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Dive into the research topics where Verónica Nácher is active.

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Featured researches published by Verónica Nácher.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

α-Oscillations in the monkey sensorimotor network influence discrimination performance by rhythmical inhibition of neuronal spiking

Saskia Haegens; Verónica Nácher; Rogelio Luna; Ranulfo Romo; Ole Nørregaard Jensen

Extensive work in humans using magneto- and electroencephalography strongly suggests that decreased oscillatory α-activity (8–14 Hz) facilitates processing in a given region, whereas increased α-activity serves to actively suppress irrelevant or interfering processing. However, little work has been done to understand how α-activity is linked to neuronal firing. Here, we simultaneously recorded local field potentials and spikes from somatosensory, premotor, and motor regions while a trained monkey performed a vibrotactile discrimination task. In the local field potentials we observed strong activity in the α-band, which decreased in the sensorimotor regions during the discrimination task. This α-power decrease predicted better discrimination performance. Furthermore, the α-oscillations demonstrated a rhythmic relation with the spiking, such that firing was highest at the trough of the α-cycle. Firing rates increased with a decrease in α-power. These findings suggest that α-oscillations exercise a strong inhibitory influence on both spike timing and firing rate. Thus, the pulsed inhibition by α-oscillations plays an important functional role in the extended sensorimotor system.


Neuron | 2010

Decoding a Perceptual Decision Process across Cortex

Adrián Hernández; Verónica Nácher; Rogelio Luna; Antonio Zainos; Luis Lemus; Manuel Barquín Álvarez; Yuriria Vázquez; Liliana Camarillo; Ranulfo Romo

Perceptual decisions arise from the activity of neurons distributed across brain circuits. But, decoding the mechanisms behind this cognitive operation across brain circuits has long posed a difficult problem. We recorded the neuronal activity of diverse cortical areas, while monkeys performed a vibrotactile discrimination task. We find that the encoding of the stimuli during the stimulus periods, working memory, and comparison periods is widely distributed across cortical areas. Notably, during the comparison and postponed decision report periods the activity of frontal brain circuits encode both the result of the sensory evaluation that corresponds to the monkeys possible choices and past information on which the decision is based. These results suggest that frontal lobe circuits are more engaged in the readout of sensory information from working memory, when it is required to be compared with other sensory inputs, than simply engaged in motor responses during this task.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Beta oscillations in the monkey sensorimotor network reflect somatosensory decision making

Saskia Haegens; Verónica Nácher; Adrián Hernández; Rogelio Luna; Ole Jensen; Ranulfo Romo

The neuronal correlate of perceptual decision making has been extensively studied in the monkey somatosensory system by using a vibrotactile discrimination task, showing that stimulus encoding, retention, and comparison are widely distributed across cortical areas. However, from a network perspective, it is not known what role oscillations play in this task. We recorded local field potentials (LFPs) from diverse cortical areas of the sensorimotor system while one monkey performed the vibrotactile discrimination task. Exclusively during stimulus presentation, a periodic response reflecting the stimulus frequency was observed in the somatosensory regions, suggesting that after initial processing, the frequency content of the stimulus is coded in some other way than entrainment. Interestingly, we found that oscillatory activity in the beta band reflected the dynamics of decision making in the monkey sensorimotor network. During the comparison and decision period, beta activity showed a categorical response that reflected the decision of the monkey and distinguished correct from incorrect responses. Importantly, this differential activity was absent in a control condition that involved the same stimulation and response but no decision making required, suggesting it does not merely reflect the maintenance of a motor plan. We conclude that beta band oscillations reflect the temporal and spatial dynamics of the accumulation and processing of evidence in the sensorimotor network leading to the decision outcome.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Coherent delta-band oscillations between cortical areas correlate with decision making

