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Dive into the research topics where Ariane Foret is active.

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Featured researches published by Ariane Foret.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2010

Stem cells in the adult rat spinal cord: plasticity after injury and treadmill training exercise

Ariane Foret; Renaud Quertainmont; Olivier Botman; Delphine Bouhy; Philippe Amabili; Gary Brook; Jean Schoenen; Rachelle Franzen

J. Neurochem. (2010) 112, 762–772.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

The Impact of Visual Perceptual Learning on Sleep and Local Slow-Wave Initiation

Laura Mascetti; Vincenzo Muto; Luca Matarazzo; Ariane Foret; Erik Ziegler; Geneviève Albouy; Virginie Sterpenich; Christina Schimdt; Christian Degueldre; Yves Leclercq; Christophe Phillips; André Luxen; Gilles Vandewalle; Rufin Vogels; Pierre Maquet; Evelyne Balteau

During non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, a global decrease in synaptic strength associated with slow waves (SWs) would enhance signal-to-noise ratio of neural responses during subsequent wakefulness. To test this prediction, 32 human volunteers were trained to a coarse orientation discrimination task, in either the morning or evening. They were retested after 8 h of wakefulness or sleep, respectively. Performance was enhanced only after a night of sleep, in the absence of any change in the abundance of NREM SWs but in proportion to the number of SWs “initiated” in lateral occipital areas during posttraining NREM sleep. The sources of these waves overlapped with the lateral occipital complex, in which responses to the learned stimulus, as assessed by fMRI, were selectively increased the next morning. This response enhancement was proportional to rapid eye movement (REM) sleep duration. These results provide an example of local sleep in which local initiation of SWs during NREM sleep predicts later skill improvement and foreshadows locally enhanced neural signals the next day. In addition, REM sleep also promotes local learning-dependent activity, possibly by promoting synaptic plasticity.


Journal of Sleep Research | 2012

Influence of acute sleep loss on the neural correlates of alerting, orientating and executive attention components.

Vincenzo Muto; Anahita Shaffii-Le Bourdiec; Luca Matarazzo; Ariane Foret; Laura Mascetti; Mathieu Jaspar; Gilles Vandewalle; Christophe Phillips; Christian Degueldre; Evelyne Balteau; André Luxen; Fabienne Collette; Pierre Maquet

The Attention Network Test (ANT) is deemed to assess the alerting, orientating and executive components of human attention. Capitalizing on the opportunity to investigate three facets of attention in a single task, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to assess the effect of sleep deprivation (SD) on brain responses associated with the three attentional components elicited by the ANT. Twelve healthy volunteers were scanned in two conditions 1 week apart, after a normal night of sleep (rested wakefulness, RW) or after one night of total sleep deprivation. Sleep deprivation was associated with a global increase in reaction times, which did not affect specifically any of the three attention effects. Brain responses associated with the alerting effect did not differ between RW and SD. Higher‐order attention components (orientating and conflict effects) were associated with significantly larger thalamic responses during SD than during RW. These results suggest that SD influences different components of human attention non‐selectively, through mechanisms that might either affect centrencephalic structures maintaining vigilance or ubiquitously perturb neuronal function. Compensatory responses can counter these effects transiently by recruiting thalamic responses, thereby supporting thalamocortical function.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Concurrent Synaptic and Systems Memory Consolidation during Sleep

Laura Mascetti; Ariane Foret; Jessica Schrouff; Vincenzo Muto; Vinciane Dideberg; Evelyne Balteau; Christian Degueldre; Christophe Phillips; André Luxen; Fabienne Collette; Vincent Bours; Pierre Maquet

Memories are consolidated during sleep by two apparently antagonistic processes: (1) reinforcement of memory-specific cortical interactions and (2) homeostatic reduction in synaptic efficiency. Using fMRI, we assessed whether episodic memories are processed during sleep by either or both mechanisms, by comparing recollection before and after sleep. We probed whether LTP influences these processes by contrasting two groups of individuals prospectively recruited based on BDNF rs6265 (Val66Met) polymorphism. Between immediate retrieval and delayed testing scheduled after sleep, responses to recollection increased significantly more in Val/Val individuals than in Met carriers in parietal and occipital areas not previously engaged in retrieval, consistent with “systems-level consolidation.” Responses also increased differentially between allelic groups in regions already activated before sleep but only in proportion to slow oscillation power, in keeping with “synaptic downscaling.” Episodic memories seem processed at both synaptic and systemic levels during sleep by mechanisms involving LTP.


Progress in Brain Research | 2011

Spontaneous neural activity during human non-rapid eye movement sleep.

