• Sex differences in oncogenic mutational processes 

      Li, Constance H.; Prokopec, Stephenie D.; Sun, Ren X.; Yousif, Fouad; Schmitz, Nathaniel; Boutros, Paul C.; Aure, Miriam Ragle; Børresen-Dale, Anne-Lise; Langerød, Anita; Wright, Derek W.; Baumhoer, Daniel; Bjerkehagen, Bodil; Garred, Øystein; Lingjærde, Ole Christian; Sauer, Torill; Zaikova, Olga; Myklebost, Ola; Knappskog, Stian; Vazquez, Miguel; Van Loo, Peter (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2020)
      Sex differences have been observed in multiple facets of cancer epidemiology, treatment and biology, and in most cancers outside the sex organs. Efforts to link these clinical differences to specific molecular features ...
    • Single Cell Transcriptomic and Chromatin Profiles Suggest Layer Vb Is the Only Layer With Shared Excitatory Cell Types in the Medial and Lateral Entorhinal Cortex 

      Blankvoort, Stefan; Olsen, Lene Christin; Kentros, Clifford (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022)
      All brain functionality arises from the activity in neural circuits in different anatomical regions. These regions contain different circuits comprising unique cell types. An integral part to understanding neural circuits ...
    • Sleep and Pain: An EEG study of how sleep affects pain perception 

      Rødsjø, Eline (Master thesis, 2020)
      Bakgrunn: Eksperimentelle studier har vist at søvnmangel er assosiert med endringer i smertepersepsjon. Flere hjerneavbildningsstudier trengs for å utvikle objektive nevrofysiologiske korrelater til smerte. Hensikt: Denne ...
    • Sleep strengthens integration of spatial memory systems 

      Noack, Hannes; Doeller, Christian Fritz Andreas; Born, Jan (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2021)
      Spatial memory comprises different representational systems that are sensitive to different environmental cues, like proximal landmarks or local boundaries. Here we examined how sleep affects the formation of a spatial ...
    • Social Learning of a Spatial Task by Observation Alone 

      Doublet, Thomas; Nosrati, Mona; Kentros, Clifford (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2022)
      Interactions between conspecifics are central to the acquisition of useful memories in the real world. Observational learning, i.e., learning a task by observing the success or failure of others, has been reported in many ...
    • Sparse model selection in the highly under-sampled regime 

      Bulso, Nicola; Marsili, Matteo; Roudi, Yasser (Journal article, 2016)
      We propose a method for recovering the structure of a sparse undirected graphical model when very few samples are available. The method decides about the presence or absence of bonds between pairs of variable by considering ...
    • Spatial Coding in the Hippocampal Region 

      Boccara, Charlotte (Doktoravhandlinger ved NTNU, 1503-8181; 2014:99, Doctoral thesis, 2014)
    • Spatial registration of serial microscopic brain images to three-dimensional reference atlases with the QuickNII tool 

      Puchades, Maja; Csúcs, Gergely; Ledergerber, Debora; Leergaard, Trygve B.; Bjaalie, Jan G. (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019)
      Modern high throughput brain wide profiling techniques for cells and their morphology, connectivity, and other properties, make the use of reference atlases with 3D coordinate frameworks essential. However, anatomical ...
    • Spatial Representation in the Hippocampal Formation: A History 

      Moser, Edvard Ingjald; Moser, May-Britt; McNaughton, Bruce (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2017)
      Since the first place cell was recorded and the cognitive-map theory was subsequently formulated, investigation of spatial representation in the hippocampal formation has evolved in stages. Early studies sought to verify ...
    • Spatial representation of a virtual environment in a deep neural network 

      Boon Linn, Choo (Master thesis, 2020)
      De siste tiårene har forskere gjort store framskritt i å karakterisere det nevrobiologiske fundamentet for spatial kognisjon. Særskilt har nevrobiologiske funn ikke vært begrenset til aktiv utforskning av den fysiske ...
    • Spatial representation – from medial entorhinal cortex to hippocampus 

      Miao, Chenglin (Doctoral thesis at NTNU;2015:226, Doctoral thesis, 2015)
      Grid cells in the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) and place cells in the hippocampus are key elements of the brain's spatial representation system. These cell populations are the basic component of the circuit of spatial ...
    • Stellate cells drive maturation of the entorhinal-hippocampal circuit 

      Donato, Flavio; Jacobsen, R Irene; Moser, May-Britt; Moser, Edvard I (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2017)
      The neural representation of space relies on a network of entorhinal-hippocampal cell types with firing patterns tuned to different abstract features of the environment. To determine how this network is set up during early ...
    • Stimulus-related astroglial calcium signals spread and amplify in seizure-suscpetible zebrafish 

      Broen, Vegard (Master thesis, 2023)
      Astrocytter spiller en avgjørende rolle i hjernens informasjonsbehandling og er strategisk plassert med mange forbindelser til synapser. Disse forbindelsene gjør det mulig for dem å modulere nevrale nettverksfunksjoner. ...
    • Stimulus-specific behavioral responses of zebrafish to a large range of odors exhibit individual variability 

      Kermen, Florence; Darnet, Lea; Wiest, Christoph; Palumbo, Fabrizio; Bechert, Jack; Uslu, Ozge; Yaksi, Emre (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2020)
      Background Odor-driven behaviors such as feeding, mating, and predator avoidance are crucial for animal survival. The neural pathways processing these behaviors have been well characterized in a number of species, and ...
    • Stimulus-specific behavioral responses of zebrafish to a large range of odors exhibit individual variability 

      Kermen, Florence; Darnet, Lea; Wiest, Christoph; Palumbo, Fabrizio; Bechert, Jack; Uslu, Ozge; Yaksi, Emre (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2020)
      Background Odor-driven behaviors such as feeding, mating, and predator avoidance are crucial for animal survival. The neural pathways processing these behaviors have been well characterized in a number of species, and ...
    • Stress disrupts insight-driven mnemonic reconfiguration in the medial temporal lobe 

      Grob, Anna-Maria; Milivojevic, Branka; Alink, Arjen; Döller, Christian Fritz Andreas; Schwabe, Lars (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2023)
      Memories are not stored in isolation. Insight into the relationship of initially unrelated events may trigger a flexible reconfiguration of the mnemonic representation of these events. Such representational changes allow ...
    • Structural and functional changes in the hippocampal region of a transgenic rat model of Alzheimer's disease 

      Heggland, Ingrid (Doctoral theses at NTNU;2016:122, Doctoral thesis, 2016)
      Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder that currently has no treatment to halt or cure the disease. Among the first symptoms are memory loss and learning difficulties, and as the disease ...
    • Structural and functional dynamics of healthy and perturbed neuronal networks in vitro 

      Weir, Janelle Shari (Master thesis, 2019)
      Rapid advancement in the field of morphogenic neuroengineering has led to interesting research perspectives in the area of in vitro neural network modeling using human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) derived neural ...
    • Structural connectivity-based segmentation of the human entorhinal cortex 

      Syversen, Ingrid Framås; Witter, Menno P.; Kobro-Flatmoen, Asgeir; Goa, Pål Erik; Schröder, Tobias Navarro; Doeller, Christian F. (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2021)
      The medial (MEC) and lateral entorhinal cortex (LEC), widely studied in rodents, are well defined and characterized. In humans, however, the exact locations of their homologues remain uncertain. Previous functional magnetic ...
    • Studying chronic stress and resilience in individual larval zebrafish 

      Cappanna Paola (Master thesis, 2021)
      The stress response is a natural physiological reaction necessary for adapting to an ever-changing environment, but if extended for a long period it can lead to chronic stress and to negative consequences for the organism. ...