237 results on '"Alexander Thiele"'
Search Results
2. Dopamine influences attentional rate modulation in Macaque posterior parietal cortex
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Jochem van Kempen, Christian Brandt, Claudia Distler, Mark A. Bellgrove, and Alexander Thiele
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Cognitive neuroscience has made great strides in understanding the neural substrates of attention, but our understanding of its neuropharmacology remains incomplete. Although dopamine has historically been studied in relation to frontal functioning, emerging evidence suggests important dopaminergic influences in parietal cortex. We recorded single- and multi-unit activity whilst iontophoretically administering dopaminergic agonists and antagonists while rhesus macaques performed a spatial attention task. Out of 88 units, 50 revealed activity modulation by drug administration. Dopamine inhibited firing rates according to an inverted-U shaped dose–response curve and increased gain variability. D1 receptor antagonists diminished firing rates according to a monotonic function and interacted with attention modulating gain variability. Finally, both drugs decreased the pupil light reflex. These data show that dopamine shapes neuronal responses and modulates aspects of attentional processing in parietal cortex.
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- 2022
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3. Tissue-type plasminogen activator induces conditioned receptive field plasticity in the mouse auditory cortex
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Caitlin Smart, Anna Mitchell, Fiona McCutcheon, Robert L. Medcalf, and Alexander Thiele
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Cell biology ,Sensory neuroscience ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) is a serine protease that is expressed in various compartments in the brain. It is involved in neuronal plasticity, learning and memory, and addiction. We evaluated whether tPA, exogenously applied, could influence neuroplasticity within the mouse auditory cortex. We used a frequency-pairing paradigm to determine whether neuronal best frequencies shift following the pairing protocol. tPA administration significantly affected the best frequency after pairing, whereby this depended on the pairing frequency relative to the best frequency. When the pairing frequency was above the best frequency, tPA caused a best frequency shift away from the conditioned frequency. tPA significantly widened auditory tuning curves. Our data indicate that regional changes in proteolytic activity within the auditory cortex modulate the fine-tuning of auditory neurons, supporting the function of tPA as a modulator of neuronal plasticity.
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- 2023
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4. Effects of muscarinic and nicotinic receptors on contextual modulation in macaque area V1
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Jose L. Herrero and Alexander Thiele
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Context affects the salience and visibility of image elements in visual scenes. Collinear flankers can enhance or decrease the perceptual and neuronal sensitivity to flanked stimuli. These effects are mediated through lateral interactions between neurons in the primary visual cortex (area V1), in conjunction with feedback from higher visual areas. The strength of lateral interactions is affected by cholinergic neuromodulation. Blockade of muscarinic receptors should increase the strength of lateral intracortical interactions, while nicotinic blockade should reduce thalamocortical feed-forward drive. Here we test this proposal through local iontophoretic application of the muscarinic receptor antagonist scopolamine and the nicotinic receptor antagonist mecamylamine, while recording single cells in parafoveal representations in awake fixating macaque V1. Collinear flankers generally reduced neuronal contrast sensitivity. Muscarinic and nicotinic receptor blockade equally reduced neuronal contrast sensitivity. Contrary to our hypothesis, flanker interactions were not systematically affected by either receptor blockade.
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- 2021
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5. Stimulus dependence of directed information exchange between cortical layers in macaque V1
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Marc Alwin Gieselmann and Alexander Thiele
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oscillations ,local field potential ,visual cortex ,granger causality ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Perception and cognition require the integration of feedforward sensory information with feedback signals. Using different sized stimuli, we isolate spectral signatures of feedforward and feedback signals, and their effect on communication between layers in primary visual cortex of male macaque monkeys. Small stimuli elicited gamma frequency oscillations predominantly in the superficial layers. These Granger-causally originated in upper layer 4 and lower supragranular layers. Unexpectedly, large stimuli generated strong narrow band gamma oscillatory activity across cortical layers. They Granger-causally arose in layer 5, were conveyed through layer six to superficial layers, and violated existing models of feedback spectral signatures. Equally surprising, with large stimuli, alpha band oscillatory activity arose predominantly in granular and supragranular layers and communicated in a feedforward direction. Thus, oscillations in specific frequency bands are dynamically modulated to serve feedback and feedforward communication and are not restricted to specific cortical layers in V1.
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- 2022
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6. Neuronal figure-ground responses in primate primary auditory cortex
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Felix Schneider, Fabien Balezeau, Claudia Distler, Yukiko Kikuchi, Jochem van Kempen, Alwin Gieselmann, Christopher I. Petkov, Alexander Thiele, and Timothy D. Griffiths
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auditory figure-ground segregation ,scene analysis ,stochastic figure-ground stimulus ,auditory cortex ,non-human primate ,A1 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Summary: Figure-ground segregation, the brain’s ability to group related features into stable perceptual entities, is crucial for auditory perception in noisy environments. The neuronal mechanisms for this process are poorly understood in the auditory system. Here, we report figure-ground modulation of multi-unit activity (MUA) in the primary and non-primary auditory cortex of rhesus macaques. Across both regions, MUA increases upon presentation of auditory figures, which consist of coherent chord sequences. We show increased activity even in the absence of any perceptual decision, suggesting that neural mechanisms for perceptual grouping are, to some extent, independent of behavioral demands. Furthermore, we demonstrate differences in figure encoding between more anterior and more posterior regions; perceptual saliency is represented in anterior cortical fields only. Our results suggest an encoding of auditory figures from the earliest cortical stages by a rate code.
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- 2021
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7. MRI monitoring of macaque monkeys in neuroscience: Case studies, resource and normative data comparisons
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Fabien Balezeau, Jennifer Nacef, Yukiko Kikuchi, Felix Schneider, Francesca Rocchi, Ross S. Muers, Rocio Fernandez-Palacios O'Connor, Christoph Blau, Benjamin Wilson, Richard C. Saunders, Matthew Howard, III, Alexander Thiele, Timothy D. Griffiths, Christopher I. Petkov, and Kathy Murphy
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Magnetic resonance imaging ,Primate ,Welfare ,Neurology ,Monitoring ,Diagnosis ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Information from Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is useful for diagnosis and treatment management of human neurological patients. MRI monitoring might also prove useful for non-human animals involved in neuroscience research provided that MRI is available and feasible and that there are no MRI contra-indications precluding scanning. However, MRI monitoring is not established in macaques and a resource is urgently needed that could grow with scientific community contributions. Here we show the utility and potential benefits of MRI-based monitoring in a few diverse cases with macaque monkeys. We also establish a PRIMatE MRI Monitoring (PRIME-MRM) resource within the PRIMatE Data Exchange (PRIME-DE) and quantitatively compare the cases to normative information drawn from MRI data from typical macaques in PRIME-DE. In the cases, the monkeys presented with no or mild/moderate clinical signs, were well otherwise and MRI scanning did not present a significant increase in welfare impact. Therefore, they were identified as suitable candidates for clinical investigation, MRI-based monitoring and treatment. For each case, we show MRI quantification of internal controls in relation to treatment steps and comparisons with normative data in typical monkeys drawn from PRIME-DE. We found that MRI assists in precise and early diagnosis of cerebral events and can be useful for visualising, treating and quantifying treatment response. The scientific community could now grow the PRIME-MRM resource with other cases and larger samples to further assess and increase the evidence base on the benefits of MRI monitoring of primates, complementing the animals’ clinical monitoring and treatment regime.
