An integrated platform for studying sensory networks in the vertebrate brain

Information

  • Research Project
  • 10051317
  • ApplicationId
    10051317
  • Core Project Number
    R01NS118406
  • Full Project Number
    1R01NS118406-01
  • Serial Number
    118406
  • FOA Number
    RFA-NS-18-030
  • Sub Project Id
  • Project Start Date
    9/15/2020 - 3 years ago
  • Project End Date
    8/31/2023 - 9 months ago
  • Program Officer Name
    DAVID, KAREN KATE
  • Budget Start Date
    9/15/2020 - 3 years ago
  • Budget End Date
    8/31/2023 - 9 months ago
  • Fiscal Year
    2020
  • Support Year
    01
  • Suffix
  • Award Notice Date
    9/11/2020 - 3 years ago

An integrated platform for studying sensory networks in the vertebrate brain

7. Project Summary/Abstract Human experience is shaped by our senses, which receive diverse inputs from our environment. These varied inputs, however, all contribute to a single integrated representation in our minds of the outside world. Neuroscientists have studied sensory perception, and the integration different sensory modalities like vision, hearing, and touch, for decades, but there are still important unanswered questions about how sensory cells in the brain work, and how the circuits that they form control the flow of information through the brain. Understanding these networks in detail would expand our knowledge of the brain in general, and would serve as a starting point for addressing disorders like autism spectrum disorder, in which sensory systems function abnormally. In a large part, these functioning sensory circuits have remained mysterious for technical reasons. Traditional techniques either sample from the whole brain without seeing the individual neurons or record from a few neurons at a time without seeing the larger networks. This project addresses this gap using the zebrafish model system by imaging activity across the entire brain, including the activity of each neuron individually. The first aim contains a plan to map such brain-wide activity while the brain perceives and processes visual or auditory information, using a set of novel approaches for sensory stimulation. Experiments in the second aim will present various visual and auditory stimuli simultaneously, looking for the ways in which the brain's functioning networks integrate this information. These data will be used to build mathematical network models of how the brain processes and integrates vision and hearing. The third aim will shed light on functional and structural aspects of these sensory neurons, revealing biological realities that we will use to adjust the purely mathematical models from the prior aims. The resulting biologically grounded models will set the stage for concrete functional experiments in the fourth aim, where we will optogenetically activate or silence specific circuit elements to test the models' predictions. The overall goal is to describe, for the first time, all of the auditory and visual neurons in the brain, and to develop and test models for how they receive, process, and integrate information across sensory modalities.

IC Name
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS AND STROKE
  • Activity
    R01
  • Administering IC
    NS
  • Application Type
    1
  • Direct Cost Amount
    1143940
  • Indirect Cost Amount
    60733
  • Total Cost
    1204673
  • Sub Project Total Cost
  • ARRA Funded
    False
  • CFDA Code
    853
  • Ed Inst. Type
  • Funding ICs
    NINDS:1204673\
  • Funding Mechanism
    Non-SBIR/STTR RPGs
  • Study Section
    ZRG1
  • Study Section Name
    Special Emphasis Panel
  • Organization Name
    UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND
  • Organization Department
  • Organization DUNS
    752898403
  • Organization City
    BRISBANE
  • Organization State
  • Organization Country
    AUSTRALIA
  • Organization Zip Code
    4072
  • Organization District
    AUSTRALIA