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Research Topic : Brain function
Field of Research : Sensory Systems
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  • Funded Activity

    InTOUCH: Tactile Assessment In Children With Cerebral Palsy

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $176,571.00
    Summary
    Recent research finds that over 70% of children with unilateral cerebral palsy have impairments in touch function that affect how well they can use their hands. Until now, the severity and extent of this deficit has been unknown, and so children with cerebral palsy have not been receiving touch assessments. This project aims to increase awareness of touch impairments and achieve integration of touch assessment into routine examaination.
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    Funded Activity

    Functional Anisotropies In The Processing Of Orientation And Direction-of-motion By Human Visual Cortex

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $366,164.00
    Summary
    We will study patterns of activity in the human brain to identify the cortical signature of normal visual function. The correspondences between patterns of brain activity and the structure and motion of the visual image in the normal human brain will provide data against which brain activity in a range of disorders from amblyopia to schizophrenia can be assessed.
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    Funded Activity

    Deciphering The Mechanisms For Constructing The Olfactory System

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $496,321.00
    Summary
    The olfactory (smell) system is a unique part of the nervous system; nerve cells are generated throughout life and it can regenerate even after injury. It therefore provides an excellent model for examining the growth, development and maintenance of nerve cells. This project will examine the effects on the organisation of the olfactory system when some guidance signals are altered. Information we obtain about how this system develops and regenerates may be useful in treating brain disorders and .... The olfactory (smell) system is a unique part of the nervous system; nerve cells are generated throughout life and it can regenerate even after injury. It therefore provides an excellent model for examining the growth, development and maintenance of nerve cells. This project will examine the effects on the organisation of the olfactory system when some guidance signals are altered. Information we obtain about how this system develops and regenerates may be useful in treating brain disorders and spinal injuries The results of these experiments will provide important information on the the initial growth and targeting of these nerve cells which may have implications for regeneration of these as well as other nerve cells.
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    Funded Activity

    Understanding The Role Of The Olfactory Ensheathing Cell In The Olfactory Sensory System

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $494,000.00
    Summary
    The olfactory (smell) system is a unique part of the nervous system; nerve cells are generated throughout life and it can regenerate even after injury. It therefore provides an excellent model for examining the growth, development and maintenance of nerve cells. This project will examine how one specialized type of cell, the olfactory ensheathing cell, helps the nerve cells to grow and regenerate. Information we obtain about how this system develops and regenerates may be useful in treating brai .... The olfactory (smell) system is a unique part of the nervous system; nerve cells are generated throughout life and it can regenerate even after injury. It therefore provides an excellent model for examining the growth, development and maintenance of nerve cells. This project will examine how one specialized type of cell, the olfactory ensheathing cell, helps the nerve cells to grow and regenerate. Information we obtain about how this system develops and regenerates may be useful in treating brain disorders and spinal injuries In the current project we will examine how olfactory nerve cells interact with the ensheathing cells. We will use transgenic mice in which the different cells are marked by separate colours which will allow us to easily identify the cells and see where they grow. In addition, we will also examine the behaviour of live cells as they are growing. In the past all attempts to understand how nerve cell connections are formed in the olfactory system have used dead tissue that has been permanently preserved. In this project we have the unique opportunity to visualise living nerve cells to enable us to determine how the cells interact with the ensheathing cells. The advantage of this approach is that it allows us to identify important interactions as they occur, rather than attempting to decipher them after they have occurred. An analogy would be watching a football game live and observing how goals were scored and appreciating the performance of individual players versus trying to guess from the final score how the game was played and who the key performers were. These experiments will provide important information about how the olfactory ensheathing and nerve cells grow and regenerate.
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    Funded Activity

    Development And Maturation Of The Visual Cortex

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $460,946.00
    Summary
    Much of the human brain is devoted to vision, which requires the integrated activity of many interconnected areas of the cerebral cortex. Damage to these areas is a relatively common complication of preterm delivery and- or perinatal conditions including trauma and infection. The severity of both the short- and long-term effects of these lesions appears to be related to the time of the damage. The aim of this project is to investigate the way in which the multiple visual areas of the brain devel .... Much of the human brain is devoted to vision, which requires the integrated activity of many interconnected areas of the cerebral cortex. Damage to these areas is a relatively common complication of preterm delivery and- or perinatal conditions including trauma and infection. The severity of both the short- and long-term effects of these lesions appears to be related to the time of the damage. The aim of this project is to investigate the way in which the multiple visual areas of the brain develop and become 'wired' together in the period following birth. We will also determine if there are mechanisms which allow alternate routes to be found for processing visual information while the brain is still establishing connections between its multiple areas. This will allow us to understand the anatomical and physiological bases of the deficits caused by early damage to the visual areas of the brain, and perhaps point to strategies that will lead to improved recovery of visual function.
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    Funded Activity

