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Dive into the research topics where Amiram Grinvald is active.

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Featured researches published by Amiram Grinvald.


Science | 1996

Dynamics of ongoing activity : Explanation of the large variability in evoked cortical responses

Amos Arieli; Alexander Sterkin; Amiram Grinvald; Ad Aertsen

Evoked activity in the mammalian cortex and the resulting behavioral responses exhibit a large variability to repeated presentations of the same stimulus. This study examined whether the variability can be attributed to ongoing activity. Ongoing and evoked spatiotemporal activity patterns in the cat visual cortex were measured with real-time optical imaging; local field potentials and discharges of single neurons were recorded simultaneously, by electrophysiological techniques. The evoked activity appeared deterministic, and the variability resulted from the dynamics of ongoing activity, presumably reflecting the instantaneous state of cortical networks. In spite of the large variability, evoked responses in single trials could be predicted by linear summation of the deterministic response and the preceding ongoing activity. Ongoing activity must play an important role in cortical function and cannot be ignored in exploration of cognitive processes.


Nature | 1986

Functional architecture of cortex revealed by optical imaging of intrinsic signals.

Amiram Grinvald; Edmund E. Lieke; Ron D. Frostig; Charles D. Gilbert; Torsten N. Wiesel

Optical imaging of cortical activity offers several advantages over conventional electrophysiological and anatomical techniques. One can map a relatively large region, obtain successive maps to different stimuli in the same cortical area and follow variations in response over time. In the intact mammalian brain this imaging has been accomplished with the aid of voltage sensitive dyes1–5. However, it has been known for many years that some intrinsic changes in the optical properties of the tissue are dependent on electrical or metabolic activity6–13. Here we show that these changes can be used to study the functional architecture of cortex. Optical maps of whisker barrels in the rat and the orientation columns in the cat visual cortex, obtained by reflection measurements of the intrinsic signal, were confirmed with voltage sensitive dyes or by electrophysiological recordings. In addition, we describe an intrinsic signal originating from small arteries which can be used to investigate the communication between local neuronal activity and the microvasculature. One advantage of the method is that it is non-invasive and does not require dyes, a clear benefit for clinical applications.


Science | 1996

Interactions Between Electrical Activity and Cortical Microcirculation Revealed by Imaging Spectroscopy: Implications for Functional Brain Mapping

Dov Malonek; Amiram Grinvald

Modern neuroimaging techniques use signals originating from microcirculation to map brain function. In this study, activity-dependent changes in oxyhemoglobin, deoxyhemoglobin, and light scattering were characterized by an imaging spectroscopy approach that offers high spatial, temporal, and spectral resolution. Sensory stimulation of cortical columns initiates tissue hypoxia and vascular responses that occur within the first 3 seconds and are highly localized to individual cortical columns. However, the later phase of the vascular response is less localized, spreading over distances of 3 to 5 millimeters.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1974

On the analysis of fluorescence decay kinetics by the method of least-squares

Amiram Grinvald; Izchak Z. Steinberg

Abstract Analysis of fluorescence decay kinetics aims at the determination of the analytic expression and the numerical values of the pertinent parameters which describe the decay process. In the well-known method of least-squares, one assumes a plausible functional form for the decay data and adjusts the values of the parameters until the statistically best fit is obtained between the data and the calculated decay function, i.e., until the sum of the weighted squares of the residuals is at a minimum. It is shown that proper weighting of the squares of the residuals may markedly improve the quality of the analysis. Such weighting requires information about the character of the experimental noise, which is often available, e.g., when the noise is due to counting error in photon-counting techniques. Furthermore, dramatic improvements in the accuracy of the analysis may often be achieved by use of auxiliary information available about the system studied. For example, the preexponents in a multiexponential fluorescence decay of a mixture of chromophores (such as tryptophan residues in a protein molecule) may sometimes be estimated independently; much higher accuracy can then be attained for the decay lifetimes by analysis of the decay kinetics. It is proposed that the shape of the autocorrelation function of the weighted residuals may serve as a convenient criterion for the quality of fit between the experimental data and the decay function obtained by analysis. The above conclusions were reached by analysis of computer-simulated experiments, and the usefulness of this approach is illustrated. The importance of stating the uncertainties in the estimated parameters inherent in the analysis of decay kinetics is stressed.


Nature | 2003

Spontaneously emerging cortical representations of visual attributes

Tal Kenet; Dmitri Bibitchkov; Misha Tsodyks; Amiram Grinvald; Amos Arieli

Spontaneous cortical activity—ongoing activity in the absence of intentional sensory input—has been studied extensively, using methods ranging from EEG (electroencephalography), through voltage sensitive dye imaging, down to recordings from single neurons. Ongoing cortical activity has been shown to play a critical role in development, and must also be essential for processing sensory perception, because it modulates stimulus-evoked activity, and is correlated with behaviour. Yet its role in the processing of external information and its relationship to internal representations of sensory attributes remains unknown. Using voltage sensitive dye imaging, we previously established a close link between ongoing activity in the visual cortex of anaesthetized cats and the spontaneous firing of a single neuron. Here we report that such activity encompasses a set of dynamically switching cortical states, many of which correspond closely to orientation maps. When such an orientation state emerged spontaneously, it spanned several hypercolumns and was often followed by a state corresponding to a proximal orientation. We suggest that dynamically switching cortical states could represent the brains internal context, and therefore reflect or influence memory, perception and behaviour.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Interaction of sensory responses with spontaneous depolarization in layer 2/3 barrel cortex

