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Showing 1–5 of 5 results
Advanced filters: Author: Fernando García-Moreno Clear advanced filters
  • Understanding the architectural principles shape human brain networks is a major challenge for systems neuroscience. Here, authors show embryogenic age is associated with functional and structural brain architecture and that embryonic age gradients are associated with genes related to nervous system development and vulnerability to neurological disorders.

    • Ibai Diez
    • Fernando García-Moreno
    • Paolo Bonifazi
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-17
  • Sensory circuits can adapt flexibly to changes in inputs yet the neural mechanisms related to experience dependent plasticity are not well understood. Here, the authors use optogenetic approaches in ferrets to show that suppression of auditory cortex during sound localization training can affect learning.

    • Victoria M. Bajo
    • Fernando R. Nodal
    • Andrew J. King
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 10, P: 1-12
  • Marsupial mammals take much longer to develop than similarly sized placental mammals, though how brain development occurs across these different periods is unclear. Here they show that the neurodevelopmental events of cortical neurogenesis, cell migration and axon extension do not all temporally scale to the same extent.

    • Annalisa Paolino
    • Elizabeth H. Haines
    • Laura R. Fenlon
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-17
  • The amygdala contains neurons that express OTP, a homeodomain transcription factor that is otherwise limited to diencephalon. Here, the authors find that these cells are indeed generated in diencephalic ventricular zone and that they then migrate tangentially into telencephalon to colonize certain nuclei of the amygdala.

    • Fernando García-Moreno
    • María Pedraza
    • Juan A De Carlos
    Research
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 13, P: 680-689