The Brain Extraction Network (BEN) provides a robust, accurate, and generalizable solution not only for extracting brain tissue from multimodal MRI data in rodents, non-human primates, and humans, but also for improving the accuracy of downstream neuroimaging processing tasks.
Danielle Beckman, Adele MH Seelke ... Eliza Bliss-Moreau
Fetal Zika virus’ direct infection of the brain causes neuroanatomical pathology that tracks with the brain development, following a caudal-to-rostral trajectory, even in individuals who do not develop microcephaly.
Amanda Klein, Hans Jürgen Solinski ... Matthias Ringkamp
MRGPRD and MRGRPX1 are co-expressed in primate DRG neurons, but β-alanine and BAM8-22, preferentially activate CMH-subclasses, and co-activating different cutaneous nociceptors by pruritogens does not change itch sensation to pain.
P Christiaan Klink, Xing Chen ... Pieter R Roelfsema
Within-species comparison of population receptive fields determined with fMRI and electrophysiology in nonhuman primates reveals the neuronal basis of blood-oxygen-level-dependent-based retinotopy.
Meningeal lymphatic vessels are present in human and nonhuman primates (common marmoset monkeys) and they can be noninvasively imaged and mapped in vivo with high-resolution, clinical MRI.
Ongoing and stimulus-evoked brain activity in cortex are shown in nonhuman primates to follow the organization of neuronal avalanches, a core commonality that might guide optimal information processing in the brain.
Maxime Donadieu, Nathanael J Lee ... Daniel S Reich
Spontaneous remyelination is a common phenomenon in the marmoset experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis model, reliably detected using in vivo magnetic resonance imaging, rendering this an indispensable model to further investigate the pathobiology of remyelination in multiple sclerosis.
Alex C Stabell, Nicholas R Meyerson ... Sara L Sawyer
An analysis of innate immunity reveals why dengue viruses do not reach high titers in primate laboratory models, even though they emerged through zoonotic transmission from primate reservoirs.
Jeroen B Smaers, Alan H Turner ... Chet C Sherwood
Multiple independent directional selection events on a neural substrate that underpins domain-general associative abilities partly explains independent occurrences of complex behavior in different lineages of mammals.