Carl C. H. Petersen; Thomas Hahn; Mayank R. Mehta; Amiram Grinvald; Bert Sakmann

The rodent primary somatosensory cortex is spontaneously active in the form of locally synchronous membrane depolarizations (UP states) separated by quiescent hyperpolarized periods (DOWN states) both under anesthesia and during quiet wakefulness. In vivo whole-cell recordings and tetrode unit recordings were combined with voltage-sensitive dye imaging to analyze the relationship of the activity of individual pyramidal neurons in layer 2/3 to the ensemble spatiotemporal dynamics of the spontaneous depolarizations. These were either brief and localized to an area of a barrel column or occurred as propagating waves dependent on local glutamatergic synaptic transmission in layer 2/3. Spontaneous activity inhibited the sensory responses evoked by whisker deflection, accounting almost entirely for the large trial-to-trial variability of sensory-evoked postsynaptic potentials and action potentials. Subthreshold sensory synaptic responses evoked while a cortical area was spontaneously depolarized were smaller, briefer and spatially more confined. Surprisingly, whisker deflections evoked fewer action potentials during the spontaneous depolarizations despite neurons being closer to threshold. The ongoing spontaneous activity thus regulates the amplitude and the time-dependent spread of the sensory response in layer 2/3 barrel cortex.


Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2004

VSDI: a new era in functional imaging of cortical dynamics

Amiram Grinvald; Rina Hildesheim

During the last few decades, neuroscientists have benefited from the emergence of many powerful functional imaging techniques that cover broad spatial and temporal scales. We can now image single molecules controlling cell differentiation, growth and death; single cells and their neurites processing electrical inputs and sending outputs; neuronal circuits performing neural computations in vitro; and the intact brain. At present, imaging based on voltage-sensitive dyes (VSDI) offers the highest spatial and temporal resolution for imaging neocortical functions in the living brain, and has paved the way for a new era in the functional imaging of cortical dynamics. It has facilitated the exploration of fundamental mechanisms that underlie neocortical development, function and plasticity at the fundmental level of the cortical column.


Neuron | 1999

Imaging Cortical Dynamics at High Spatial and Temporal Resolution with Novel Blue Voltage-Sensitive Dyes

Doron Shoham; Daniel E. Glaser; Amos Arieli; Tal Kenet; Chaipi Wijnbergen; Yuval Toledo; Rina Hildesheim; Amiram Grinvald

Conventional imaging techniques have provided high-resolution imaging either in the spatial domain or in the temporal domain. Optical imaging utilizing voltage-sensitive dyes has long had the unrealized potential to achieve high resolution in both domains simultaneously, providing subcolumnar spatial detail with millisecond precision. Here, we present a series of developments in voltage-sensitive dyes and instrumentation that make functional imaging of cortical dynamics practical, in both anesthetized and awake behaving preparations, greatly facilitating exploration of the cortex. We illustrate this advance by analyzing the millisecond-by-millisecond emergence of orientation maps in cat visual cortex.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 1977

Changes in absorption, fluorescence, dichroism, and Birefringence in stained giant axons: : optical measurement of membrane potential.

W. N. Ross; B. M. Salzberg; Lawrence B. Cohen; Amiram Grinvald; H. V. Davila; A. S. Waggoner; C. H. Wang

SummaryThe absorption, fluorescence, dichroism, and birefringence of stained squid axons were measured during action potentials and voltage clamp steps in an effort to find large optical signals that could be used to monitor membrane potential. Changes in all four optical properties were found that were linearly related to membrane potential and, with several new dyes, the signal-to-noise ratios were larger than any obtained previously. The problem of photodynamic damage was greatly diminished; with a merocyaninerhodanine dye, the photodynamic damage associated with intense light and the presence of oxygen was negligible. The absorption change obtained with this dye was relatively large; it could be measured with a signal-to-noise ratio of 100∶1 during a single action potential.


Neuron | 2002

Spatio-temporal dynamics of odor representations in the mammalian olfactory bulb.

Hartwig Spors; Amiram Grinvald

We explored the spatio-temporal dynamics of odor-evoked activity in the rat and mouse main olfactory bulb (MOB) using voltage-sensitive dye imaging (VSDI) with a new probe. The high temporal resolution of VSDI revealed odor-specific sequences of glomerular activation. Increasing odor concentrations reduced response latencies, increased response amplitudes, and recruited new glomerular units. However, the sequence of glomerular activation was maintained. Furthermore, we found distributed MOB activity locked to the nasal respiration cycle. The spatial distribution of its amplitude and phase was heterogeneous and changed by sensory input in an odor-specific manner. Our data show that in the mammalian olfactory bulb, odor identity and concentration are represented by spatio-temporal patterns, rather than spatial patterns alone.

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Darin Nelson

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Ivo Vanzetta

Aix-Marseille University

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Rina Hildesheim

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Amos Arieli

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Db Omer

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Ron D. Frostig

University of California

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