Matias J. Ison
University of Leicester
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Publication
Featured researches published by Matias J. Ison.
Nature Neuroscience | 2011
Florian Mormann; Julien Dubois; Simon Kornblith; Milica Milosavljevic; Moran Cerf; Matias J. Ison; Naotsugu Tsuchiya; Alexander Kraskov; Rodrigo Quian Quiroga; Ralph Adolphs; Itzhak Fried; Christof Koch
The amygdala is important in emotion, but it remains unknown whether it is specialized for certain stimulus categories. We analyzed responses recorded from 489 single neurons in the amygdalae of 41 neurosurgical patients and found a categorical selectivity for pictures of animals in the right amygdala. This selectivity appeared to be independent of emotional valence or arousal and may reflect the importance that animals held throughout our evolutionary past.
Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2009
Juan Martinez; Carlos Pedreira; Matias J. Ison; Rodrigo Quian Quiroga
In this paper we present an efficient method to generate realistic simulations of extracellular recordings. The method uses a hybrid and computationally simple approach, where the features of the background noise arise naturally from its biophysical process of generation. The generated data resemble the characteristics of real recordings, as quantified by the amplitude and frequency distributions. Moreover, we reproduce real features that are specially challenging for the analysis of extracellular data, such as the presence of sparse firing neurons and multi-unit activity. We compare our simulations with real recordings from the human medial temporal lobe and exemplify their use for testing spike detection and sorting algorithms. These results show that this technique provides an optimal scenario for generating realistic simulations of extracellular recordings.
Journal of Vision | 2012
Juan E. Kamienkowski; Matias J. Ison; Rodrigo Quian Quiroga; Mariano Sigman
We report a study of concurrent eye movements and electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings while subjects freely explored a search array looking for hidden targets. We describe a sequence of fixation-event related potentials (fERPs) that unfolds during ∼ 400 ms following each fixation. This sequence highly resembles the event-related responses in a replay experiment, in which subjects kept fixation while a sequence of images occurred around the fovea simulating the spatial and temporal patterns during the free viewing experiment. Similar responses were also observed in a second control experiment where the appearance of stimuli was controlled by the experimenters and presented at the center of the screen. We also observed a relatively early component (∼150 ms) that distinguished between targets and distractors only in the freeviewing condition. We present a novel approach to match the critical properties of two conditions (targets/distractors), which can be readily adapted to other paradigms to investigate EEG components during free eye-movements.
Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2012
Carlos Pedreira; Juan Martinez; Matias J. Ison; Rodrigo Quian Quiroga
Highlights ► Spike sorting algorithms are limited in the number of single units they can detect. ► The maximum number of correctly identified neurons stands between 8 and 10. ► Sparse neurons are strongly affected by this limitation. ► Further development of algorithms is needed to address sparse neurons detection.
Neuron | 2015
Matias J. Ison; Rodrigo Quian Quiroga; Itzhak Fried
Summary The creation of memories about real-life episodes requires rapid neuronal changes that may appear after a single occurrence of an event. How is such demand met by neurons in the medial temporal lobe (MTL), which plays a fundamental role in episodic memory formation? We recorded the activity of MTL neurons in neurosurgical patients while they learned new associations. Pairs of unrelated pictures, one of a person and another of a place, were used to construct a meaningful association modeling the episodic memory of meeting a person in a particular place. We found that a large proportion of responsive MTL neurons expanded their selectivity to encode these specific associations within a few trials: cells initially responsive to one picture started firing to the associated one but not to others. Our results provide a plausible neural substrate for the inception of associations, which are crucial for the formation of episodic memories.
Journal of Neurophysiology | 2011
Matias J. Ison; Florian Mormann; Moran Cerf; Christof Koch; Itzhak Fried; Rodrigo Quian Quiroga
Neurons in the medial temporal lobe (MTL) respond selectively to pictures of specific individuals, objects, and places. However, the underlying mechanisms leading to such degree of stimulus selectivity are largely unknown. A necessary step to move forward in this direction involves the identification and characterization of the different neuron types present in MTL circuitry. We show that putative principal cells recorded in vivo from the human MTL are more selective than putative interneurons. Furthermore, we report that putative hippocampal pyramidal cells exhibit the highest degree of selectivity within the MTL, reflecting the hierarchical processing of visual information. We interpret these differences in selectivity as a plausible mechanism for generating sparse responses.
