GT Neuro Seminar Series

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Event Details
  • Date/Time:
    • Monday November 27, 2017
      11:15 am - 12:15 pm
  • Location: Krone Engineered Biosystems Building, Room 1005, Atlanta, GA
  • Phone:
  • URL:
  • Email:
  • Fee(s):
    N/A
  • Extras:
Contact

Chris Rozell - faculty host

Summaries

Summary Sentence: “Social Information Processing and Learning in Rodents” - Robert Liu, Ph.D., Emory University

Full Summary: No summary paragraph submitted.

“Social Information Processing and Learning in Rodents”

Robert Liu, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of Biology
Emory University

There is an increasing appreciation that mental health disorders often include social-specific deficits, motivating research into the neurophysiological mechanisms that underlie natural, social behaviors in mammals. Information about other individuals is constantly being acquired, assessed and learned from cues emitted during social interactions. However, our understanding about processing and plasticity mechanisms for sensory cues has generally come from studies of nonsocial contexts, leaving a gap in our knowledge about their relevance in social contexts. My lab has been addressing this gap by applying a computational neuroethological paradigm to investigate social-sensory information processing and plasticity in robust, natural rodent social behaviors. In this talk, I will first review recent work about sensory cortical plasticity when maternal mice learn the natural, behavioral meaning of a category of ultrasonic vocalizations emitted by pups – findings that were unexpected based on prior auditory cortical plasticity studies from nonsocial contexts. I will then present new research investigating neural activity underlying social interactions in the monogamous prairie vole, a premier animal model for elucidating the neural bases for prosocial bonding. Exploiting both electrophysiological and optogenetic methods, our results provide the first dynamic view of corticostriatal processes involved in bond formation, revealing how social interactions recruit reward systems to drive changes in affiliative behavior.

Additional Information

In Campus Calendar
Yes
Groups

Parker H. Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Bioscience (IBB), Wallace H. Coulter Dept. of Biomedical Engineering

Invited Audience
Faculty/Staff, Graduate students
Categories
Seminar/Lecture/Colloquium
Keywords
IBB, go-neuro, go-NeuralEngineering
Status
  • Created By: Angela Ayers
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Sep 19, 2017 - 3:10pm
  • Last Updated: Sep 21, 2017 - 8:44am