Featured Finding

By SfN Staff
July 18, 2024

Looking back at ten years of eNeuro papers, this post features two papers published in 2019.

By SfN Staff
June 27, 2024

Looking back at ten years of eNeuro papers, this post features two papers published in 2018.

By SfN Staff
June 6, 2024

Looking back at ten years of eNeuro papers, this post features two papers published in 2017.

By SfN Staff
May 2, 2024

Looking back at ten years of eNeuro papers, this post features two papers published in 2016.

By SfN Staff
April 4, 2024

Looking back at ten years of eNeuro papers, this post features two papers published in 2015.

Spiking patterns of MeA Dbx1- and Foxp2-lineage neurons differ across sex and lineage.
By Rosalind S.E. Carney, DPhil
August 13, 2020

Authors show neuronal subpopulation and sex differences in the biophysical signatures of developmentally defined medial amygdala output neurons.

Image of electron micrographs of untreated, control lamprey synapses stimulated at 20 Hz for 5 min.
By Rosalind S.E. Carney, DPhil
July 9, 2020

Authors report a viable chaperone-based strategy for reversing the synaptic vesicle trafficking defects associated with excess α-synuclein, which may be of value for improving synaptic function in Parkinson’s disease and other synucleinopathies.

Authors describe the in vivo behavior of mitochondria at the growth cone of elongating retinal axons in zebrafish.
By Rosalind S.E. Carney, DPhil
February 6, 2020

Authors describe the in vivo behavior of mitochondria at the growth cone of elongating retinal axons in zebrafish.

Authors show that real-time mutual interaction during eye contact is mediated by the cerebellum and limbic mirror system.
By Rosalind S.E. Carney, DPhil
October 10, 2019

Authors show that real-time mutual interaction during eye contact is mediated by the cerebellum and limbic mirror system.

Authors show that although handedness impacts the accuracy of hand movement control, it has virtually no influence on the ability to predict the visual consequences of hand movements.
By Rosalind S.E. Carney, DPhil
August 8, 2019

Authors show that although handedness impacts the accuracy of hand movement control, it has virtually no influence on the ability to predict the visual consequences of hand movements.