Verónica Nácher; Anders Ledberg; Gustavo Deco; Ranulfo Romo

Significance Delta oscillations have been largely associated with slow-wave sleep and anesthesia, when no conscious functions take place during these states. However, our study demonstrates that coherent delta-band oscillations reflect the linkage between distant parietal and frontal cortical circuits during decision making. Thus, these findings open an avenue for investigating whether the activity between distant cortical circuits oscillates in the delta frequency range during other cognitive functions. Coherent oscillations in the theta-to-gamma frequency range have been proposed as a mechanism that coordinates neural activity in large-scale cortical networks in sensory, motor, and cognitive tasks. Whether this mechanism also involves coherent oscillations at delta frequencies (1–4 Hz) is not known. Rather, delta oscillations have been associated with slow-wave sleep. Here, we show coherent oscillations in the delta frequency band between parietal and frontal cortices during the decision-making component of a somatosensory discrimination task. Importantly, the magnitude of this delta-band coherence is modulated by the different decision alternatives. Furthermore, during control conditions not requiring decision making, delta-band coherences are typically much reduced. Our work indicates an important role for synchronous activity in the delta frequency band when large-scale, distant cortical networks coordinate their neural activity during decision making.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Neural correlates of a postponed decision report

Luis Lemus; Adrián Hernández; Rogelio Luna; Antonio Zainos; Verónica Nácher; Ranulfo Romo

Depending on environmental demands, a decision based on a sensory evaluation may be either immediately reported or postponed for later report. If postponed, the decision must be held in memory. But what exactly is stored by the underlying memory circuits, the final decision itself or the sensory information that led to it? Here, we report that, during a postponed decision report period, the activity of medial premotor cortex neurons encodes both the result of the sensory evaluation that corresponds to the monkeys possible choices and past sensory information on which the decision is based. These responses could switch back and forth with remarkable flexibility across the postponed decision report period. Moreover, these responses covaried with the animals decision report. We propose that maintaining in working memory the original stimulus information on which the decision is based could serve to continuously update the postponed decision report in this task.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

Dynamics of Cortical Neuronal Ensembles Transit from Decision Making to Storage for Later Report

Adrián Ponce-Alvarez; Verónica Nácher; Rogelio Luna; Alexa Riehle; Ranulfo Romo

Decisions based on sensory evaluation during single trials may depend on the collective activity of neurons distributed across brain circuits. Previous studies have deepened our understanding of how the activity of individual neurons relates to the formation of a decision and its storage for later report. However, little is known about how decision-making and decision maintenance processes evolve in single trials. We addressed this problem by studying the activity of simultaneously recorded neurons from different somatosensory and frontal lobe cortices of monkeys performing a vibrotactile discrimination task. We used the hidden Markov model to describe the spatiotemporal pattern of activity in single trials as a sequence of firing rate states. We show that the animals decision was reliably maintained in frontal lobe activity through a selective state sequence, initiated by an abrupt state transition, during which many neurons changed their activity in a concomitant way, and for which both latency and variability depended on task difficulty. Indeed, transitions were more delayed and more variable for difficult trials compared with easy trials. In contrast, state sequences in somatosensory cortices were weakly decision related, had less variable transitions, and were not affected by the difficulty of the task. In summary, our results suggest that the decision process and its subsequent maintenance are dynamically linked by a cascade of transient events in frontal lobe cortices.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Procedure for recording the simultaneous activity of single neurons distributed across cortical areas during sensory discrimination.

Adrián Hernández; Verónica Nácher; Rogelio Luna; Manuel Barquín Álvarez; Antonio Zainos; Silvia Cordero; Liliana Camarillo; Yuriria Vázquez; Luis Lemus; Ranulfo Romo

We report a procedure for recording the simultaneous activity of single neurons distributed across five cortical areas in behaving monkeys. The procedure consists of a commercially available microdrive adapted to a commercially available neural data collection system. The critical advantage of this procedure is that, in each cortical area, a configuration of seven microelectrodes spaced 250–500 μm can be inserted transdurally and each can be moved independently in the z axis. For each microelectrode, the data collection system can record the activity of up to five neurons together with the local field potential (LFP). With this procedure, we normally monitor the simultaneous activity of 70–100 neurons while trained monkeys discriminate the difference in frequency between two vibrotactile stimuli. Approximately 20–60 of these neurons have response properties previously reported in this task. The neuronal recordings show good signal-to-noise ratio, are remarkably stable along a 1-day session, and allow testing several protocols. Microelectrodes are removed from the brain after a 1-day recording session, but are reinserted again the next day by using the same or different x-y microelectrode array configurations. The fact that microelectrodes can be moved in the z axis during the recording session and that the x-y configuration can be changed from day to day maximizes the probability of studying simultaneous interactions, both local and across distant cortical areas, between neurons associated with the different components of this task.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Coding perceptual discrimination in the somatosensory thalamus.