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- 2021
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8. Perceptual learning of fine contrast discrimination changes neuronal tuning and population coding in macaque V4
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Mehdi Sanayei, Xing Chen, Daniel Chicharro, Claudia Distler, Stefano Panzeri, and Alexander Thiele
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Science - Abstract
Perceptual learning, the improvement in perceptual abilities with training, is thought to involve changes in neuronal 'tuning'. Here, the authors show that perceptual learning works by making neurons increasingly sensitive to task-relevant differences in stimuli, and by improving population coding mechanisms.
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- 2018
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9. 26th Annual Computational Neuroscience Meeting (CNS*2017): Part 2
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Leonid L. Rubchinsky, Sungwoo Ahn, Wouter Klijn, Ben Cumming, Stuart Yates, Vasileios Karakasis, Alexander Peyser, Marmaduke Woodman, Sandra Diaz-Pier, James Deraeve, Eliana Vassena, William Alexander, David Beeman, Pawel Kudela, Dana Boatman-Reich, William S. Anderson, Niceto R. Luque, Francisco Naveros, Richard R. Carrillo, Eduardo Ros, Angelo Arleo, Jacob Huth, Koki Ichinose, Jihoon Park, Yuji Kawai, Junichi Suzuki, Hiroki Mori, Minoru Asada, Sorinel A. Oprisan, Austin I. Dave, Tahereh Babaie, Peter Robinson, Alejandro Tabas, Martin Andermann, André Rupp, Emili Balaguer-Ballester, Henrik Lindén, Rasmus K. Christensen, Mari Nakamura, Tania R. Barkat, Zach Tosi, John Beggs, Davide Lonardoni, Fabio Boi, Stefano Di Marco, Alessandro Maccione, Luca Berdondini, Joanna Jędrzejewska-Szmek, Daniel B. Dorman, Kim T. Blackwell, Christoph Bauermeister, Hanna Keren, Jochen Braun, João V. Dornas, Eirini Mavritsaki, Silvio Aldrovandi, Emma Bridger, Sukbin Lim, Nicolas Brunel, Anatoly Buchin, Clifford Charles Kerr, Anton Chizhov, Gilles Huberfeld, Richard Miles, Boris Gutkin, Martin J. Spencer, Hamish Meffin, David B. Grayden, Anthony N. Burkitt, Catherine E. Davey, Liangyu Tao, Vineet Tiruvadi, Rehman Ali, Helen Mayberg, Robert Butera, Cengiz Gunay, Damon Lamb, Ronald L. Calabrese, Anca Doloc-Mihu, Víctor J. López-Madrona, Fernanda S. Matias, Ernesto Pereda, Claudio R. Mirasso, Santiago Canals, Alice Geminiani, Alessandra Pedrocchi, Egidio D’Angelo, Claudia Casellato, Ankur Chauhan, Karthik Soman, V. Srinivasa Chakravarthy, Vignayanandam R. Muddapu, Chao-Chun Chuang, Nan-yow Chen, Mehdi Bayati, Jan Melchior, Laurenz Wiskott, Amir Hossein Azizi, Kamran Diba, Sen Cheng, Elena Y. Smirnova, Elena G. Yakimova, Anton V. Chizhov, Nan-Yow Chen, Chi-Tin Shih, Dorian Florescu, Daniel Coca, Julie Courtiol, Viktor K. Jirsa, Roberto J. M. Covolan, Bartosz Teleńczuk, Richard Kempter, Gabriel Curio, Alain Destexhe, Jessica Parker, Alexander N. Klishko, Boris I. Prilutsky, Gennady Cymbalyuk, Felix Franke, Andreas Hierlemann, Rava Azeredo da Silveira, Stefano Casali, Stefano Masoli, Martina Rizza, Martina Francesca Rizza, Yinming Sun, Willy Wong, Faranak Farzan, Daniel M. Blumberger, Zafiris J. Daskalakis, Svitlana Popovych, Shivakumar Viswanathan, Nils Rosjat, Christian Grefkes, Silvia Daun, Damiano Gentiletti, Piotr Suffczynski, Vadym Gnatkovski, Marco De Curtis, Hyeonsu Lee, Se-Bum Paik, Woochul Choi, Jaeson Jang, Youngjin Park, Jun Ho Song, Min Song, Vicente Pallarés, Matthieu Gilson, Simone Kühn, Andrea Insabato, Gustavo Deco, Katharina Glomb, Adrián Ponce-Alvarez, Petra Ritter, Adria Tauste Campo, Alexander Thiele, Farah Deeba, P. A. Robinson, Sacha J. van Albada, Andrew Rowley, Michael Hopkins, Maximilian Schmidt, Alan B. Stokes, David R. Lester, Steve Furber, Markus Diesmann, Alessandro Barri, Martin T. Wiechert, David A. DiGregorio, Alexander G. Dimitrov, Catalina Vich, Rune W. Berg, Antoni Guillamon, Susanne Ditlevsen, Romain D. Cazé, Benoît Girard, Stéphane Doncieux, Nicolas Doyon, Frank Boahen, Patrick Desrosiers, Edward Laurence, Louis J. Dubé, Russo Eleonora, Daniel Durstewitz, Dominik Schmidt, Tuomo Mäki-Marttunen, Florian Krull, Francesco Bettella, Christoph Metzner, Anna Devor, Srdjan Djurovic, Anders M. Dale, Ole A. Andreassen, Gaute T. Einevoll, Solveig Næss, Torbjørn V. Ness, Geir Halnes, Eric Halgren, Klas H. Pettersen, Marte J. Sætra, Espen Hagen, Alina Schiffer, Axel Grzymisch, Malte Persike, Udo Ernst, Daniel Harnack, Udo A. Ernst, Nergis Tomen, Stefano Zucca, Valentina Pasquale, Giuseppe Pica, Manuel Molano-Mazón, Michela Chiappalone, Stefano Panzeri, Tommaso Fellin, Kelvin S. Oie, David L. Boothe, Joshua C. Crone, Alfred B. Yu, Melvin A. Felton, Isma Zulfiqar, Michelle Moerel, Peter De Weerd, Elia Formisano, Kelvin Oie, Piotr Franaszczuk, Roland Diggelmann, Michele Fiscella, Domenico Guarino, Jan Antolík, Andrew P. Davison, Yves Frègnac, Benjamin Xavier Etienne, Flavio Frohlich, Jérémie Lefebvre, Encarni Marcos, Maurizio Mattia, Aldo Genovesio, Leonid A. Fedorov, Tjeerd M.H. Dijkstra, Louisa Sting, Howard Hock, Martin A. Giese, Laure Buhry, Clément Langlet, Francesco Giovannini, Christophe Verbist, Stefano Salvadé, Michele Giugliano, James A. Henderson, Hendrik Wernecke, Bulcsú