scispace - formally typeset
L

Lydia Potekhina

Researcher at Allen Institute for Brain Science

Publications -  16
Citations -  1204

Lydia Potekhina is an academic researcher from Allen Institute for Brain Science. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neocortex & Biology. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 12 publications receiving 687 citations.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Classification of electrophysiological and morphological neuron types in the mouse visual cortex.

TL;DR: A single-cell characterization pipeline is established using standardized patch-clamp recordings in brain slices and biocytin-based neuronal reconstructions to establish a morpho-electrical taxonomy of cell types for the mouse visual cortex via unsupervised clustering analysis of multiple quantitative features.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comprehensive transcriptional map of primate brain development

Trygve E. Bakken, +98 more
- 21 Jul 2016 - 
TL;DR: A high-resolution transcriptional atlas of rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) brain development is described that combines dense temporal sampling of prenatal and postnatal periods with fine anatomical division of cortical and subcortical regions associated with human neuropsychiatric disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrated Morphoelectric and Transcriptomic Classification of Cortical GABAergic Cells.

TL;DR: 28 met- types are defined that have congruent morphological, electrophysiological, and transcriptomic properties and robust mutual predictability, and layer-specific axon innervation pattern is identified as a defining feature distinguishing different met-types.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human neocortical expansion involves glutamatergic neuron diversification

Jim Berg, +150 more
- 07 Oct 2021 - 
TL;DR: In this article, a robust platform combining patch clamp recording, biocytin staining and single-cell RNA-sequencing (Patch-seq) was developed to examine neurosurgically resected human tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuropathological and transcriptomic characteristics of the aged brain.

TL;DR: A comprehensive neuropathological, molecular, and transcriptomic characterization of hippocampus and two regions cortex in 107 aged donors from the Adult Changes in Thought study is generated, highlighting the importance of properly controlling for RNA quality when studying dementia.