scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Collège de France

EducationParis, France
About: Collège de France is a education organization based out in Paris, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Dopamine. The organization has 6541 authors who have published 11983 publications receiving 648742 citations. The organization is also known as: College de France.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Major compelling questions about the functional role of the locus coeruleus nucleus that had been difficult to answer, given its remote location and diminutive size have now become accessible via new neuroscience tools.
Abstract: The locus coeruleus (LC), or 'blue spot', is a small nucleus located deep in the brainstem that provides the far-reaching noradrenergic neurotransmitter system of the brain. This phylogenetically conserved nucleus has proved relatively intractable to full characterization, despite more than 60 years of concerted efforts by investigators. Recently, an array of powerful new neuroscience tools have provided unprecedented access to this elusive nucleus, revealing new levels of organization and function. We are currently at the threshold of major discoveries regarding how this tiny brainstem structure exerts such varied and significant influences over brain function and behaviour. All LC neurons receive inputs related to autonomic arousal, but distinct subpopulations of those neurons can encode specific cognitive processes, presumably through more specific inputs from the forebrain areas. This ability, combined with specific patterns of innervation of target areas and heterogeneity in receptor distributions, suggests that activation of the LC has more specific influences on target networks than had initially been imagined.

245 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study provides the basis for a reliable mapping method in awake monkeys and a reference for the organization of the properties of the visual space representation in an area LIP extended with respect to the previously described LIP and showing a relative emphasis of central visual field.
Abstract: The representation of the visual field in the primate lateral intraparietal area (LIP) was examined, using a rapid, computer-driven receptive field (RF) mapping procedure. RF characteristics of single LIP neurons could thus be measured repeatedly under different behavioral conditions. Here we report data obtained using a standard ocular fixation task during which the animals were required to monitor small changes in color of the fixated target. In a first step, statistical analyses were conducted in order to establish the experimental limits of the mapping procedure on 171 LIP neurons recorded from three hemispheres of two macaque monkeys. The characteristics of the receptive fields of LIP neurons were analyzed at the single cell and at the population level. Although for many neurons the assumption of a simple two-dimensional gaussian profile with a central area of maximal excitability at the center and progressively decreasing response strength at the periphery can represent relatively accurately the spatial structure of the RF, about 19% of the cells had a markedly asymmetrical shape. At the population level, we observed, in agreement with prior studies, a systematic relation between RF size and eccentricity. However, we also found a more accentuated overrepresentation of the central visual field than had been previously reported and no marked differences between the upper and lower visual representation of space. This observation correlates with an extension of the definition of LIP from the posterior third of the lateral intraparietal sulcus to most of the middle and posterior thirds. Detailed histological analyses of the recorded hemispheres suggest that there exists, in this newly defined unitary functional cortical area, a coarse but systematic topographical organization in area LIP that supports the distinction between its dorsal and ventral regions, LIPd and LIPv, respectively. Paralleling the physiological data, the central visual field is mostly represented in the middle dorsal region and the visual periphery more ventral and posterior. An anteroposterior gradient from the lower to the upper visual field representations can also be identified. In conclusion, this study provides the basis for a reliable mapping method in awake monkeys and a reference for the organization of the properties of the visual space representation in an area LIP extended with respect to the previously described LIP and showing a relative emphasis of central visual field.

245 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: During slow wave sleep and quiet wakefulness, the hippocampus generates high frequency field oscillations (ripples) during which pyramidal neurons replay previous waking activity in a temporally compressed manner and reactivated firing patterns occur within shorter time windows propitious for synaptic plasticity within the hippocampal network and in downstream neocortical structures.