Sándor, Claudius Gros, Nicole Voges, Paulina Dabrovska, Alexa Riehle, Thomas Brochier, Sonja Grün, Yifan Gu, Pulin Gong, Grégory Dumont, Nikita A. Novikov, Boris S. Gutkin, Parul Tewatia, Olivia Eriksson, Andrei Kramer, Joao Santos, Alexandra Jauhiainen, Jeanette H. Kotaleski, Jovana J. Belić, Arvind Kumar, Jeanette Hellgren Kotaleski, Masanori Shimono, Naomichi Hatano, Subutai Ahmad, Yuwei Cui, Jeff Hawkins, Johanna Senk, Karolína Korvasová, Tom Tetzlaff, Moritz Helias, Tobias Kühn, Michael Denker, PierGianLuca Mana, David Dahmen, Jannis Schuecker, Sven Goedeke, Christian Keup, Katja Heuer, Rembrandt Bakker, Paul Tiesinga, Roberto Toro, Wei Qin, Alex Hadjinicolaou, Michael R. Ibbotson, Tatiana Kameneva, William W. Lytton, Lealem Mulugeta, Andrew Drach, Jerry G. Myers, Marc Horner, Rajanikanth Vadigepalli, Tina Morrison, Marlei Walton, Martin Steele, C. Anthony Hunt, Nicoladie Tam, Rodrigo Amaducci, Carlos Muñiz, Manuel Reyes-Sánchez, Francisco B. Rodríguez, Pablo Varona, Joseph T. Cronin, Matthias H. Hennig, Elisabetta Iavarone, Jane Yi, Ying Shi, Bas-Jan Zandt, Werner Van Geit, Christian Rössert, Henry Markram, Sean Hill, Christian O’Reilly, Rodrigo Perin, Huanxiang Lu, Alexander Bryson, Michal Hadrava, Jaroslav Hlinka, Ryosuke Hosaka, Mark Olenik, Conor Houghton, Nicolangelo Iannella, Thomas Launey, Rebecca Kotsakidis, Jaymar Soriano, Takatomi Kubo, Takao Inoue, Hiroyuki Kida, Toshitaka Yamakawa, Michiyasu Suzuki, Kazushi Ikeda, Samira Abbasi, Amber E. Hudson, Detlef H. Heck, Dieter Jaeger, Joel Lee, Skirmantas Janušonis, Maria Luisa Saggio, Andreas Spiegler, William C. Stacey, Christophe Bernard, Davide Lillo, Spase Petkoski, Mark Drakesmith, Derek K. Jones, Ali Sadegh Zadeh, Chandra Kambhampati, Jan Karbowski, Zeynep Gokcen Kaya, Yair Lakretz, Alessandro Treves, Lily W. Li, Joseph Lizier, Cliff C. Kerr, Timothée Masquelier, Saeed Reza Kheradpisheh, Hojeong Kim, Chang Sub Kim, Julia A. Marakshina, Alexander V. Vartanov, Anastasia A. Neklyudova, Stanislav A. Kozlovskiy, Andrey A. Kiselnikov, Kanako Taniguchi, Katsunori Kitano, Oliver Schmitt, Felix Lessmann, Sebastian Schwanke, Peter Eipert, Jennifer Meinhardt, Julia Beier, Kanar Kadir, Adrian Karnitzki, Linda Sellner, Ann-Christin Klünker, Lena Kuch, Frauke Ruß, Jörg Jenssen, Andreas Wree, Paula Sanz-Leon, Stuart A. Knock, Shih-Cheng Chien, Burkhard Maess, Thomas R. Knösche, Charles C. Cohen, Marko A. Popovic, Jan Klooster, Maarten H.P. Kole, Erik A. Roberts, Nancy J. Kopell, Daniel Kepple, Hamza Giaffar, Dima Rinberg, Alex Koulakov, Caroline Garcia Forlim, Leonie Klock, Johanna Bächle, Laura Stoll, Patrick Giemsa, Marie Fuchs, Nikola Schoofs, Christiane Montag, Jürgen Gallinat, Ray X. Lee, Greg J. Stephens, Bernd Kuhn, Luiz Tauffer, Philippe Isope, Katsuma Inoue, Yoshiyuki Ohmura, Shogo Yonekura, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Hyun Jae Jang, Jeehyun Kwag, Marc de Kamps, Yi Ming Lai, Filipa dos Santos, K. P. Lam, Peter Andras, Julia Imperatore, Jessica Helms, Tamas Tompa, Antonieta Lavin, Felicity H. Inkpen, Michael C. Ashby, Nathan F. Lepora, Aaron R. Shifman, John E. Lewis, Zhong Zhang, Yeqian Feng, Christian Tetzlaff, Tomas Kulvicius, Yinyun Li, Rodrigo F. O. Pena, Davide Bernardi, Antonio C. Roque, Benjamin Lindner, Sebastian Vellmer, Ausra Saudargiene, Tiina Maninen, Riikka Havela, Marja-Leena Linne, Arthur Powanwe, Andre Longtin, Jesús A. Garrido, Joe W. Graham, Salvador Dura-Bernal, Sergio L. Angulo, Samuel A. Neymotin, and Srdjan D. Antic
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Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Published
- 2017
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10. Behavioural and neural signatures of perceptual decision-making are modulated by pupil-linked arousal
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Jochem van Kempen, Gerard M Loughnane, Daniel P Newman, Simon P Kelly, Alexander Thiele, Redmond G O'Connell, and Mark A Bellgrove
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decision-making ,pupil diameter ,EEG ,human ,arousal ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The timing and accuracy of perceptual decision-making is exquisitely sensitive to fluctuations in arousal. Although extensive research has highlighted the role of various neural processing stages in forming decisions, our understanding of how arousal impacts these processes remains limited. Here we isolated electrophysiological signatures of decision-making alongside signals reflecting target selection, attentional engagement and motor output and examined their modulation as a function of tonic and phasic arousal, indexed by baseline and task-evoked pupil diameter, respectively. Reaction times were shorter on trials with lower tonic, and higher phasic arousal. Additionally, these two pupil measures were predictive of a unique set of EEG signatures that together represent multiple information processing steps of decision-making. Finally, behavioural variability associated with fluctuations in tonic and phasic arousal, indicative of neuromodulators acting on multiple timescales, was mediated by its effects on the EEG markers of attentional engagement, sensory processing and the variability in decision processing.