Laura Mascetti; Ariane Foret; Anahita Shaffii; Vincenzo Muto; Caroline Kussé; Mathieu Jaspar; Luca Matarazzo; Thien Thanh Dang Vu; Manuel Schabus; Pierre Maquet

Recent neuroimaging studies characterized the neural correlates of slow waves and spindles during human non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep. They showed that significant activity was consistently associated with slow (> 140 μV) and delta waves (75-140 μV) during NREM sleep in several cortical areas including inferior frontal, medial prefrontal, precuneus, and posterior cingulate cortices. Unexpectedly, slow waves were also associated with transient responses in the pontine tegmentum and in the cerebellum. On the other hand, spindles were associated with a transient activity in the thalami, paralimbic areas (anterior cingulate and insular cortices), and superior temporal gyri. Moreover, slow spindles (11-13 Hz) were associated with increased activity in the superior frontal gyrus. In contrast, fast spindles (13-15 Hz) recruited a set of cortical regions involved in sensorimotor processing, as well as the mesial frontal cortex and hippocampus. These findings indicate that human NREM sleep is an active state during which brain activity is temporally organized by spontaneous oscillations (spindles and slow oscillation) in a regionally specific manner. The functional significance of these NREM sleep oscillations is currently interpreted in terms of synaptic homeostasis and memory consolidation.


International Review of Neurobiology | 2010

Neuroimaging of dreaming: state of the art and limitations.

Caroline Kussé; Vincenzo Muto; Laura Mascetti; Luca Matarazzo; Ariane Foret; Anahita Shaffii; Pierre Maquet

During the last two decades, functional neuroimaging has been used to characterize the regional brain function during sleep in humans, at the macroscopic systems level. In addition, the topography of brain activity, especially during rapid eye movement sleep, was thought to be compatible with the general features of dreams. In contrast, the neural correlates of dreams remain largely unexplored. This review examines the difficulties associated with the characterization of dream correlates. ἓν οἶδα ὅτι οὐδὲν οἶδα Σωκράτης (The only thing I know is that I know nothing) Socrates.


Epilepsia | 2009

Some facts about sleep relevant for Landau-Kleffner syndrome.

Laura Mascetti; Ariane Foret; Maxime Bonjean; Luca Matarazzo; Thanh Dang-Vu; Pierre Maquet

Our understanding of the neural mechanisms of non–rapid eye movement sleep (NREM) is steadily increasing. Given the intriguing activation of paroxysmal activity during NREM sleep in patients with Landau‐Kleffner syndrome (LKS), a thorough characterization of commonalities and differences between the neural correlates of LKS paroxysms and normal sleep oscillations might provide useful information on the neural underpinning of this disorder. Especially, given the suspected role of sleep in brain plasticity, this type of information is needed to assess the link between cognitive deterioration and electroencephalography (EEG) paroxysms during sleep.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2012

Functional neuroimaging of the reciprocal influences between sleep and wakefulness.

Zayd Jedidi; Estelle Rikir; Vincenzo Muto; Laura Mascetti; Caroline Kussé; Ariane Foret; Anahita Shaffii-Le Bourdiec; Gilles Vandewalle; Pierre Maquet

The activity patterns adopted by brain neuronal populations differ dramatically between wakefulness and sleep. However, these vigilance states are not independent and they reciprocally interact. Here, we provide evidence that in humans, regional brain activity during wakefulness is influenced by sleep regulation, namely by the interaction between sleep homeostasis and circadian signals. We also show that, by contrast, regional brain activity during sleep is influenced by the experience acquired during the preceding waking period. These data reveal the dynamic interactions by which the succession of vigilance states support normal brain function and human cognition.


Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Reciprocal interactions between wakefulness and sleep influence global and regional brain activity.

Vincenzo Muto; Laura Mascetti; Luca Matarazzo; Caroline Kussé; Ariane Foret; Anahita Shaffii-Le Bourdiec; Gilles Vandewalle; Derk-Jan Dijk; Pierre Maquet

Reciprocal interactions between wakefulness and sleep substantially influence human brain function in both states of vigilance. On the one hand, there is evidence that regionally-specialized brain activity during wakefulness is modulated by the interaction between a local use-dependent buildup of homeostatic sleep pressure and circadian signals. On the other hand, brain activity during sleep, although mainly constrained by genuine sleep oscillations, shows wake-dependent regionally-specific modulations, which are involved in the dissipation of local homeostatic sleep pressure and memory consolidation.


Sleep and Brain Activity | 2012

Neural Correlates of Human Sleep and Sleep-Dependent Memory Processing

Christelle Meyer; Vincenzo Muto; Mathieu Jaspar; Caroline Kussé; Ariane Foret; Laura Mascetti; Pierre Maquet

Wakefulness and sleep are associated with distinct patterns of neural activity and neuromodulation. In humans, functional neuroimaging was used to characterize the related changes in regional brain metabolism and hemodynamics. Recent data combining EEG and fMRI described the transient responses associated with spindles and slow waves, as well as the changes in functional integration during NREM sleep. It was also shown that regional brain activity during sleep is influenced by the experience acquired during the preceding waking period. These data are currently interpreted in the framework of two theories. First, the use-dependent increase in slow oscillation during NREM sleep is associated with local synaptic homeostasis. Second, reactivations of memory traces during NREM sleep would reorganize declarative memories in hippocampal-neocortical networks, a systems-level memory consolidation that can be hindered by sleep deprivation. Collectively, these data reveal the dynamic changes in brain activity during sleep that support normal human cognition.

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