1. Head before heart: cognitive empathy emerges before affective empathy in the developing brain

    This article has 5 authors:
    1. C. Bulgarelli
    2. P. Pinti
    3. T. Bazelmans
    4. A. F. de C. Hamilton
    5. E.J.H. Jones
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      The authors have presented a study which addresses a recognised gap in the literature, the emergence of the neural correlates of cognitive and affective empathy in children; they introduce a task for measuring both positive and negative empathy in a relatively large group of children aged 3-5. The task was combined with functional near-infrared spectroscopy to examine brain regions involved in the task. The findings are interpreted as providing evidence for the earlier emergence of cognitive than affective empathy. The study represents a valuable contribution to understanding the development of cognitive function, but in its current form, the strength of support for the conclusion is incomplete due to limited support for the comparison to the adult literature and a need to more clearly justify the pre-selected brain regions, their links to empathy and the justification of the hypotheses.

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    This article has 3 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  2. FMRP Regulates Neuronal RNA Granules Containing Stalled Ribosomes, Not Where Ribosomes Stall

    This article has 9 authors:
    1. Jewel T-Y Li
    2. Mehdi Amiri
    3. Senthilkumar Kailasam
    4. Lily Drever
    5. Jingyu Sun
    6. Laura Bohorquez
    7. Nahum Sonenberg
    8. Joaquin Ortega
    9. Wayne S Sossin
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
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      eLife Assessment

      Based on several lines of interesting data, the authors conclude that neuronal FMRP, which is associated with stalled ribosomes and mRNP granules, does not determine position on the mRNAs at which ribosomes stall. They instead propose a role in subsequent translational activation of arrested mRNAs. Supported by generally solid experimental data, the paper represents a valuable contribution to the field. The generality of these conclusions, particularly for neurons of different development stages and for different subtypes of mRNP granules, should become clear with future studies that replicate and extend this work.

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    This article has 10 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  3. Bayesian causal inference unifies perceptual and neuronal processing of center-surround motion in area MT

    This article has 4 authors:
    1. Gabor Lengyel
    2. Sabyasachi Shivkumar
    3. Gregory C DeAngelis
    4. Ralf M Haefner
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      eLife Assessment

      This manuscript represents a valuable contribution to understanding motion processing in the visual cortex. Based on a heterogeneous collection of previous empirical findings, the authors show that the diversity of tuning curves in the middle temporal (MT) area, in response to moving center-surround images, can be explained by Bayesian inference combined with neural sampling. The model rests on strong and solid assumptions about the prior and likelihood; independent evidence that neither of these factors is misspecified would strengthen the work.

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    This article has 3 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  4. Dual-feature selectivity enables bidirectional coding in visual cortical neurons

    This article has 19 authors:
    1. Nikos Karantzas
    2. Katrin Franke
    3. Konstantin Willeke
    4. Maria Diamantaki
    5. Kandan Ramakrishnan
    6. Hasan Atakan Bedel
    7. Pavithra Elumalai
    8. Kelli Restivo
    9. Paul Fahey
    10. Cate Nealley
    11. Tori Shinn
    12. Gabrielle Garcia
    13. Saumil Patel
    14. Alexander Ecker
    15. Edgar Y Walker
    16. Emmanouil Froudarakis
    17. Sophia Sanborn
    18. Fabian H Sinz
    19. Andreas Tolias
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
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      eLife Assessment

      The authors combine a modeling approach, using a digital twin, with electrophysiological evidence in two species to assess the role of inhibition in shaping selectivity in the visual cortex. The results provide a fundamental advance beyond the classic view of sensory coding by proving compelling evidence that many neurons in visual areas exhibit dual-feature selectivity. Overall, the work compellingly showcases how in silico experiments can generate concrete hypotheses about neuronal coding that are difficult to discover experimentally.

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    This article has 7 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  5. Neural activity profiles reveal overlapping, intermingled subpopulations spanning area borders in mouse sensorimotor cortex

    This article has 3 authors:
    1. Sohrab Salimian
    2. Harrison A Grier
    3. Matthew T Kaufman
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This fundamental study provides compelling evidence for the functional segregation of the sensorimotor cortex into precisely delineated areas, and highlights a rapid transition in functional properties at the boundaries between these areas. This result further confirms and extends recent work on the diversity of neural response specificities across cortical areas in the context of complex behavioral tasks. This work will be of interest to neuroscientists studying sensory-motor functions.