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- 2019
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11. Muscarinic and Nicotinic Contribution to Contrast Sensitivity of Macaque Area V1 Neurons
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Jose L. Herrero, Marc A. Gieselmann, and Alexander Thiele
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acetylcholine ,visual cortex organization ,contrast sensitivity ,normalization ,primary visual cortex (V1) ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Acetylcholine is a neuromodulator that shapes information processing in different cortical and subcortical areas. Cell type and location specific cholinergic receptor distributions suggest that acetylcholine in macaque striate cortex should boost feed-forward driven activity, while also reducing population excitability by increasing inhibitory tone. Studies using cholinergic agonists in anesthetized primate V1 have yielded conflicting evidence for such a proposal. Here we investigated how muscarinic or nicotinic receptor blockade affect neuronal excitability and contrast response functions in awake macaque area V1. Muscarinic or nicotinic receptor blockade caused reduced activity for all contrasts tested, without affecting the contrast where neurons reach their half maximal response (c50). The activity reduction upon muscarinic and nicotinic blockade resulted in reduced neuronal contrast sensitivity, as assessed through neurometric functions. In the majority of cells receptor blockade was best described by a response gain model (a multiplicative scaling of responses), indicating that ACh is involved in signal enhancement, not saliency filtering in macaque V1.
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- 2017
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12. Auditory motion-specific mechanisms in the primate brain.
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Colline Poirier, Simon Baumann, Pradeep Dheerendra, Olivier Joly, David Hunter, Fabien Balezeau, Li Sun, Adrian Rees, Christopher I Petkov, Alexander Thiele, and Timothy D Griffiths
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
This work examined the mechanisms underlying auditory motion processing in the auditory cortex of awake monkeys using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We tested to what extent auditory motion analysis can be explained by the linear combination of static spatial mechanisms, spectrotemporal processes, and their interaction. We found that the posterior auditory cortex, including A1 and the surrounding caudal belt and parabelt, is involved in auditory motion analysis. Static spatial and spectrotemporal processes were able to fully explain motion-induced activation in most parts of the auditory cortex, including A1, but not in circumscribed regions of the posterior belt and parabelt cortex. We show that in these regions motion-specific processes contribute to the activation, providing the first demonstration that auditory motion is not simply deduced from changes in static spatial location. These results demonstrate that parallel mechanisms for motion and static spatial analysis coexist within the auditory dorsal stream.
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- 2017
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13. The use of preferred social stimuli as rewards for rhesus macaques in behavioural neuroscience.
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Helen Gray, Bradley Pearce, Alexander Thiele, and Candy Rowe
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Macaques are often motivated to perform in neuroscientific experiments by implementing fluid restriction protocols. Daily access to water is controlled and the monkeys are rewarded with droplets of fluid for performing correct trials in the laboratory. Although these protocols are widely used and highly effective, it is important from a 3Rs perspective to investigate refinements that may help to lessen the severity of the fluid restriction applied. We assessed the use of social stimuli (images of conspecifics) as rewards for four rhesus macaques performing simple cognitive tasks. We found that individual preferences for images of male faces, female perinea and control stimuli could be identified in each monkey. However, using preferred images did not translate into effective motivators on a trial-by-trial basis: animals preferred fluid rewards, even when fluid restriction was relaxed. There was no difference in the monkeys' performance of a task when using greyscale versus colour images. Based on our findings, we cannot recommend the use of social stimuli, in this form, as a refinement to current fluid restriction protocols. We discuss the potential alternatives and possibilities for future research.
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- 2017
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14. The topography of frequency and time representation in primate auditory cortices
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Simon Baumann, Olivier Joly, Adrian Rees, Christopher I Petkov, Li Sun, Alexander Thiele, and Timothy D Griffiths
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auditory cortex ,amplitude modulation ,tonotopy ,topography ,fMRI ,macaque ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Natural sounds can be characterised by their spectral content and temporal modulation, but how the brain is organized to analyse these two critical sound dimensions remains uncertain. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we demonstrate a topographical representation of amplitude modulation rate in the auditory cortex of awake macaques. The representation of this temporal dimension is organized in approximately concentric bands of equal rates across the superior temporal plane in both hemispheres, progressing from high rates in the posterior core to low rates in the anterior core and lateral belt cortex. In A1 the resulting gradient of modulation rate runs approximately perpendicular to the axis of the tonotopic gradient, suggesting an orthogonal organisation of spectral and temporal sound dimensions. In auditory belt areas this relationship is more complex. The data suggest a continuous representation of modulation rate across several physiological areas, in contradistinction to a separate representation of frequency within each area.
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- 2015
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15. Stimulus roving and flankers affect perceptual learning of contrast discrimination in Macaca mulatta.
