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Showing 1–14 of 14 results
Advanced filters: Author: Aaron P. Batista Clear advanced filters
  • Oby, Degenhart, Grigsby and colleagues used a brain–computer interface to challenge monkeys to override their natural time courses of neural activity. They found the time courses to be highly robust, suggestive of network-level computational mechanisms.

    • Emily R. Oby
    • Alan D. Degenhart
    • Aaron P. Batista
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 28, P: 383-393
  • During learning, the new patterns of neural population activity that develop are constrained by the existing network structure so that certain patterns can be generated more readily than others.

    • Patrick T. Sadtler
    • Kristin M. Quick
    • Aaron P. Batista
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 512, P: 423-426
  • High near-surface nitrogen-fixation rates that promoted the recent growth of the Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt were tied to greater upwelling of phosphorus from the equatorial Atlantic, according to coral-bound nitrogen isotope records from the Caribbean.

    • Jonathan Jung
    • Nicolas N. Duprey
    • Alfredo Martínez-García
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 18, P: 1259-1265
  • Hennig et al. study how changes in internal state interact with learning in primates. They report stereotyped activity fluctuations in the motor cortex that reflect the animal’s level of engagement and predict how quickly the animals learned.

    • Jay A. Hennig
    • Emily R. Oby
    • Byron M. Yu
    Research
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 24, P: 727-736
  • This Comment calls on scientists to acknowledge how insufficient communication and limited engagement beyond academia have deepened the divide between science and the public. Restoring trust requires a paradigm shift in which scientists accept that the responsibility to champion science lies with us. We propose a new model in which public communication and advocacy are considered as essential to our mission as rigor and reproducibility — critical not only for safeguarding science, but also for ensuring that its benefits reach all segments of the societies we serve.

    • Cory T. Miller
    • Michele A. Basso
    • Michael L. Platt
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 28, P: 2169-2170
  • Although action and motor imagery share similar population-wide neural responses in motor cortex, a subset of those responses exists in orthogonal action-unique and imagery-unique subspaces.

    • Brian M. Dekleva
    • Raeed H. Chowdhury
    • Jennifer L. Collinger
    Research
    Nature Human Behaviour
    Volume: 8, P: 729-742
  • A new article by Pandarinath et al. describes an artificial neural network model that captures some key aspects of the activity of populations of neurons in the primary motor cortex.

    • Aaron P. Batista
    • James J. DiCarlo
    News & Views
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 15, P: 772-773
  • Learning is ubiquitous in everyday life, yet it is unclear how neurons change their activity together during learning. Golub and colleagues show that short-term learning relies on a fixed neural repertoire, which limits behavioral improvement.

    • Matthew D. Golub
    • Patrick T. Sadtler
    • Byron M. Yu
    Research
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 21, P: 607-616
  • The status of the harlequin toads has not improved since 2004 despite species rediscoveries accompanied by increasing conservation efforts, and habitat destruction and degradation continue to threaten them today, according to an analysis of population status records over the period 2004–2022.

    • Stefan Lötters
    • Amadeus Plewnia
    • Enrique La Marca
    ResearchOpen Access
    Communications Earth & Environment
    Volume: 4, P: 1-8