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  • 15
    Feb 2016

    The Primary Visual Cortex Is Differentially Modulated by Stimulus-Driven and Top-Down Attention


    Miller Lab
    Neuroscience

    Increases in beta power associated with top-down attention.  Beta seemed unite visual cortex.  There was a more homogeneous pattern of beta correlation across the cortex during top-down vs bottom-up attention.

    Bekisz, M., Bogdan, W., Ghazaryan, A., Waleszczyk, W. J., Kublik, E., & Wróbel, A. (2016). The Primary Visual Cortex Is Differentially Modulated by Stimulus-Driven and Top-Down Attention. PloS one, 11(1), e0145379.

  • 10
    Feb 2016

    Mikael and Earl celebrate acceptance of a new paper


    Miller Lab
    Miller Laboratory, Neuroscience

    Lunqvist, M., Rose, J., Herman, P, Brincat, S.L, Buschman, T.J., and Miller, E.K. (in press) Gamma and beta bursts underlie memory.  Neuron

    We know how to party!

  • 4
    Feb 2016

    Bose’s new beat


    Miller Lab
    Miller Laboratory

    CNET article on how the Bose Corporation is funding new technology and innovative research.  Including research by Earl Miller, a 2014 Bose Research Fellow. Bose’s New Beat

    2014 Bose Research Fellow, Prof. Earl K. Miller

  • 4
    Feb 2016

    Why neurons mix: high dimensionality for higher cognition


    Miller Lab
    Miller Laboratory, Neuroscience

    The viewpoint that single neurons are the functional units of the brain rests on the hypothesis that each neuron has a single function or “message”.  This notion has eroded under observations that cortical neurons do not seem to do one thing.  Instead, neurons often respond to diverse combinations of task relevant variables, and often a variety of different variables with no apparent single function.  Why would the brain evolve neurons with this “mixed selectivity”?  In short, they add computational power.  How?  Read this paper and we”ll tell you.

    Why neurons mix: high dimensionality for higher cognition,
    Stefano Fusi, Earl K Miller, Mattia Rigotti,
    Current Opinion in Neurobiology, Volume 37, April 2016, Pages 66-74, ISSN 0959-4388, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.conb.2016.01.010.

  • 2
    Feb 2016

    Role of Prefrontal Persistent Activity in Working Memory


    Miller Lab
    Neuroscience

    Nice review of our putative neural correlate of one of the most studied cognitive functions: Working memory.

    Riley, Mitchell R., and Christos Constantinidis. “Role of Prefrontal Persistent Activity in Working Memory.” Frontiers in systems neuroscience 9 (2015).

  • 27
    Jan 2016

    More from the TODAY show: Q and A on multitasking with Earl Miller


    Miller Lab
    Miller Laboratory

    Multitasking doesn’t work: Why focus isn’t just hocus-pocus.

    Earl Miller answers questions about the why and why bad of multitasking.  TODAY.com (1/27/16)

  • 27
    Jan 2016

    NBC’s TODAY Show: Earl Miller on the myth of multitasking


    Miller Lab
    In The News

    NBC’s The TODAY show: This is your brain on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram other digital platforms (1/27/16)

  • 26
    Jan 2016

    The myth of multitasking on NBC’s TODAY Show – tomorrow morning


    Miller Lab
    In The News, Miller Laboratory, Neuroscience

    Earl Miller is scheduled to discuss the myth of multitasking on NBC’s TODAY show tomorrow morning (1/27/16).  Tune in (but only if it is not a distraction).

    http://www.today.com/

  • 22
    Jan 2016

    Human brain networks function in connectome-specific harmonic waves


    Miller Lab
    Neuroscience

    I like to say that anatomy is the road-and-highway system, activity is the traffic, and oscillations are the traffic lights.  So, here you go:

    Human brain networks function in connectome-specific harmonic waves.
    Selen Atasoy, Isaac Donnelly & Joel Pearson
    Nature Communications 7, Article number: 10340 doi:10.1038/ncomms10340

  • 21
    Jan 2016

    Prefrontal Parvalbumin Neurons in Control of Attention


    Miller Lab
    Neuroscience

    Oscillatory synchrony of  prefrontal parvalbumin plays a role in top-down control of attention.

    Kim, H., Ährlund-Richter, S., Wang, X., Deisseroth, K., & Carlén, M. (2016). Prefrontal Parvalbumin Neurons in Control of Attention. Cell, 164(1), 208-218.

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