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Xing Chen, Mehdi Sanayei, and Alexander Thiele
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
'Stimulus roving' refers to a paradigm in which the properties of the stimuli to be discriminated vary from trial to trial, rather than being kept constant throughout a block of trials. Rhesus monkeys have previously been shown to improve their contrast discrimination performance on a non-roving task, in which they had to report the contrast of a test stimulus relative to that of a fixed-contrast sample stimulus. Human psychophysics studies indicate that roving stimuli yield little or no perceptual learning. Here, we investigate how stimulus roving influences perceptual learning in macaque monkeys and how the addition of flankers alters performance under roving conditions. Animals were initially trained on a contrast discrimination task under non-roving conditions until their performance levels stabilized. The introduction of roving contrast conditions resulted in a pronounced drop in performance, which suggested that subjects initially failed to heed the sample contrast and performed the task using an internal memory reference. With training, significant improvements occurred, demonstrating that learning is possible under roving conditions. To investigate the notion of flanker-induced perceptual learning, flanker stimuli (30% fixed-contrast iso-oriented collinear gratings) were presented jointly with central (roving) stimuli. Presentation of flanker stimuli yielded substantial performance improvements in one subject, but deteriorations in the other. Finally, after the removal of flankers, performance levels returned to their pre-flanker state in both subjects, indicating that the flanker-induced changes were contingent upon the continued presentation of flankers.
- Published
- 2014
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16. Die Europäische Zentralbank: Von technokratischer Behörde zu politischem Akteur?
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Alexander Thiele
- Published
- 2019
17. Der gefräßige Leviathan: Entstehung, Ausbreitung und Zukunft des modernen Staates
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Alexander Thiele
- Published
- 2019
18. Intrinsic timescales in the visual cortex change with selective attention and reflect spatial connectivity
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Y Shi, R Zeraati, Alexander Thiele, Anna Levina, Tatiana A. Engel, Tirin Moore, Mark A. Gieselmann, and Nicholas A. Steinmetz
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Multidisciplinary ,Neocortex ,Quantitative Biology::Neurons and Cognition ,Computer science ,Functional specialization ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Cognition ,General Chemistry ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Neural activity ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Receptive field ,Attentional modulation ,medicine ,Neuroscience ,Network model - Abstract
Intrinsic timescales characterize dynamics of endogenous fluctuations in neural activity. Variation of intrinsic timescales across the neocortex reflects functional specialization of cortical areas, but less is known about how intrinsic timescales change during cognitive tasks. We measured intrinsic timescales of local spiking activity within columns of area V4 in male monkeys performing spatial attention tasks. The ongoing spiking activity unfolded across at least two distinct timescales, fast and slow. The slow timescale increased when monkeys attended to the receptive fields location and correlated with reaction times. By evaluating predictions of several network models, we found that spatiotemporal correlations in V4 activity were best explained by the model in which multiple timescales arise from recurrent interactions shaped by spatially arranged connectivity, and attentional modulation of timescales results from an increase in the efficacy of recurrent interactions. Our results suggest that multiple timescales may arise from the spatial connectivity in the visual cortex and flexibly change with the cognitive state due to dynamic effective interactions between neurons.
- Published
- 2023
19. A Multi-agent Approach to Professional Software Engineering.
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Marco Lützenberger, Tobias Küster, Thomas Konnerth, Alexander Thiele, Nils Masuch, Axel Heßler, Jan Keiser, Michael Burkhardt, Silvan Kaiser, Jakob Tonn, Michael Kaisers, and Sahin Albayrak
- Published
- 2013
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20. Die lädierte Demokratie
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Alexander Thiele
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General Medicine - Abstract
Die Vorgänge um die Erstürmung des Kapitols in Washington haben weltweit Fassungslosigkeit und Entsetzen ausgelöst, sind allerdings nur der (vorläufige) Höhepunkt bereits Jahrzehnte früher einsetzender gesellschaftlicher und politischer Veränderungen. Der Beitrag blickt zu den Anfängen dieser Entwicklung, die mit einer vor allem von Newt Gingrich vertretenen Strategie der Totalopposition Anfang der 90er Jahre an Fahrt aufnahm und durch Veränderungen in der Medienlandschaft zusätzlich befeuert wurde. Seitdem hat sich die Spaltung der politischen Lager weiter vertieft und ist das gegenseitige Misstrauen beider Seiten stetig angewachsen, sodass Donald Trumps “Big Lie” von der gestohlenen Wahl schließlich auf fruchtbaren Boden fallen und die gewaltsame Entladung am 6. Januar 2021 hervorrufen konnte. Sollte es Joe Biden nicht gelingen, das politische Klima abzukühlen und eine angemessene Kultur der Kooperation wiederzubeleben, ist es alles andere als sicher, dass die amerikanische Verfassungsordnung dies mittelfristig unbeschadet überstehen wird.
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- 2022
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21. Decision letter: Spike-phase coupling patterns reveal laminar identity in primate cortex
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Alexander Thiele
- Published
- 2023
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22. Ripples in macaque V1 and V4 are modulated by top-down visual attention
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Jafar Doostmohammadi, Marc Alwin Gieselmann, Jochem van Kempen, Reza Lashgari, Ali Yoonessi, and Alexander Thiele
- Subjects
Multidisciplinary - Abstract
Sharp-wave ripples (SWRs) are highly synchronous neuronal activity events. They have been predominantly observed in the hippocampus during offline states such as pause in exploration, slow-wave sleep, and quiescent wakefulness. SWRs have been linked to memory consolidation, spatial navigation, and spatial decision-making. Recently, SWRs have been reported during visual search, a form of remote spatial exploration, in macaque hippocampus. However, the association between SWRs and multiple forms of awake conscious and goal-directed behavior is unknown. We report that ripple activity occurs in macaque visual areas V1 and V4 during focused spatial attention. The occurrence of ripples is modulated by stimulus characteristics, increased by attention toward the receptive field, and by the size of the attentional focus. During attention cued to the receptive field, the monkey’s reaction time in detecting behaviorally relevant events was reduced by ripples. These results show that ripple activity is not limited to hippocampal activity during offline states, rather they occur in the neocortex during active attentive states and vigilance behaviors.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. MAMS Service Framework.
- Author
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Alexander Thiele, Silvan Kaiser, Thomas Konnerth, and Benjamin Hirsch
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Applying JIAC V to Real World Problems: The MAMS Case.
- Author
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Alexander Thiele, Thomas Konnerth, Silvan Kaiser, Jan Keiser, and Benjamin Hirsch
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Herding Agents - JIAC TNG in Multi-Agent Programming Contest 2008.
