scholarly journals The impact of silencing feed-forward parvalbumin-expressing inhibitory interneurons in the cortico-thalamocortical network on seizure generation and behaviour

2019 ◽  
Vol 132 ◽  
pp. 104610 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandesh Panthi ◽  
Beulah Leitch
Author(s):  
Milos Milanovic ◽  
Verica Radisavljevic-Gajic

This paper presents, a novel controller design technique that can be used for the Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell to tackle the impact of the sudden stack current disturbances. The proposed controller design consists of three components: a full-state feedback control loop, an integral of error control loop and a feed-forward control loop. The feed-forward control loop is designed to ease the impact of the piecewise continuous current disturbance on the stack voltage. Linearized system matrices are set up in such a way that a new augmented system is formed. Controller gains are calculated by using a quadratic performance criterion which is minimized along the trajectories of the augmented system. Simulation results are presented and discussed.


Author(s):  
Rui Yin ◽  
Yuanyuan Sun ◽  
Shanshan Wang ◽  
Bing Zhao ◽  
Guanglu Wu ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandesh Panthi ◽  
Beulah Leitch

Parvalbumin-expressing (PV+) interneurons are a subset of GABAergic inhibitory interneurons that mediate feed-forward inhibition (FFI) within the cortico-thalamocortical (CTC) network of the brain. The CTC network is a reciprocal loop with connections between cortex and thalamus. FFI PV+ interneurons control the firing of principal excitatory neurons within the CTC network and prevent runaway excitation. Studies have shown that generalized spike-wave discharges (SWDs), the hallmark of absence seizures on electroencephalogram (EEG), originate within the CTC network. In the stargazer mouse model of absence epilepsy, reduced FFI is believed to contribute to absence seizure genesis as there is a specific loss of excitatory α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptors (AMPARs) at synaptic inputs to PV+ interneurons within the CTC network. However, the degree to which this deficit is directly related to seizure generation has not yet been established. Using chemogenetics and in vivo EEG recording, we recently demonstrated that functional silencing of PV+ interneurons in either the somatosensory cortex (SScortex) or the reticular thalamic nucleus (RTN) is sufficient to generate absence-SWDs. Here, we used the same approach to assess whether activating PV+ FFI interneurons within the CTC network during absence seizures would prevent or reduce seizures. To target these interneurons, mice expressing Cre recombinase in PV+ interneurons (PV-Cre) were bred with mice expressing excitatory Gq-DREADD (hM3Dq-flox) receptors. An intraperitoneal dose of pro-epileptic chemical pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) was used to induce absence seizure. The impact of activation of FFI PV+ interneurons during seizures was tested by focal injection of the “designer drug” clozapine N-oxide (CNO) into either the SScortex or the RTN thalamus. Seizures were assessed in PVCre/Gq-DREADD animals using EEG/video recordings. Overall, DREADD-mediated activation of PV+ interneurons provided anti-epileptic effects against PTZ-induced seizures. CNO activation of FFI either prevented PTZ-induced absence seizures or suppressed their severity. Furthermore, PTZ-induced tonic-clonic seizures were also reduced in severity by activation of FFI PV+ interneurons. In contrast, administration of CNO to non-DREADD wild-type control animals did not afford any protection against PTZ-induced seizures. These data demonstrate that FFI PV+ interneurons within CTC microcircuits could be a potential therapeutic target for anti-absence seizure treatment in some patients.


2005 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 916-924 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karri Lamsa ◽  
Joost H Heeroma ◽  
Dimitri M Kullmann

2012 ◽  
Vol 610-613 ◽  
pp. 1676-1681
Author(s):  
Ai Peng Jiang ◽  
Qiang Ding ◽  
Jian Wang ◽  
Weiwei Lin ◽  
Zhou Shu Jiang

It is the most effective resource use practices for coal slurry to be used as fuel for fluidized bed boiler. The dry desulfurization of slurry fluidized bed boiler is a large time delay system, and the load disturbance of this system changes frequently. In order to achieve stable control of SO2 emission and meet environmental requirements, a fuzzy control technology combined with the optimal feed-forward was designed. Combined with field experience, a fuzzy controller system was designed by fuzzy control technology, and then the integral process was added to achieve non-error track. To reduce the impact of desulfurizer and other factors, based on the principle of feed-forward, an objective to minimize disturbance impact was obtained, and then a nonlinear programming problem for solving the optimal feed-forward parameters was established, from which the best feed-forward form can be obtained. Results of 440T/H fluidized bed boiler show that the proposed method has satisfactory control effect. SO2 concentration can fully meet environmental emission requirements, and its fluctuation is relatively small.


Author(s):  
Katherine S. Peterson ◽  
Anna G. Stefanopoulou ◽  
Yan Wang ◽  
Tom Megli

The reduction of impacts which occur in electromechanical valve actuators due to the presence of valve lash have been largely neglected in the literature. Instead, the majority of work in this area has focused on impacts occurring elsewhere. As such, a controller is presented here to account for the impacts which occur during the release phase of the valve opening due to the presence of valve lash. A combination of feed forward and iterative learning control are used to achieve trajectory tracking during the release bounding the impact velocity by 0.4 m/s.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sayak Bhattacharya ◽  
Matthieu B. L. Cauchois ◽  
Pablo A. Iglesias ◽  
Zhe Sage Chen

