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  <title><![CDATA[GT Neuro Seminar Series]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p class="p1"><strong>&ldquo;Inhibitory Control of Cortical Activity <i>in vivo</i>&rdquo;</strong></p>

<p class="p2">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="p1"><strong>Bilal Haider, Ph.D.<br />
Assistant Professor<br />
Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering</strong></p>

<p class="p2">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="p1">The cerebral cortex is the largest and most complicated structure of the mammalian brain.&nbsp; The cortex generates many regimes of spontaneous and sensory evoked activity.&nbsp; What are the cellular and circuit mechanisms that determine these regimes? What consequences do they have for sensory processing?&nbsp; And how do these mechanisms vary across behavioral states? &nbsp;</p>

<p class="p2">To address these questions, I will present three electrophysiological studies of spiking and sub-threshold (synaptic) activity recorded from specific cortical neuron types in vivo.&nbsp; First, I will show that cortical excitation and inhibition closely balance each other during ongoing spontaneous activity.&nbsp; I will next show how inhibitory circuits are recruited to produce reliable and precise cortical activity during naturalistic visual stimulation.&nbsp; Finally, I will show that in the awake cortex, the specific activation of inhibitory circuits dramatically sharpens the spatial and temporal resolution of visual processing.&nbsp; This enhanced role of inhibition during wakefulness shapes how excitatory neuron populations relate to sensory events.&nbsp; Taken together, these studies suggest that cortical inhibitory circuits play the dominant role in rapid modulation of sensory processing according to the demands of the environment and behavior.</p>

<p class="p2">&nbsp;</p>

<p class="p2"><strong>Bio-sketch:</strong></p>

<p>Bilal Haider is an assistant professor of biomedical engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology &amp; Emory University in Atlanta.&nbsp; He received his M.Phil. and Ph.D. in Neurobiology from Yale University with David McCormick.&nbsp; He went on to perform postdoctoral research in visual neuroscience as an NSF International Research Fellow at University College London, UK, with Matteo Carandini and Michael Hausser.&nbsp; His research focuses on synaptic and network mechanisms that allow neurons in the cerebral cortex to modulate their response properties during sensory perception and behavior.&nbsp;</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
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