- Author
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Axel Hessler, Jan Keiser, Tobias Küster, Marcel Patzlaff, Alexander Thiele, and Erdene-Ochir Tuguldur
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Review for 'Serotonergic modulation of local network processing in V1 mirrors previously reported signatures of local network modulation by spatial attention'
- Author
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null Alexander Thiele
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Distinct feedforward and feedback pathways for cell-type specific attention effects
- Author
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Georgios Spyropoulos, Marius Schneider, Jochem van Kempen, Marc Alwin Gieselmann, Alexander Thiele, and Martin Vinck
- Abstract
Spatial attention selectively enhances neural responses to visual stimuli. There are two long-standing hypotheses about how top-down feedback enhances sensory responses in areas like V4: First, by amplifying V1-to-V4 feedforward communication via 30-80Hz gamma-coherence. Second, via top-down feedback to V4 supra- and infra-granular layers. To test these hypotheses, we recorded distinct cell-types across macaque V1 and V4 layers. Attention increased both V1-V4 gamma-coherence and V4 spike-rates, yet with distinct laminar and cell-type profiles. Surprisingly, V1 gamma did not engage V4 excitatory neurons, but only Layer-4 fast-spiking interneurons. Similar observations were made in mouse visual-cortex, where feedforward gamma-influences preferentially recruit optogenetically-tagged PV+ and narrowwaveform SSt+ interneurons. By contrast, attention enhanced V4 spike-rates in both excitatory neurons and fast-spiking interneurons, with the strongest and earliest modulation in Layer-2/3, consistent with a feedback influence. These findings reveal distinct feedforward and feedback pathways for the attentional modulation of inter-areal coherence and spike rates, respectively.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Verfassungsgerichtsexpertokratie?
- Author
-
Alexander Thiele
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The representation of time windows in primate auditory cortex
- Author
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Pradeep Dheerendra, Simon Baumann, Olivier Joly, Fabien Balezeau, Christopher I Petkov, Alexander Thiele, and Timothy D Griffiths
- Subjects
Auditory Cortex ,Brain Mapping ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Auditory Perception ,Animals ,Humans ,Macaca mulatta - Abstract
Whether human and nonhuman primates process the temporal dimension of sound similarly remains an open question. We examined the brain basis for the processing of acoustic time windows in rhesus macaques using stimuli simulating the spectrotemporal complexity of vocalizations. We conducted functional magnetic resonance imaging in awake macaques to identify the functional anatomy of response patterns to different time windows. We then contrasted it against the responses to identical stimuli used previously in humans. Despite a similar overall pattern, ranging from the processing of shorter time windows in core areas to longer time windows in lateral belt and parabelt areas, monkeys exhibited lower sensitivity to longer time windows than humans. This difference in neuronal sensitivity might be explained by a specialization of the human brain for processing longer time windows in speech.
- Published
- 2022
30. Characterisation of the BOLD response time course at different levels of the auditory pathway in non-human primates.
- Author
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Simon Baumann, Timothy D. Griffiths, Adrian Rees, David Hunter, Li Sun, and Alexander Thiele
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Data-Robust Tight Lower Bounds to the Information Carried by Spike Times of a Neuronal Population.
- Author
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Gianni Pola, Rasmus S. Petersen, Alexander Thiele, Malcolm P. Young, and Stefano Panzeri
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Sharp wave ripples in macaque V1 and V4 are modulated by top-down visual attention
- Author
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Jafar Doostmohammadi, Marc Alwin Gieselmann, Jochem van Kempen, Reza Lashgari, Ali Yoonessi, and Alexander Thiele
- Abstract
Sharp-wave ripples (SWRs) are highly synchronous neuronal activity events. They have been predominantly observed in the hippocampus during offline states such as pause in exploration, slow-wave sleep and quiescent wakefulness. SWRs have been linked to memory consolidation, spatial navigation, and spatial decision-making. Recently, SWRs have been reported during visual search, a form of remote spatial exploration, in macaque hippocampus. However, the association between SWRs and multiple forms of awake conscious and goal-directed behavior is unknown. We report that ripple activity occurs in macaque visual areas V1 and V4 during focused spatial attention. The frequency of ripples is modulated by characteristics of the stimuli, by spatial attention directed toward a receptive field, and by the size of the attentional focus. Critically, the monkey’s reaction times in detecting behaviorally relevant stimulus changes was affected on trials with SWRs. These results show that ripple activity is not limited to hippocampal activity during offline states, rather they occur in the neocortex during active attentive states and vigilance behaviors.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Allgemeine Staatslehre
- Author
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Alexander Thiele
- Abstract
Vor welchen Herausforderungen steht der Staat? Was macht den modernen Staat aus? Vor welchen Herausforderungen steht er im 21. Jahrhundert? Ist eine Allgemeine Staatslehre in Zeiten voranschreitender Globalisierung und eines (vermeintlichen) Untergangs des modernen Staates überhaupt noch zeitgemäß? Das vorliegende Lehrbuch möchte Fragen mit einem Fokus auf den demokratischen Verfassungsstaat beantworten. Es richtet sich an Studierende der Rechts-, Politik- und Wirtschaftswissenschaften sowie an alle, die am „Wesen des Staates“ interessiert sind.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. § 16 Die Europäische Bankenunion
- Author
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Alexander Thiele
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Editorial
- Author
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Daniel Effer-Uhe, Alexander Thiele, and Anne Schneider
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Author response: Stimulus dependence of directed information exchange between cortical layers in macaque V1
- Author
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Marc Alwin Gieselmann and Alexander Thiele
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Book review: Vom Bail-out-Verbot zur solidarischen Bail-out-Pflicht? Eine rechtliche Analyse des europäischen mitgliedsstaatlichen Solidaritätsprinzips von der Gründung der EWG bis zum ESM, by Pipitsa Kousoula. (Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2020)
- Author
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Alexander Thiele
- Subjects
Political Science and International Relations ,Law - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Decision letter: Columnar processing of border ownership in primate visual cortex
- Author
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Rudiger von der Heydt and Alexander Thiele
- Subjects
Border ownership ,Geography ,Primate visual cortex ,Neuroscience - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Defekte Visionen : Eine Intervention zur Zukunft der Europäischen Union
- Author
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Alexander Thiele and Alexander Thiele
- Abstract
Wie geht es weiter mit der Europäischen Union? Ihre institutionelle Gestaltung und ihr Zusammenspiel mit den Mitgliedstaaten steht angesichts zahlreicher Krisen wieder vermehrt auf der Tagesordnung. Entsprechend zahlreich sind die Zukunftsvisionen, die von prominenten Politikerinnen und Politikern – etwa von Joschka Fischer, Emmanuel Macron und Olaf Scholz – präsentiert wurden. Die Debatte scheint gleichwohl festgefahren. Das liegt auch daran, dass all diesen Vorschlägen kein normatives Leitbild unterliegt: Es bleibt meist unklar, welches Problem sie adressieren und wie sie die Funktionsfähigkeit der EU konkret verbessern möchten. Aus Pathos folgt weder staatsrechtliche Form noch langfristige Legitimität. Die Zukunft der EU – so Alexander Thiele in diesem Buch – liegt denn auch nicht im großen und umfassenden Wurf, sondern in schrittweisen Reformen, die jeweils konkrete Legitimitätsdefizite adressieren.
