Martin Seeber
Research at Duke
Brain dynamics of freely moving humans
- Going to #SfN25? Meet my fantastic colleagues at the conference, and if you find yourself near my poster Tuesday afternoon (TT10) come say hi!
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- Reposted by Martin SeeberCheck out our new review/perspective (w/ @juangallego.bsky.social & Devika Narain) on neural manifolds in the brain! It was a lot of fun to think through these ideas over the past couple of years, and I'm excited it's finally out in the world! 🔗: www.nature.com/articles/s41... 📄: rdcu.be/ex8hW
- Reposted by Martin SeeberNanthia Suthana, PhD, is especially interested in the complex processes that drive memory and emotion, and in developing therapies using neurostimulation to treat disorders that involve those processes. neurosurgery.duke.edu/news/learnin...
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- Reposted by Martin Seeber🚨 New lab paper!🚨 A dream study of mine for nearly 20 yrs not possible until now thanks to NIH 🧠 funding & 1st-author lead @seeber.bsky.social We tracked hippocampal activity as people walked memory-guided paths & imagined them again. Did brain patterns reappear?🧵👇 www.nature.com/articles/s41...
- 🧠 Our new (NIH funded!) paper reveals how the brain creates internal dynamics during both real- and imagined navigation. We recorded directly from the human hippocampus as participants moved through physical space and when they mentally navigated imagined routes. www.nature.com/articles/s41...
- The fascinating result? Similar neural patterns emerge in both scenarios! The hippocampal theta oscillations we observed encode spatial information even when we imagine moving along specific spatial routes.