245 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
G.T.J. Arnison, A. Astbury, G.H. Grayer, W.J. Haynes, Asoke K. Nandi, C. Roberts, W. G. Scott, T.P. Shah, B. Aubert, P. Catz, J. Colas, M. Della Negra, A. Gonidec, J. P. Lees, D. Linglin, M.-N. Minard, M. Yvert, A. Bezaguet1, R. Boeck, M. Calvetti1, T. Carroll1, S. Centro1, Sergio Cittolin1, A.M. Cnops1, M. Demoulin1, D. DiBitonto1, P. Ghez1, R. Haidan1, H. F. Hoffmann1, Francesco Lacava1, W. Jank1, H. Kowalski1, Thomas W. Markiewicz1, G. Maurin1, F. Muller1, L. Naumann1, A. Norton1, G. Pianomortari, A. Placci1, J. P. Revol1, Michael Rijssenbeek1, C. Rubbia1, B. Sadoulet1, D. Schinzel1, Charling Tao1, J. Timmer1, J.P. Vialle1, V. Vuillemin1, E. Zurfluh1, T. J. V. Bowcock2, E. Eisenhandler2, W.R. Gibson2, A. Honma2, P.I.P. Kalmus2, Richard Keeler2, G. Salvi2, G. Thompson2, C. Cochet, M. Debeer, Daniel Denegri, J.P. Fournier, Alain Givernaud, J. P. Laugier, A. Lévêque, Elizabeth Locci, James Rich, J. Sass, J. Saudraix, A. Savoy-Navarro, Michel Spiro, D. Dallmann, R. Fruehwirth, L.O. Hertzberger, D. J. Holthuizen, Josef Strauss, F. Szoncso, H. D. Wahl, Ludwik Dobrzynski1, G. Fontaine3, S. Geer3, C. Ghesquiere3, Y. Giraud-Héraud3, D. Kryn3, J. P. Mendiburu3, A. Orkin-Lecourtois3, G. Sajot3, J. Vrana3, C. Bacci, R. Bernabei, Filippo Ceradini, M.J. Corden, S. d'Angelo, J. D. Dowell, M. Edwards, K. Eggert, Nicolas Ellis, P. Erhard, H. Faissner, J. Garvey, K.L. Giboni, Phillip Gutierrez, T. Hansl-Kozanecka, C. Hodges, Dirk L. Hoffmann, R. J. Homer, V. Karimaeki, I. R. Kenyon, A. Kernan, Ritva Kinnunen, W. Kozanecki, H. Lehmann, R. Leuchs, T. J. McMahon, M. Moricca, L. Paoluzi, M. Pimiä, E. Radermacher, J. Ransdell, Hans Reithler, G. Salvini, Konstanty Sumorok, E. Tscheslog, Jorma Tuominiemi, P. M. Watkins, J. A. Wilson 
TL;DR: In this paper, the transverse momentum spectra up to 10 GeV/c for charged particles produced centrally in proton-antiproton collisions at 540 GeV in the centre of mass at the CERN collider were measured.

244 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The characteristics of invasive data acquired from implanted epilepsy patients using stereotactic‐electroencephalography (SEEG) and electrocorticography (ECoG) and the use of spectral analysis to reveal task‐related modulations in multiple frequency components are discussed.
Abstract: Although non-invasive techniques provide functional activation maps at ever-growing spatio-temporal precision, invasive recordings offer a unique opportunity for direct investigations of the fine-scale properties of neural mechanisms in focal neuronal populations. In this review we provide an overview of the field of intracranial Electroencephalography (iEEG) and discuss its strengths and limitations and its relationship to non-invasive brain mapping techniques. We discuss the characteristics of invasive data acquired from implanted epilepsy patients using stereotactic-electroencephalography (SEEG) and electrocorticography (ECoG) and the use of spectral analysis to reveal task-related modulations in multiple frequency components. Increasing evidence suggests that gamma-band activity (>40 Hz) might be a particularly efficient index for functional mapping. Moreover, the detection of high gamma activity may play a crucial role in bridging the gap between electrophysiology and functional imaging studies as well as in linking animal and human data. The present review also describes recent advances in real-time invasive detection of oscillatory modulations (including gamma activity) in humans. Furthermore, the implications of intracerebral findings on future non-invasive studies are discussed.

244 citations


Authors

Showing all 6597 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Pierre Chambon211884161565
Irving L. Weissman2011141172504
David R. Williams1782034138789
Kari Alitalo174817114231
Pierre Bourdieu153592194586
Stanislas Dehaene14945686539
Howard L. Weiner144104791424
Alain Fischer14377081680
Yves Agid14166974441
Michel Foucault140499191296
Jean-Pierre Changeux13867276462
Jean-Marie Tarascon136853137673
K. Ganga13227299004
Jacques Delabrouille13135494923
G. Patanchon12824187233
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
382.4K papers, 13.6M citations

92% related

University of Paris
174.1K papers, 5M citations

92% related

Max Planck Society
406.2K papers, 19.5M citations

90% related

French Institute of Health and Medical Research
174.2K papers, 8.3M citations

90% related

École Normale Supérieure
99.4K papers, 3M citations

90% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20238
202293
2021418
2020429
2019385
2018391