Content area

Abstract

Neural decoding and neuromodulation technologies hold great promise for treating mood and other brain disorders in next-generation therapies that manipulate functional brain networks. Here, we perform a novel causal network analysis to decode multiregional communication in the primate mood processing network and determine how neuromodulation, short-burst tetanic microstimulation (sbTetMS), alters multiregional network communication. The causal network analysis revealed a mechanism of network excitability that regulates when a sender stimulation site communicates with receiver sites. Decoding network excitability from neural activity at modulator sites predicted sender-receiver communication while sbTetMS neuromodulation temporarily disrupted sender-receiver communication. Additionally, we characterize several activity-based electrophysiological biomarkers in frontal-cortical-striatal areas to understand their organizational properties during reinforcement learning in this model system. These results reveal specific network mechanisms of multiregional communication and suggest a new generation of brain therapies that combine neural decoding to predict multiregional communication with neuromodulation to disrupt multiregional communication and identify functional organization.

Details

1010268
Title
A Cellular Substrate for Multiregional Communication Across Large-Scale Networks in the Non-Human Primate
Number of pages
288
Publication year
2025
Degree date
2025
School code
0146
Source
DAI-B 87/3(E), Dissertation Abstracts International
ISBN
9798293889358
Committee member
Fenton, Andre; Hawken, Michael; Buzsaki, Gyorgy; Kiani, Roozbeh
University/institution
New York University
Department
Center for Neural Science
University location
United States -- New York
Degree
Ph.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
32121868
ProQuest document ID
3255217719
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/dissertations-theses/cellular-substrate-multiregional-communication/docview/3255217719/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Database
ProQuest One Academic