    Neural Network Properties Of The Primate Retina

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $417,335.00
    Summary
    The broad aim of this project is to understand how the eye receives visual signals and sends them to the brain. Our experimental goal is to study the structure of neural connections in a poorly understood division of the visual system, called the koniocellular pathway. The cells of the koniocellular pathway make up close to 10 percent of all projections from the eye to the brain, but their functions are almost completely unknown. The fovea is a specialised region of the retina (the nerve cells w .... The broad aim of this project is to understand how the eye receives visual signals and sends them to the brain. Our experimental goal is to study the structure of neural connections in a poorly understood division of the visual system, called the koniocellular pathway. The cells of the koniocellular pathway make up close to 10 percent of all projections from the eye to the brain, but their functions are almost completely unknown. The fovea is a specialised region of the retina (the nerve cells which line the back of the eye). It is characterised by a very high density of cone photoreceptors, and is essential for high-acuity vision. This makes the fovea the most important part of the primate retina, but the high density of nerve cells there is thought to be the reason why the fovea is especially vulnerable to disease and age-related degeneration. Our aim is to analyse, using high-resolution microscopic techniques, the connections of koniocellular-pathway cells within the retina. We specifically aim to discover whether the koniocellular pathway contributes to foveal vision. Recent work from our and other laboratories has shown that many koniocellular-pathway cells receive functional connections from short-wavelength sensitive (blue) cone photoreceptors. Thus, our study will provide new insights into the connectivity of blue-cone pathways in the fovea. Although these experiments address basic scientific questions, they can lead to improved clinical practice. Understanding the wiring diagram of the retina can inform clinical studies of conditions such as glaucoma, and helps to give a rational basis for development of treatments. For example, dysfunction in blue-cone pathways is an early sign of glaucoma, so understanding the connections of blue-cone pathways in the fovea can lead to improved methods for early detection of this leading cause of blindness.
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    Funded Activity

    Generation Of Complex Responses In Retinal Ganglion Cells

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $490,500.00
    Summary
    The retinal ganglion cells, whose axons form the optic nerve, comprise numerous distinct types, which respond to visual stimuli in either a simple or complex manner. The project will investigate how the complex responses of the direction-selective ganglion cells (DSGCs) and the local-edge-detector ganglion cells (LEDs) are generated. It appears that the retinal neurons providing inhibitory input to DSGCs and LEDs use different neurotransmitters, and the project will investigate how this shapes t .... The retinal ganglion cells, whose axons form the optic nerve, comprise numerous distinct types, which respond to visual stimuli in either a simple or complex manner. The project will investigate how the complex responses of the direction-selective ganglion cells (DSGCs) and the local-edge-detector ganglion cells (LEDs) are generated. It appears that the retinal neurons providing inhibitory input to DSGCs and LEDs use different neurotransmitters, and the project will investigate how this shapes the response properties of the ganglion cells. This will be done both by recording the visually evoked responses of the ganglion cells in an isolated preparation of the retina and by using two-photon laser-scanning microscopy to functionally image the neuronal interactions between the neurons that inhibit the DSGCs.
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    Funded Activity

    Inhibitory Microcircuits In The Primate Retina

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $433,149.00
    Summary
    The retina lines the back of the eye and sends multiple movies of the visual world to the brain. This project aims to investigate how these multiple information channels are created. Descriptions of the basic pattern of wiring in the healthy retina will help clinical researchers to understand the disruptions that occur in visual disease. The precision of normal retinal wiring also delineates the precision required to restore normal function to a diseased or degenerating eye.
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    Funded Activity

    Role Of Dendritic Information Processing In Visual Circuit Computations

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $895,244.00
    Summary
    Vision is the primary sensory modality in man, and its disturbance carries an enormous socio-economic burden. The dynamic operations of the neuronal assemblies that underlie vision are poorly understood, partly because of an incomplete description of the computational properties of visual neuronal circuits. The aims of the application are to mechanistically dissect defined computational operations of visual neural circuits using advanced electrophysiological and optical recording techniques.
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    Funded Activity

    Vestibulo-ocular Reflex Physiology, Pathology And Rehabilitation

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Summary
    A sensation of movement from the inner ear is used to stabilise vision during head movements. Without it, every time you walk, run, or drive on a bumpy road, the world would appear to bounce. It can be debilitating when this sense doesn't work due to various diseases. This research examines how this sense works normally and the factors important for self-repair after injury. This work will also develop training exercises using a device for take-home balance rehabilitation.
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