Contact PI/Project LeaderGROH, JENNIFER M Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationDUKE UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
PROJECT SUMMARY
Many things happen at once - there are always abundant stimuli to be perceived, items to
be remembered, and courses of action to be planned. While considerable research has
explored how our brains screen out the onslaught, we know less about how information about
multiple stimuli is preserved despite limitations in neural processing capacity. This proposal
explores potential brain mechanisms that may play a role in such information preservation.
We recently found evidence that neural populations contain fluctuating activity patterns:
some neurons alternate between encoding one stimulus and encoding another on a sub-second
to second time scale. We now seek to understand the organizing principles through which such
fluctuating activity patterns serve to preserve and/or select information. Specifically, we will test
how such fluctuating activity patterns are coordinated with other neurons across sensory and
motor representations, and whether/how they contribute to performance of information-
preserving vs. information-selecting (attention) tasks. We will focus on one structure previously
implicated in information preservation - the inferior colliculus, which is an essential node of the
auditory processing stream through which nearly all ascending auditory information must pass,
and one structure previously implicated in information selection - the superior colliculus, a
multimodal brain area that has been shown to play a role in controlling eye movements and
spatial attention.
We will specifically focus on (a) how fluctuations depend on the overlap in the population of
neurons potentially driven by each stimulus; (b) how fluctuations are coordinated across
neurons; and (c) whether and how these properties are affected by neural and behavioral
contexts taxing either the ability to preserve multiple stimuli or select individual stimuli to guide a
behavioral response. Recordings will be conducted with multiple electrodes, allowing the
assessment of coordinated fluctuation patterns via novel statistical approaches.
These experiments will yield important insights into how neural representations operate
when challenged with multiple stimuli. The ability to keep multiple items in mind is central to
communication, working memory, attention, and sensory-motor skills, and it may be adversely
affected in disorders such as attention-deficit disorder, autism, central auditory processing
disorder, and age-related hearing loss.
Public Health Relevance Statement
HEALTH RELEVANCE
This project investigates how the brain preserves and selects information about multiple sensory stimuli.
Deficits in this ability contribute to poor communication performance in noisy scenes in central auditory
processing disorder and age-related hearing loss. Insights from these experiments could ultimately lead to
improvements in the treatment of these and related conditions.
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
CFDA Code
853
DUNS Number
044387793
UEI
TP7EK8DZV6N5
Project Start Date
01-June-2022
Project End Date
28-February-2027
Budget Start Date
01-March-2025
Budget End Date
28-February-2026
Project Funding Information for 2025
Total Funding
$493,741
Direct Costs
$310,183
Indirect Costs
$183,558
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2025
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
$493,741
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01NS129112-04
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
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Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
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Clinical Studies
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