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Volume 18 Issue 3, March 2017

'Cellular connections' by Jennie Vallis, inspired by the Review on p131.

Research Highlight

  • Direct projections from the dorsal and intermediate CA1 to the medial prefrontal cortex in rats are crucial for the retrieval of temporal and spatial aspects of episodic memory, respectively.

    • Natasha Bray
    Research Highlight

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  • Extended periods of exposure to emotional stimuli result in increased functional connectivity between the amygdala and the anterior hippocampus, which strengthens memory consolidation and subsequent recall of neutral stimuli experienced during this altered brain state.

    • Sian Lewis
    Research Highlight
  • This study dissects the complex interneuron networks that contribute to the processing of innocuous touch-information in the spinal cord.

    • Katherine Whalley
    Research Highlight
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In Brief

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Research Highlight

  • Activated microglia induce a subtype of reactive astrocytes that is toxic to various neuronal types and oligodendrocytes and that is found in various neurological disorders.

    • Darran Yates
    Research Highlight
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In Brief

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Review Article

  • Micro-connectomics involves determining the principles of how neuronal networks are organized at the cellular level. In this Review, Schröter, Paulsen and Bullmore examine studies that have provided insight into the network organization of relatively small, as well as more complex, nervous systems.

    • Manuel Schröter
    • Ole Paulsen
    • Edward T. Bullmore

    Collection:

    Review Article
  • Mutations in the genes encoding the SH3 and multiple ankyrin repeat domains protein (SHANK) family have been linked to autism spectrum disorder, driving a wave of recent studies that aimed to dissect their functional roles in the brain. Monteiro and Feng describe recent findings that have begun to shed light on the important roles of SHANK proteins at the synapse.

    • Patricia Monteiro
    • Guoping Feng
    Review Article
  • Impulsivity comes in various forms, with some forms considered more or less advantageous than others. Dalley and Robbins review the different types of impulsivity and their underlying neural mechanisms, and comment on the applicability of measures of impulsivity in research into psychiatric disorders.

    • Jeffrey W. Dalley
    • Trevor W. Robbins
    Review Article
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Opinion

  • In this Opinion article, Hunt and Hayden highlight that many of the models for reward-based choice are based on distinct component processes that occur in series and are functionally localized. They argue that, instead, such choice emerges from repeated computations that are undertaken in many brain areas.

    • Laurence T. Hunt
    • Benjamin Y. Hayden
    Opinion
  • Recent human neuroimaging studies suggest that, in addition to its role in visuospatial and sensorimotor processes, the posterior parietal cortex (PPC) also plays an important part in episodic memory retrieval. Here, Sestieri, Shulman and Corbetta present a functional–anatomical model of the involvement of the PPC in memory retrieval.

    • Carlo Sestieri
    • Gordon L. Shulman
    • Maurizio Corbetta
    Opinion
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