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    This article has 7 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  6. Two time scales of adaptation in human learning rates

    This article has 8 authors:
    1. Jonas Simoens
    2. Senne Braem
    3. Pieter Verbeke
    4. Haopeng Chen
    5. Stefania Mattioni
    6. Mengqiao Chai
    7. Nicolas W Schuck
    8. Tom Verguts
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      eLife Assessment

      This study makes a valuable contribution to the understanding of meta-learning and its neural mechanisms by distinguishing two timescales of learning rate adaptation: rapid, within-block reductions and slower, location-specific, meta-learned adjustments. Behavioural data and computational modelling provide convincing evidence that individuals adjust learning rates both rapidly in response to uncertainty and more gradually through meta-learning of environmental statistics. Neuroimaging results indicate that meta-learned learning rates are represented in orbitofrontal cortex, and that prediction errors are encoded across a distributed network including the ventral striatum, where they are modulated by expectations about error magnitude. The manuscript is timely and clearly written and opens the door to future work on how these signals contribute to adaptive behaviour.

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    This article has 7 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  7. Layer-specific spatiotemporal dynamics of feedforward and feedback in human visual object perception

    This article has 9 authors:
    1. Tony Carricarte
    2. Siying Xie
    3. Johannes Singer
    4. Robert Trampel
    5. Laurentius Huber
    6. Zejin Lu
    7. Tim C. Kietzmann
    8. Nikolaus Weiskopf
    9. Radoslaw M. Cichy
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
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      eLife Assessment

      This valuable study combines sub-millimeter 7T fMRI, EEG, representational similarity analysis, and deep neural network modeling to investigate layer-specific spatiotemporal dynamics underlying human object processing in early visual cortex and lateral occipital cortex; the authors report temporally distinct signatures in superficial layers of LOC that are interpreted as reflecting sequential feedforward and feedback processing during visual recognition. The multimodal methodological approach and empirical dataset are substantial and will be of broad interest to researchers in visual neuroscience, layer-fMRI methodology, and computational vision. However, the evidence supporting the central interpretation of interareal feedback remains incomplete, as the observed dynamics could also be explained by alternative mechanisms such as within-area recurrent processing, and there are additional concerns regarding several methodological and modeling choices underlying claims about increasing representational complexity at later time points. Overall, the study provides solid evidence for layer- and time-specific neural dynamics during object processing, while the interpretation of these signals as feedback-related remains provisional.

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    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  8. Oxytocin neurons signal state-dependent transitions from rest to thermogenesis and behavioral arousal in social and non-social settings

    This article has 9 authors:
    1. Morgane Vandendoren
    2. Jason G Landen
    3. Joseph F Rogers
    4. Samantha Killmer
    5. Baizar Alamiri
    6. Celeste Pohlman
    7. Glenn J Tattersall
    8. Nicole L Bedford
    9. Adam C Nelson
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      eLife Assessment

      This study presents an important finding regarding the role of oxytocin neurons in thermogenesis and behavioral thermoregulation. The use of numerous converging methods, including behavior, fiber photometry, optogenetics, thermal recordings, metabolic analyses, and more, produces a multi-dimensional dataset delivering findings that provide solid support for the conclusions. The conclusions could be further strengthen by more extensive analyses of behavior and determining whether it is the release of oxytocin (rather than co-release of glutamate) from the PVN that is critical for the transition between behavioral states, nevertheless, the manuscript had many strengths, the findings are novel, and this work opens new doors for understanding the role of the PVT in thermoregulation. This work will be of strong interest to the thermoregulation, social behavior, and oxytocin signaling communities.

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    This article has 10 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  9. Anterior cingulate cortex in complex associative learning: monitoring action state and action content

    This article has 6 authors:
    1. Wenqiang Huang
    2. Arron F Hall
    3. Natalia Kawalec
    4. Ashley N Opalka
    5. Jun Liu
    6. Dong V Wang
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      eLife Assessment

      Huang and colleagues examined neural responses in mouse anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) during a discrimination-avoidance task. The authors present valuable findings that ACC neurons encode primarily "action content" over extended periods. The methodological approach is sound and the evidence in support of action state encoding is solid, though it is not conclusive to what extent ACC primarily encodes post-action events.

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    This article has 15 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  10. Neuromodulatory systems partially account for the topography of cortical networks of learning under uncertainty

    This article has 2 authors:
    1. Alice Hodapp
    2. Florent Meyniel
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This study presents valuable findings on the neuromodulatory underpinnings of adaptive learning in dynamic, probabilistic environments. Solid evidence for these claims comes from showing spatial correlations between model-derived fMRI responses and PET-based receptor density maps. The work will be of interest to cognitive and systems neuroscientists working on decision-making.

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    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
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