- Published
- 2024
40. Die Verfassungsordnung der Bundesrepublik Deutschland
- Author
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Werner Heun, Alexander Thiele, Werner Heun, and Alexander Thiele
- Abstract
Das vorliegende Werk ist kein konventionelles Lehrbuch des Staatsrechts, sondern eine systematische und interdisziplinäre Darstellung der durch das Grundgesetz konstituierten politischen Ordnung. Das 1949 erlassene Grundgesetz ist inzwischen zu einem Modell für Verfassungen in der ganzen Welt geworden, das sich durch besondere Merkmale auszeichnet: fünf grundlegende Staatsstrukturprinzipien (Republik, Demokratie, Sozial-, Bundes- und Rechtsstaat), einen unitarischen Bundesstaat, der einen kooperativen und zugleich exekutiven Föderalismus schafft, ein parlamentarisches Regierungssystem, ein machtvolles Parlament, das im Bundesrat und den Länderministerpräsidenten ein starkes Gegengewicht findet. Schließlich nimmt das Bundesverfassungsgericht als letztverbindlicher Interpret der Verfassung eine bedeutsame politische Position ein. Auf dem Feld der Grundrechte hat das Bundesverfassungsgericht nicht zuletzt eine weitreichende Konstitutionalisierung des gesamten politischen Systems bewirkt. Pünktlich zum 75-jährigen Jubiläum des Grundgesetzes liegt das Werk in einer umfassend aktualisierten und ergänzten Auflage vor.
- Published
- 2024
41. Virtual Electrode Recording Tool for EXtracellular potentials (VERTEX): Comparing multi-electrode recordings from simulated and biological mammalian cortical tissue.
- Author
-
Richard J. Tomsett, Matt Ainsworth, Alexander Thiele, Mehdi Sanayei, Xing Chen, Alwin Gieselmann, Miles A. Whittington, Mark O. Cunningham, and Marcus Kaiser
- Published
- 2014
42. Industrial process optimisation with JIAC.
- Author
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Marco Lützenberger, Tobias Küster, Thomas Konnerth, Alexander Thiele, Nils Masuch, Axel Heßler, Jan Keiser, Michael Burkhardt, Silvan Kaiser, Jakob Tonn, and Sahin Albayrak
- Published
- 2013
43. JIAC V: A MAS framework for industrial applications.
- Author
-
Marco Lützenberger, Tobias Küster, Thomas Konnerth, Alexander Thiele, Nils Masuch, Axel Heßler, Jan Keiser, Michael Burkhardt, Silvan Kaiser, and Sahin Albayrak
- Published
- 2013
44. Contribution of Ionotropic Glutamatergic Receptors to Excitability and Attentional Signals in Macaque Frontal Eye Field
- Author
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Miguel Dasilva, Christian Brandt, Marc Alwin Gieselmann, Alexander Thiele, and Claudia Distler
- Subjects
Male ,N-Methylaspartate ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,primate ,Macaque ,neuropharmacology ,Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Glutamatergic ,Dopamine ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Excitatory Amino Acid Agonists ,Reaction Time ,Saccades ,Animals ,Receptors, AMPA ,AcademicSubjects/MED00385 ,Receptor ,alpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic Acid ,Neuropharmacology ,biology ,frontal cortex ,Attentional control ,Macaca mulatta ,attention ,Frontal Lobe ,Original Article ,AcademicSubjects/MED00310 ,Neuroscience ,Acetylcholine ,Photic Stimulation ,Ionotropic effect ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Top-down attention, controlled by frontal cortical areas, is a key component of cognitive operations. How different neurotransmitters and neuromodulators flexibly change the cellular and network interactions with attention demands remains poorly understood. While acetylcholine and dopamine are critically involved, glutamatergic receptors have been proposed to play important roles. To understand their contribution to attentional signals, we investigated how ionotropic glutamatergic receptors in the frontal eye field (FEF) of male macaques contribute to neuronal excitability and attentional control signals in different cell types. Broad-spiking and narrow-spiking cells both required N-methyl-D-aspartic acid and α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor activation for normal excitability, thereby affecting ongoing or stimulus-driven activity. However, attentional control signals were not dependent on either glutamatergic receptor type in broad- or narrow-spiking cells. A further subdivision of cell types into different functional types using cluster-analysis based on spike waveforms and spiking characteristics did not change the conclusions. This can be explained by a model where local blockade of specific ionotropic receptors is compensated by cell embedding in large-scale networks. It sets the glutamatergic system apart from the cholinergic system in FEF and demonstrates that a reduction in excitability is not sufficient to induce a reduction in attentional control signals.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. MAMS service framework.
- Author
-
Thomas Konnerth, Silvan Kaiser, Alexander Thiele, Jan Keiser, and Dai Labor
- Published
- 2009
46. Das Vorabentscheidungsverfahren in Deutschland und in Polen
- Author
-
Bernard ?uka?ko, Alexander Thiele, Bernard ?uka?ko, and Alexander Thiele
- Subjects
- Advisory opinions--Poland, Advisory opinions--Germany, Advisory opinions--European Union countries
- Abstract
Das Vorabentscheidungsverfahren ist das wichtigste Verfahren vor dem EuGH. Seit dem polnischen EU-Beitritt haben sowohl der Verfassungsgerichtshof als auch das Oberste Gericht, das Hauptverwaltungsgericht, ordentliche Gerichte und Verwaltungsgerichte Vorlagen beim EuGH eingereicht. In Deutschland hat mittlerweile sogar das Bundesverfassungsgericht Vorlageverfahren initiiert - ob darin ein Wille zur Kooperation mit dem Luxemburger Gericht zu sehen ist, wird allerdings bisweilen bezweifelt. Der vorliegende Band enthält Ergebnisse eines deutsch-polnischen Forschungsprojekts zur Bedeutung des Vorabentscheidungsverfahrens aus der europäischen und der nationalen Perspektive. Untersucht werden allgemeine dogmatische Fragen, aber auch die Rolle der Vorabentscheidungen in unterschiedlichen Rechtsgebieten, wie dem Verfassungsrecht, dem Zivilrecht, dem Sozial- und Sozialversicherungsrecht und dem Steuerrecht.
