2026-02-11
Chestnut Hill, Mass. (2/11/2026) – Human activity has lessened the resilience of modern coral reefs by restricting the food-fueled energy flow that moves through the food chains of these critical ecosystems, an international team of researchers report in the journal Nature. Examining otoliths – fish ear stones that are preserved in marine sediments across millennia – the team developed and applied a nitrogen isotope method to 7,000-year-old fossils in order to reconstruct ancient reef food webs directly for the first time, according to Boston College Senior Research Associate Jessica Lueders-Dumont, a lead researcher on the project. The new analysis highlights underappreciated ...

Virus-based therapy boosts anti-cancer immune responses to brain cancer

2026-02-11
A team led by investigators at Mass General Brigham and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute has shown that a single injection of an oncolytic virus—a genetically modified virus that selectively infects and destroys cancer cells—can recruit immune cells to penetrate and persist deep within brain tumors. The research, which is published in Cell, provides details on how this therapy prolonged survival in patients with glioblastoma, the most common and malignant primary brain tumor, in a recent clinical trial. “Patients with glioblastoma have not benefited from immunotherapies that have transformed patient care in other cancer ...

Ancient fish ear stones reveal modern Caribbean reefs have lost their dietary complexity

2026-02-11
Coral reefs are undoubtedly in crisis. Scientists have documented concerning coral bleaching events, dramatic declines in coral cover, fish and shark populations across the Caribbean over recent decades. But a critical question has remained unanswered: has the way energy flows through reef ecosystems also changed? A new study led by scientists at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) and published in Nature reveals that it has, profoundly. Food chains on modern Caribbean reefs are 60-70% shorter than they were 7,000 years ago, and individual fish have lost the dietary specialisation that ...

American College of Lifestyle Medicine announces updated dietary position statement for treatment and prevention of chronic disease

2026-02-11
The American College of Lifestyle Medicine (ACLM) has announced the availability of its updated dietary position statement meant to guide clinicians in the treatment, reversal and prevention of chronic disease. The statement is the result of a year of work by a multi-member expert task force led by Associate Professor and Chair, Department of Nutrition, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science Melissa Bernstein, PhD, RDN, LD, FAND, DipACLM, FACLM, and ACLM Senior Director of Research Micaela Karlsen, PhD, MSPH. This update coincides with a key time of increased national attention on nutrition. As the Institute for Health Metrics ...

New findings highlight two decades of evidence supporting pecans in heart-healthy diets

2026-02-11
CHICAGO, Feb. 11, 2026 – As Americans focus on heart health during American Heart Month, a newly published scientific review highlights pecans – America’s native nut – and their role in heart-healthy diets.  Published in the peer-reviewed journal Nutrients, the comprehensive analysis synthesizes more than 20 years of research on pecans and reinforces positive evidence related to cardiovascular health and overall diet quality, while also identifying promising areas for future research. Conducted by researchers at the Illinois Institute ...

Case report explores potential link between mRNA COVID-19 vaccines and cancer

2026-02-11
“In this article, we assess the risk of developing haematopoietic cancers post-modRNA vaccination based on current scientific literature and explore the reported potential genetic and molecular mechanisms involved in disease pathogenesis.” BUFFALO, NY – February 11, 2026 – A new case report was published in Volume 17 of Oncotarget on February 6, 2026, titled “Exploring the potential link between mRNA COVID-19 vaccinations and cancer: A case report with a review of haematopoietic malignancies with insights into pathogenic mechanisms.” In this report, led by first author Patrizia Gentilini along with corresponding ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The ‘Great Texas Freeze’ killed thousands of purple martins; biologists worry recovery could take decades

Cancer has a unique nuclear metabolic fingerprint

Tiny thermometers offer on-chip temperature monitoring for processors

New compound stops common complications after intestinal surgery

Breaking through water treatment limits with defect-free, high-efficiency next-generation ceramic filters!

Researchers determine structural motifs of water undecamer cluster

Researchers enhance photocatalytic hydrogen evolution performance of covalent organic frameworks by constitutional isomer strategy

Molecular target drives immunogenicity in cancer immunotherapy

Plant cell structure could hold key to cancer therapies and improved crops

Sustainable hydrogen peroxide production: Breakthroughs in electrocatalyst design for on-site synthesis

Cash rewards for behavior change: A review of financial incentives science in one health contexts and implications

One Health antimicrobial resistance modelling: from science to policy

Artificial feeding platform transforms study of ticks and their diseases

Researchers uncover microscopic mechanism of alkali species dissolution in water clusters

Methionine restriction for cancer therapy: A comprehensive review of mechanisms and clinical applications

White House autism briefing linked to swift shifts in prescribing patterns, study finds

Specialist palliative care can save the NHS up to £8,000 per person and improves quality of life

New research warns charities against ‘AI shortcut’ to empathy

Cannabis compounds show promise in fighting fatty liver disease

Study in mice reveals the brain circuits behind why we help others

Online forum to explore how organic carbon amendments can improve soil health while storing carbon

Turning agricultural plastic waste into valuable chemicals with biochar catalysts

Hidden viral networks in soil microplastics may shape the future of sustainable agriculture

Americans don’t just fear driverless cars will crash — they fear mass job losses

Mayo Clinic researchers find combination therapy reduces effects of ‘zombie cells’ in diabetic kidney disease

Preventing breast cancer resistance to CDK4/6 inhibitors using genomic findings

Carbon nanotube fiber ‘textile’ heaters could help industry electrify high-temperature gas heating

Improving your biological age gap is associated with better brain health

Learning makes brain cells work together, not apart

Engineers improve infrared devices using century-old materials

[Press-News.org] Different visual experiences give rise to different neural wiring