AbstractPropagation of activity in spatially structured neuronal networks has been observed in awake, anesthetized, and sleeping brains. How these wave patterns emerge and organize across brain structures, and how network connectivity affects spatiotemporal neural activity remains unclear. Here, we develop a computational model of a two-dimensional thalamocortical network, which gives rise to emergent traveling waves similar to those observed experimentally. We illustrate how spontaneous and evoked oscillatory activity in space and time emerge using a closed-loop thalamocortical architecture, sustaining smooth waves in the cortex and staggered waves in the thalamus. We further show that intracortical and thalamocortical network connectivity, cortical excitation/inhibition balance, and thalamocortical or corticothalamic delay can independently or jointly change the spatiotemporal patterns (radial, planar and rotating waves) and characteristics (speed, direction, and frequency) of cortical and thalamic traveling waves. Computer simulations predict that increased thalamic inhibition induces slower cortical frequencies and that enhanced cortical excitation increases traveling wave speed and frequency. Overall, our results provide insight into the genesis and sustainability of thalamocortical spatiotemporal patterns, showing how simple synaptic alterations cause varied spontaneous and evoked wave patterns. Our model and simulations highlight the need for spatially spread neural recordings to uncover critical circuit mechanisms for brain functions.


2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 11-33
Author(s):  
Pirjo Pollari

Good feedback is a powerful element in learning. Ultimately, however, the impact feedback has on learning depends on how the learner responds to that feedback. So far, foreign or second language studies on feedback have mainly concentrated on different methods of error correction, not on students’ responses to feedback in general. This study aims to find out what students thought of the feedback they had received in their EFL studies. Furthermore, the study seeks to discover students’ different responses to that feedback. The data was gathered using a web-based questionnaire filled out by 140 students. The students, aged 17–19, were all from a single Finnish upper secondary school. The data was analysed mainly quantitatively. The results show that although students were primarily content with their feedback, they wanted more guiding feedback, i.e. more feed forward. They also wanted more personalised feedback as well as feedback that takes place during the learning process, and not only after it. In addition, the varimax-rotated principal component analysis brought out four different responses to feedback. The results indicate that feedback should be more differentiated to support and empower students in their EFL learning better.


1998 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 567-582 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harvey A. Swadlow ◽  
Irina N. Beloozerova ◽  
Mikhail G. Sirota

Swadlow, Harvey A., Irina N. Beloozerova, and Mikhail G. Sirota. Sharp, local synchrony among putative feed-forward inhibitory interneurons of rabbit somatosensory cortex. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 567–582, 1998. Many suspected inhibitory interneurons (SINs) of primary somatosensory cortex (S1) receive a potent monosynaptic thalamic input (thalamocortical SINs, SINstc). It has been proposed that nearly all such SINstc of a S1 barrel column (BC) receive excitatory synaptic input from each member of a subpopulation of neurons within the topographically aligned ventrobasal (VB) thalamic barreloid. Such a divergent and convergent network leads to several testable predictions: sharply synchronous activity should occur between SINstc of a BC, sharp synchrony should not occur between SINstc of neighboring BCs, and sharp synchrony should not occur between SINs or other neurons of the same BC that do not receive potent monosynaptic thalamic input. These predictions were tested by cross-correlating the activity of SINstc of the same and neighboring BCs. Correlations among descending corticofugal neurons of layer 5 (CF-5 neurons, identified by antidromic activation) and other neurons that receive little or no monosynaptic VB input also were examined. SINs were identified by a high-frequency (>600 Hz) burst of three or more spikes elicited by VB stimulation and had action potentials of short duration. SINstc were further differentiated by short synaptic latencies to electrical stimulation of VB thalamus (<1.7 ms) and to peripheral stimulation (<7.5 ms). The above predictions were confirmed fully. 1) Sharp synchrony (±1 ms) was seen between all SINstc recorded within the same BC (a mean of 4.26% of the spikes of each SINtc were synchronized sharply with the spikes of the paired SINtc). Sharp synchrony was not dependent on peripheral stimulation, was not oscillatory, and survived general anesthesia. Sharp synchrony was superimposed on a broader synchrony, with a time course of tens of milliseconds. 2) Little or no sharp synchrony was seen when CF-5 neurons were paired with SINstc or other neurons of the same BC. 3) Little or no sharp synchrony was seen when SINstc were paired with other SINstc located in neighboring BCs. Intracellular recordings obtained from three SINs in the fully awake state supported the assertion that SINs are GABAergic interneurons. Each of these cells met our extracellular criteria for identification as a SIN, each had a spike of short duration (0.4–0.5 ms), and each responded to a depolarizing current pulse with a nonadapting train of action potentials. These results support the proposed network linking VB barreloid neurons with SINstc within the topographically aligned BC. We suggest that sharp synchrony among SINstc results in highly synchronous inhibitory postsynpatic potentials (IPSPs)in the target neurons of these cells and that these summated IPSPs may be especially effective when excitatory drive to target cells is weak and asynchronous.


2013 ◽  
Vol 310 ◽  
pp. 524-531
Author(s):  
Guo Ping Zhao ◽  
Hong Xing Wu ◽  
Min Xiu Kong ◽  
Li Yi Li

This paper studies the current loop, velocity loop and position loop controller of PMSM position servo system for Electric steering gear servo system. It makes research around the principle of PMSM vector control and three control loop control strategy. The control strategy bases on the principle of vector control of PMSM when id=0 and uses the classic PI control theory. A new method of decouple control for the current of direct axis and cross axis direct is presented. It will overcome the impact of EMF when the motor is working in high dynamic. The system uses the feed-forward control to compensate the position deviation of permanent magnet synchronous motor using in the steering gear. The paper also researches transfer function of feed-forward control of the location, and establishes the feed-forward controller model of the position loop. Simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed scheme.


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