- Published
- 2023
47. Digitalisierung der Medienordnung : 1. Berlin-Potsdamer Konferenz zu interdisziplinären Rechtsfragen
- Author
-
Marcus Schladebach, Alexander Thiele, Marcus Schladebach, and Alexander Thiele
- Abstract
Der generelle Prozess der Digitalisierung ist für die Medienordnung von besonderer Relevanz. Stehen auf der einen Seite wichtige Kommunikations- und Effektivitätsgewinne, so müssen auf der anderen Seite gesellschaftliche Gefahren durch Hatespeech, Fake News oder Urheberrechtsverletzungen erkannt und verhindert werden. Der vorliegende Band enthält die Vorträge, die auf der 1. Berlin-Potsdamer Konferenz zu interdisziplinären Rechtsfragen im März 2022 in Berlin gehalten wurden. Sie beleuchten die aus der Medienkonvergenz folgenden Veränderungen der Medienlandschaft in zentralen Bereichen wie der Bekämpfung von Desinformation, der Digitalwirtschaft, der Wissenskommunikation, dem Persönlichkeitsrechtsschutz, dem Influencer-Marketing, der Plattformregulierung, der Musikwirtschaft und der Anonymität in sozialen Netzwerken. Dabei geht es jeweils auch um Empfehlungen, welche politischen Aktivitäten erforderlich sind, um die Digitalisierung einerseits zu fördern, andererseits aber auch ihren Gefahren wirksam zu begegnen. Mit Beiträgen von: Florian Drücke, Eva Flecken, Conrad Heberling, Anne Reif, Christian Schertz, Marcus Schladebach, Christiane Stützle, Alexander Thiele, Marie-Christine Zeisberg
- Published
- 2023
48. Das Grundgesetz. Verständlich erklärt von Alexander Thiele : Thiele, Alexander – juristische Texte; Gesetze; Rechtswesen; Basiswissen – 14415
- Author
-
Alexander Thiele and Alexander Thiele
- Abstract
Was ist der Unterschied zwischen Freiheits- und Gleichheitsrechten? Wie funktioniert eine Grundrechtsprüfung? Warum können Grundrechte eingeschränkt werden? Welche Rolle haben die Parteien? Was passiert im Verteidigungsfall? Was ist die Ewigkeitsklausel? Diese und viele andere Fragen erläutert Alexander Thiele im Durchgang durch die 14 Abschnitte des Grundgesetzes ausführlich und leicht verständlich: Für Schülerinnen und Schüler, für Studienanfänger der Politik- und Rechtswissenschaften, für alle an Verfassungsfragen interessierten Bürgerinnen und Bürger.
- Published
- 2023
49. VwVfG
- Author
-
Daniela Heinemann, Manuel J. Heinemann, Lutz Hoffmann, Arne Pautsch, Alexander Thiele, and Tim Uschkereit
- Abstract
Zusätzlich zu allen Vorzügen, die Ihnen jeder Berliner Kommentar bietet, gehört zum Selbstverständnis dieses Werkes seine sehr überzeugende und anwenderfreundliche Schwerpunktsetzung: Während ausgewählte Bereiche des VwVfG besonders intensiv erläutert werden, sind die übrigen Vorschriften auf das Wesentliche reduziert dargestellt. Stets mit Blick auf unionsrechtliche Entwicklungen und die Digitalisierung der öffentlichen Verwaltung. In jedem Fall anschaulich, auf schnelle Lösungen orientiert und hochaktuell mit Rechtsstand Juli 2020. Bereits eingearbeitet sind u.a. das Maßnahmengesetzvorbereitungsgesetz vom 22.3.2020 und das Plansicherstellungsgesetz vom 20.5.2020 zur Sicherstellung ordnungsgemäßer Planungs- und Genehmigungsverfahren während der COVID-19-Pandemie.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Directed information exchange between cortical layers in macaque V1 and V4 and its modulation by selective attention
- Author
-
Alexander Thiele, Demetrio Ferro, Michael Boyd, Stefano Panzeri, and Jochem van Kempen
- Subjects
Sensory system ,Local field potential ,Macaque ,laminar interaction ,biology.animal ,feedforward processing ,Animals ,Visual Pathways ,Visual Cortex ,Physics ,feedback processing ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Feed forward ,Information flow ,Cognition ,Biological Sciences ,Macaca mulatta ,attention ,Modulation ,Receptive field ,Evoked Potentials, Visual ,Neuroscience ,Photic Stimulation - Abstract
Significance Attention is thought to modulate sensory processing by changing communication between cortical areas within specific frequency bands. Using local field potential recordings, we tested this influential model through laminar recordings in macaque V1 and V4. Attention modulated communication unexpectedly. In V1, it decreased communication across spectral frequencies except for granular-to-supragranular interactions. In V4, it increased communication across all spectral frequencies. Critically, attention increased V1–V4 feedforward communication across all frequency bands, decreased V4–V1 feedback communication in low-frequency bands, and increased beta and gamma feedback communication. These findings challenge existing theories of frequency specificity of feedforward and feedback interactions., Achieving behavioral goals requires integration of sensory and cognitive information across cortical laminae and cortical regions. How this computation is performed remains unknown. Using local field potential recordings and spectrally resolved conditional Granger causality (cGC) analysis, we mapped visual information flow, and its attentional modulation, between cortical layers within and between macaque brain areas V1 and V4. Stimulus-induced interlaminar information flow within V1 dominated upwardly, channeling information toward supragranular corticocortical output layers. Within V4, information flow dominated from granular to supragranular layers, but interactions between supragranular and infragranular layers dominated downwardly. Low-frequency across-area communication was stronger from V4 to V1, with little layer specificity. Gamma-band communication was stronger in the feedforward V1-to-V4 direction. Attention to the receptive field of V1 decreased communication between all V1 layers, except for granular-to-supragranular layer interactions. Communication within V4, and from V1 to V4, increased with attention across all frequencies. While communication from V4 to V1 was stronger in lower-frequency bands (4 to 25 Hz), attention modulated cGCs from V4 to V1 across all investigated frequencies. Our data show that top-down cognitive processes result in reduced communication within cortical areas, increased feedforward communication across all frequency bands, and increased gamma-band feedback communication.
- Published
- 2021
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