NeuroImage | 2014
Lisandro Kaunitz; Juan E. Kamienkowski; Alexander Varatharajah; Mariano Sigman; Rodrigo Quian Quiroga; Matias J. Ison
Despite the compelling contribution of the study of event related potentials (ERPs) and eye movements to cognitive neuroscience, these two approaches have largely evolved independently. We designed an eye-movement visual search paradigm that allowed us to concurrently record EEG and eye movements while subjects were asked to find a hidden target face in a crowded scene with distractor faces. Fixation event-related potentials (fERPs) to target and distractor stimuli showed the emergence of robust sensory components associated with the perception of stimuli and cognitive components associated with the detection of target faces. We compared those components with the ones obtained in a control task at fixation: qualitative similarities as well as differences in terms of scalp topography and latency emerged between the two. By using single trial analyses, fixations to target and distractors could be decoded from the EEG signals above chance level in 11 out of 12 subjects. Our results show that EEG signatures related to cognitive behavior develop across spatially unconstrained exploration of natural scenes and provide a first step towards understanding the mechanisms of target detection during natural search.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Nadia Pilati; Matias J. Ison; Matthew C. Barker; Mike Mulheran; Charles H. Large; Ian D. Forsythe; John Matthias; Martine Hamann
Exposure to loud sound causes cochlear damage resulting in hearing loss and tinnitus. Tinnitus has been related to hyperactivity in the central auditory pathway occurring weeks after loud sound exposure. However, central excitability changes concomitant to hearing loss and preceding those periods of hyperactivity, remain poorly explored. Here we investigate mechanisms contributing to excitability changes in the dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) shortly after exposure to loud sound that produces hearing loss. We show that acoustic overexposure alters synaptic transmission originating from the auditory and the multisensory pathway within the DCN in different ways. A reduction in the number of myelinated auditory nerve fibers leads to a reduced maximal firing rate of DCN principal cells, which cannot be restored by increasing auditory nerve fiber recruitment. In contrast, a decreased membrane resistance of DCN granule cells (multisensory inputs) leads to a reduced maximal firing rate of DCN principal cells that is overcome when additional multisensory fibers are recruited. Furthermore, gain modulation by inhibitory synaptic transmission is disabled in both auditory and multisensory pathways. These cellular mechanisms that contribute to decreased cellular excitability in the central auditory pathway are likely to represent early neurobiological markers of hearing loss and may suggest interventions to delay or stop the development of hyperactivity that has been associated with tinnitus.
Journal of Anatomy | 2015
Hernan G. Rey; Matias J. Ison; Carlos Pedreira; Antonio Valentin; Gonzalo Alarcon; Richard Selway; Mark P. Richardson; Rodrigo Quian Quiroga
Recordings from individual neurons in patients who are implanted with depth electrodes for clinical reasons have opened the possibility to narrow down the gap between neurophysiological studies in animals and non‐invasive (e.g. functional magnetic resonance imaging, electroencephalogram, magnetoencephalography) investigations in humans. Here we provide a description of the main procedures for electrode implantation and recordings, the experimental paradigms used and the main steps for processing the data. We also present key characteristics of the so‐called ‘concept cells’, neurons in the human medial temporal lobe with selective and invariant responses that represent the meaning of the stimulus, and discuss their proposed role in declarative memory. Finally, we present novel results dealing with the stability of the representation given by these neurons, by studying the effect of stimulus repetition in the strength of the responses. In particular, we show that, after an initial decay, the response strength reaches an asymptotic value after approximately 15 presentations that remains above baseline for the whole duration of the experiment.
Frontiers in Bioscience | 2008
Matias J. Ison; Rodrigo Quian Quiroga
The sight of an object triggers a complex set of processes in the brain. Although it is already well established that object perception is performed by a hierarchical network, the so-called ventral visual pathway, we are only starting to understand how neurons along this pathway encode visual information at each processing stage. In this review, we discuss basic principles of neural coding for object perception and describe evidence showing that it mainly relies on two principles: selectivity and invariance.