Liliana Camarillo; Rogelio Luna; Verónica Nácher; Ranulfo Romo

The sensory thalamus is classically viewed as a relay station of sensory information to cortex, but recent studies suggest that it is sensitive to cognitive demands. There are, however, few experiments designed to test whether this is so. We addressed this problem by analyzing the responses of single neurons recorded in the somatosensory thalamus while trained monkeys reported a decision based on the comparison of two mechanical vibration frequencies applied sequentially to one fingertip. In this task, monkeys must hold the first stimulus frequency (f1) in working memory and compare it to the current sensory stimulus (f2) and must postpone the decision report until a cue triggers the decision motor report, i.e., whether f2 > f1 or f2 < f1. We found that thalamic somatosensory neurons encoded the stimulus frequency either in their periodicity and firing-rate responses, but only during the stimulus periods and not during the working memory and decision components of this task. Furthermore, correlation analysis between behavior and stimulus coding showed that only the firing rate modulations accounted for the overall psychophysical performance. However, these responses did not predict the animal’s decision reports on individual trials. Moreover, the sensitivity to changes in stimulus frequency was similar when the monkeys performed the vibrotactile discrimination task and when they were not required to report discrimination. These results suggest that the somatosensory thalamus behaves as a relay station of sensory information to the cortex and that it is insensitive to the cognitive demands of the task used here.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Task-driven intra- and interarea communications in primate cerebral cortex

Adrià Tauste Campo; Marina Martinez-Garcia; Verónica Nácher; Rogelio Luna; Ranulfo Romo; Gustavo Deco

Significance How do multiple neurons communicate to solve a cognitive task? To answer this question, we investigate spike-train directional correlations across five primate cortical areas simultaneously recorded during a somatosensory discrimination task. Correlations are inferred using a nonparametric procedure that models spike trains as Markovian binary series and dynamically estimates the directed information between every neuron pair at different delays. We find that information processing during the discrimination task can be described by intra- and interarea decision-driven delayed correlations, which are no longer found when a monkey receives both stimuli but does not perform the task. Neural correlations during a cognitive task are central to study brain information processing and computation. However, they have been poorly analyzed due to the difficulty of recording simultaneous single neurons during task performance. In the present work, we quantified neural directional correlations using spike trains that were simultaneously recorded in sensory, premotor, and motor cortical areas of two monkeys during a somatosensory discrimination task. Upon modeling spike trains as binary time series, we used a nonparametric Bayesian method to estimate pairwise directional correlations between many pairs of neurons throughout different stages of the task, namely, perception, working memory, decision making, and motor report. We find that solving the task involves feedforward and feedback correlation paths linking sensory and motor areas during certain task intervals. Specifically, information is communicated by task-driven neural correlations that are significantly delayed across secondary somatosensory cortex, premotor, and motor areas when decision making takes place. Crucially, when sensory comparison is no longer requested for task performance, a major proportion of directional correlations consistently vanish across all cortical areas.


BMC Neuroscience | 2014

Causal correlation paths across cortical areas in decision making

Adrià Tauste Campo; Marina Martinez-Garcia; Verónica Nácher; Gustavo Deco; Ranulfo Romo

Specifically, during the passive stimulation task there is an abrupt decrease in the number of causal correlations after the first stimulation, which is shown to be independent of the spike-train variability of each area. Conclusions Neuronal causal correlation paths that are specific to the discriminations task are ubiquitous, bidirectional and remain approximately constant along the task in both sensory and motor areas. These findings are robust to the stimulation pair under study and the spike-train variability of each area.

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Ranulfo Romo

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Rogelio Luna

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Adrián Hernández

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Antonio Zainos

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Liliana Camarillo

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Luis Lemus

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Gustavo Deco

Pompeu Fabra University

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Manuel Barquín Álvarez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Yuriria Vázquez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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