The Role Of The Prefrontal Cortex In Working Memory For Visual Motion
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$359,796.00
Summary
As objects of interest may not always be in one's view, it is important to store information about their spatial locations for future reference. For example, you could reach for a beverage without taking your eyes from this application. While this may be effortless, such tasks are fundamentally complex, requiring spatial information to be coded, stored in memory and retrieved at appropriate times. This proposal examines how interactions between different brain areas allow this to happen.
Cognitive And Psychosocial Functioning In Patients With Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsies
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$123,143.00
Summary
Children born extremely preterm are at risk of struggling at school and falling behind normal educational milestones, and having emotional problems such as anxiety. This study aims to see whether anxiety affects these children’s ability to learn and use new information. It will also determine whether an intervention targeting these thinking skills is less useful in children with higher levels of anxiety.
Rhythmicity And Synchronicity In Uterine Smooth Muscle
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$291,823.00
Summary
Natural birth occurs through rhythmic contractions of the smooth muscle of the uterus. There is surprisingly little understanding of the mechanism of the pacemaker clock that both initiates and times each contraction in a coordinated manner to expel the fetus. This project is to challenge this knowledge gap using our findings on cellular rhythms that herald Ca2+ stores as a major pacemaker mechanism. First, we will use electrophysiology and calcium imaging techniques to test the hypothesis that ....Natural birth occurs through rhythmic contractions of the smooth muscle of the uterus. There is surprisingly little understanding of the mechanism of the pacemaker clock that both initiates and times each contraction in a coordinated manner to expel the fetus. This project is to challenge this knowledge gap using our findings on cellular rhythms that herald Ca2+ stores as a major pacemaker mechanism. First, we will use electrophysiology and calcium imaging techniques to test the hypothesis that rhythmicity and synchronicity of uterine contractions are underpinned by store pacemaking. Second, we will probe the role of current spread between cells via gap junctions as a mechanism of recruitment and will examine whether accessory cells termed interstitial cells subserve a role in pacemaking. These cells are present within the uterine wall but their function is unknown. We will probe their ion channel properties in relation to pacemaking using patch clamp techniques. Third, we will examine the role of labour hormones, such as oxytocin, in augmenting uterine contractions via interaction with the Ca2+ store mechanism and cell recruitment. These studies will provide new and fundamental insights into uterine pacemaking, an outcome that should be of great significance to understanding and better controlling birth-associated complications such as preterm delivery and failure to progress.Read moreRead less
Mechanisms Of Action Of Neurochemicals And Modulators In Human Intestine: Changes In Disease
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$442,500.00
Summary
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and idiopathic chronic constipation (ICC) are two serious gastrointestinal disorders, for which no effective medical treatment is known. We will investigate the hypothesis that abnormalities in the nerve chemicals found in the gut contribute to the aetiology of these diseases. Our studies will examine the sites of action (receptors) for these chemicals (neurotensin and acetylcholine) in the small and large intestine. The mechanisms governing motility changes in r ....Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and idiopathic chronic constipation (ICC) are two serious gastrointestinal disorders, for which no effective medical treatment is known. We will investigate the hypothesis that abnormalities in the nerve chemicals found in the gut contribute to the aetiology of these diseases. Our studies will examine the sites of action (receptors) for these chemicals (neurotensin and acetylcholine) in the small and large intestine. The mechanisms governing motility changes in response to these chemicals have been well studied in animal intestine, but there is little detailed information from the human intestine. This study will provide insight into the mechanisms operating in the normal bowel, providing a base for comparing bowel obtained from patients with IBD or ICC. We will also study bowel removed at surgery for acute diverticular disease (DD), representing another type of inflammation. Studies on isolated segments of colon from ICC patients will determine whether the contractility of the muscle is abnormal in general or only with respect to the chemicals under investigation. Other studies will investigate the inflammatory processes occurring in the bowel and whether this differs in IBD. Our work will facilitate understanding of the function of the bowel in health and in gastrointestinal disorders and may lead to new medical treatments for IBD and ICC.Read moreRead less
Characterising And Modulating Corticostriatal Connectivity In Schizophrenia.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$316,449.00
Summary
Schizophrenia is a devastating mental illness that affects approximately 0.5-1% of the population. Many of the symptoms of schizophrenia, such as problems with memory and motivation, remain untreatable. This project will explore the brain processes that underlie memory deficits in people with schizophrenia and investigate the use of non-invasive brain stimulation to improve these impairments. The results from this study will hopefully lead to new treatments for people with schizophrenia.
How well people perform in everyday situations is often determined by memory function. When required to perform under stress memory performance is often affected. The effect of a psychological stress test on memory function in healthy volunteers and the ability of a dietary supplement, tyrosine, to prevent the effects will be studied. The data may suggest that depletion amino acids is responsible for the decrements in performance that are evident after an acute stressor.