1. Patient-Specific Midbrain Organoids with CRISPR Correction Reveal Disease Mechanisms and Enable Therapeutic Evaluation in Neuronopathic Gaucher Disease

    This article has 16 authors:
    1. Yi Lin
    2. Benjamin Liou
    3. Venette Fannin
    4. Stuart Adler
    5. Christopher N. Mayhew
    6. Jason E. Hammonds
    7. Yueh-Chiang Hu
    8. Jason Tchieu
    9. Wujuan Zhang
    10. Xueheng Zhao
    11. Rebecca L. Beres
    12. Kenneth DR. Setchell
    13. Ahmet Kaynak
    14. Xiaoyang Qi
    15. Ricardo A. Feldman
    16. Ying Sun
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      The manuscript presents important findings with theoretical or practical implications beyond a single subfield. The work is overall solid, and the methods, data, and analyses broadly support the claims. Although the novelty of this study and the work put into it are appreciated, there are also clearly some weaknesses that should be addressed.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 5 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  2. Contrasting patterns of specificity and transfer in human odor discrimination learning

    This article has 6 authors:
    1. Xiaoyue Chang
    2. Huibang Tan
    3. Jiehui Niu
    4. Kaiqi Yuan
    5. Rui Chen
    6. Wen Zhou
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This potentially important study explores the specificity of olfactory perceptual learning. In keeping with previous work, the authors found that learning to discriminate between two enantiomers does not generalize across the nostrils or to unrelated enantiomers, whereas learning to discriminate odor mixtures does generalize across the nostrils and to other odor mixtures, with this learning effect persisting over at least two weeks. While the evidence presented to support these findings is convincing, it remains unclear why the results differ for enantiomers and why training on odor mixtures generalizes to other odor mixtures.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  3. Neural Representation of Time across Complementary Reference Frames

    This article has 4 authors:
    1. Yangwen Xu
    2. Nicola Sartorato
    3. Léo Dutriaux
    4. Roberto Bottini
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This study presents a valuable finding on the neural representation of time from two distinct egocentric and allocentric reference frames. The evidence is solid and largely supports the hypothesis, with one caveat that the task differences could impact the observed effects. The work will be of interest to cognitive neuroscientists working on the perception and memory of time.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 7 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  4. The distinct role of human PIT in attention control

    This article has 3 authors:
    1. Siyuan Huang
    2. Lan Wang
    3. Sheng He
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This important study reports that the human posterior inferotemporal cortex (hPIT) functions as an attentional priority map, integrating both top-down and bottom-up attentional signals rather than serving solely as an object-processing region. The experiments and analyses are well conducted and provide compelling evidence that hPIT bridges dorsal and ventral attention networks and is robustly modulated by attention across diverse visual tasks. The study will be relevant for researchers investigating visual attention, high-level visual cortex, and the neural mechanisms that integrate endogenous and exogenous attentional control.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 8 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  5. Four new Duchenne muscular dystrophy mouse models with clinically relevant exon deletions in the human DMD gene

    This article has 10 authors:
    1. Maaike van Putten
    2. Margot Linssen
    3. Christa Tanganyika-de Winter
    4. Conny M. Brouwers
    5. Jill W.C. Claassens
    6. Nisha Verwey
    7. Max Walsh
    8. Tiberiu Loredan Stan
    9. Annemieke Aartsma-Rus
    10. Peter Hohenstein

    Reviewed by Review Commons

    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  6. Sexual dimorphism in sensorimotor transformation of optic flow

    This article has 7 authors:
    1. Sarah Nicholas
    2. Katja Sporar Klinge
    3. Luke Turnbull
    4. Annabel Moran
    5. Aika Young
    6. Yuri Ogawa
    7. Karin Nordström
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      Hoverflies are known for their sexually dimorphic visual systems and exquisite flight behaviors. This valuable study reports how two types of visual descending neurons differ between males and females in their motion- and speed-dependent responses, yet surprisingly, the behavior they control lacks any sexual dimorphism. The results convincingly support these findings, which will be of interest for studies of visuomotor transformations and network-level brain organization.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  7. Divergent spatial codes in retrosplenial cortex and hippocampus support multi-scale representation of complex environments

    This article has 5 authors:
    1. Célia Laurent
    2. Nada El Mahmoudi
    3. David M Smith
    4. Francesca Sargolini
    5. Pierre-Yves Jacob
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This valuable study reports results showing how different neurons in the dysgranular retrosplenial cortex code spatial orientation. Specifically, the paper reports that some neurons maintain tuning for a single head direction across multi-compartmental environments, while other neurons are tuned to different head directions that reflect the geometry within each compartment. The study was viewed as likely to expand the field's understanding of directional tuning of neurons, but incomplete evidence was provided to support the conclusions.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  8. RHODOPSIN 7: An ancient non-retinal photoreceptor for contrast vision, darkness detection, and circadian regulation

    This article has 8 authors:
    1. Valentina Kirsch
    2. Nils Reinhard
    3. Heiko Hartlieb
    4. Annika Mohr
    5. Dirk Rieger
    6. Peter Soba
    7. Charlotte Helfrich-Förster
    8. Pingkalai R Senthilan
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      The study investigates, from multiple angles, the still-debated function of insect rhodopsin-7 (Rh7). The authors present compelling results for its ancient phylogenetic origin across pan-arthropods, a non-visual role based on expression analyses in the fly brain, an unusual G-protein signalling pathway, and - using behavioural genetics - that Rh7 affects how Drosophila melanogaster interprets and responds to light-dark transitions. Through this, the work provides fundamental new insights into the evolution and function of non-visual opsins.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  9. Visual experience shapes functional connectivity between occipital and non-visual networks

    This article has 5 authors:
    1. Mengyu Tian
    2. Xiang Xiao
    3. Huiqing Hu
    4. Rhodri Cusack
    5. Marina Bedny
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This important study provides evidence supporting the hypothesis that postnatal visual experience shapes the patterns of functional connectivity between extrastriate visual cortex and frontal regions, by comparing neonates, blind and sighted adults using resting-state fMRI. The evidence supporting the main claim is convincing, and the authors' interpretations are appropriately calibrated in the discussion. Nevertheless, the study design and methodology are inherently limited to resolve the underlying mechanisms driving connectivity changes during neurodevelopment (experience-related plasticity vs post-natal experience-independent maturation). This study will be of broad interest to neuroscientists and neuroimaging researchers studying vision, plasticity and brain development.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 14 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  10. Peripheral anatomy and central connectivity of proprioceptive sensory neurons in the Drosophila wing

    This article has 3 authors:
    1. Ellen Lesser
    2. Anthony Moussa
    3. John C Tuthill
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This important work describes wing mechanosensory neurons in detail, extending our understanding of sensorimotor processing in the fruit fly. The evidence presented convincingly supports the authors' identification of these neurons and leverages state-of-the-art methods to generate a near-complete map of wing mechanosensory circuitry. Overall, this study provides new hypotheses and invaluable tools for investigating proprioceptive motor control of the wing in Drosophila.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 9 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
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