Schedule
Day 1
30 October, 2023
8:50 a.m.–9.00 a.m. Welcome remarks - Klaus Scheffler
9.00 a.m.–9.40 a.m.
TBA
Jürgen Mai,
Duesseldorf, Germany
9.40 a.m.–10:15 a.m.
Thalamus drives active dendritic computations in cortex
Marcel Oberlaender
Bonn, Germany
Coffee Break 10:15 a.m.–10:40 a.m.
10.40 a.m.–11:20 p.m.
TBA
Manoj Saranathan
Boston, USA
11:20 a.m.–11.50 a.m.
TBA
Meritxell Bach Cuadra
11.50 a.m.–12:20 p.m.
Thalamocortical dynamics during wake and sleep: insights from human intracranial recordings
Tobias Staudigl
Munich, Germany
Lunch 12:20 p.m.–13:20 p.m.
13:20 p.m.–14.00 p.m.
TBA
Laura Busse
Munich, Germany
14:00 p.m.–14:40 p.m.
Region specific cortical control of the thalamus - mice vs humans
Acsády László
Budapest, Hungary
Abstract: The nature and role of top-down cortical control of thalamus is still an enigma. Here I demonstrate in mouse that the interaction between cortex and thalamus is qualitatively different in frontal compared to parietal areas. In order to explore to what extent these differences apply to humans we prepared a fine grained segmentation of human thalamus based on its excitatory afferents and compare the synaptic organization of the homologous thalamic regions in the two species.
Coffee Break 14:40 p.m.–15:10 p.m.
15:10 p.m.–15:40 p.m.
A translational approach toward thalamus disconnection following ischemic stroke
Thomas Tourdias
Bordeaux, France
15.40 p.m.–16:10 p.m.
Vulnerability of thalamic nuclei at CSF interface during the entire course of multiple sclerosis
Ismail Koubiyr
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
16.10 p.m.–17:00 p.m.
TBA
Giulio Pergola
Baltimore, USA
Discussions 17:00 p.m.–18:00 p.m.
Conference Dinner 19:00
Day 2
31 October, 2023
9.00 a.m.–9.45 a.m.
Feedforward and Feedback Interactions between Thalamus and Cortex for Vision
Martin Usrey
UCDAVIS, USA
Abstract: The thalamus and cerebral cortex are interconnected by a dense network of feedforward and feedback circuits. In the visual system, the response properties of neurons in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) of the thalamus and primary visual cortex (V1) are governed by the anatomical organization of these connections and the temporal patterns of impulse arrival. Results will be presented from experiments using multielectrode recordings and optogenetic manipulation to examine the specificity of neuronal connections and the role of spike timing and behavioral modulation in the reciprocal exchange of information between the LGN and V1 in the alert macaque monkey. These results reveal a striking relationship between the parallel feedforward and feedback processing streams, as well as the biophysical properties that govern spike transfer and the encoding of visual information in neuronal spike trains.
9.45 a.m.–10.15 a.m.
Exploring the impact of interthalamic adhesion on human cognition: insights from healthy subjects and patients with strokes to the thalamus
Julie Vidal
Paris, France
Abstract: The interthalamic adhesion (IA), also known as the massa intermedia, is a structure that connects the median borders of both thalami across the third ventricle. It is absent in about 20% of healthy individuals, with a lower prevalence in males and some neurodevelopmental conditions, such as schizophrenia. Because it is difficult to identify on routine neuroimaging, its functional role, if any, remains debated. This study takes an original approach as we assess the possible role of the IA in cognition in a group of healthy subjects and a group of patients with lesions of the thalamus. We included 40 patients with isolated strokes to the thalamus and 45 matched healthy subjects, who underwent T1w and FLAIR MRI and a neuropsychological assessment. 75% of the whole population had an IA, with a higher presence among women (91%) than men (61%). There was no difference in the presence/absence of the IA between groups. The presence/absence of IA had no effect on the neuropsychological performance of healthy subjects. The patients without an IA were more impaired on verbal memory and language. This effect was not explained by age, laterality of the infarct, volume or localization of the lesion. The patients with lesions extending to the IA showed a similar trend, which could however be explained by concomitant lesions to the nearby mamillo-thalamic tract. In conclusion, the IA does not seem to play a major role in cognition in healthy subjects but could play a compensatory role following lesions to the thalamus, possibly in relation to its connectivity with the prefrontal cortex.
Coffee Break 10:15 a.m.–10:45 a.m.
10.45 a.m.–11:05 a.m.
Cortico-nuclear thalamic structural co-variation networks are related to familial risk for schizophrenia in the context of nuclei volume reduction in patients via the ENIGMA Consortium
Annalisa Lella
Bari, Italy
11.05 a.m.–11:25 a.m.
The contribution of thalamic subdivisions in learning is linked to inter-individual variability in memory performance.
Roberta Passiatore
Bari, Italy
11.25 a.m.–12.05 a.m.
TBA
Petra Ritter
Berlin, Germany
12.05 p.m.–12.45 p.m.
TBA
Birte Forstmann
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Lunch 12:45 p.m.–13:45 p.m.