PhD Program International DIM C-BRAINS
Dans son engagement à promouvoir la recherche francilienne à l'échelle internationale, C-BRAINS s'est fixé comme objectif majeur de former une nouvelle génération de chercheurs et de chercheuses en neurosciences et cognition.
Ce programme doctoral international est exclusivement destiné aux étudiants actuellement engagés dans un programme de master et stage hors de France qui ambitionneraient à poursuivre en thèse au sein du périmètre scientifique et régional du DIM C-BRAINS.
Ce programme régional compétitif offre en plus d’une rémunération sur 3 ans, une prime scientifique ainsi qu'une aide à l'installation en Île-de-France soutenue par la FNP.
Cette année encore, ce programme sera mené conjointement avec l’Institut du Cerveau et la Fondation des Neurosciences de Paris.
- 14 novembre 2024 - 30 janvier 2025 : Ouverture des candidatures étudiantes
- 17 février 2025 - 21 mars 2025 : Choix des candidats par les chercheurs
- 7 mai 2025 : Jury de pré-sélection des binômes chercheurs/étudiants
- 4 au 6 juin 2025 : Audition des candidats pré-sélectionnés
Télécharger le déroulé du PhD program international du DIM C-BRAINS.
Télécharger les critères d'éligibilité des candidatures étudiantes.
Cliquez ici pour candidater sur la plateforme en ligne du DIM C-BRAINS.
Télécharger le livret d'accueil des étudiants.
PhD Program international, Édition 2024-2025
Liste des sujets de thèse (1 au total)
Liste des sujets de thèse
INSERM Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit, Neurospin | Brain Computations
A key unresolved question is how such neuronal responses to numerosity are derived from the signals impinging onto our retina, where continuous physical variables co-vary with numbers of objects and a given number can lead to profoundly different stimulation depending on object types and their surroundings. Another question is how numerical responses in high-level brain areas of the human cerebral cortex fit with the presence of number sense in many animal species that lack similarly developed higher brain structures.
Visual inputs in vertebrate species are processed by a series of evolutionarily conserved regions in the midbrain and thalamus before reaching higher cognitive areas (6). The midbrain’s tectum which corresponds to the superior colliculus in mammals, while considered less important for conscious visual recognition in primates, can represent a map of the locations of salient objects in the environment with some degree of independence of those objects’ defining features (7, 8), which could make it particularly suitable as an intermediate step in the extraction of discrete numerosity. Although findings supporting a role of such early regions in numerosity processing have been absent or scarce until recently, results from optical imaging in zebrafish now show that number responsive neurons are indeed not limited to the forebrain but also found in the tectum (9), and specific early visual circuits that according to some views are comparable to those of the vertebrate tectum (10) are required for behavioral numerosity discrimination in flies (11). In humans, behavioral results suggesting that numerosity discrimination may partly rely on monocular parts of the visual system have been interpreted as pointing to an involvement of the subcortex (12), although they cannot determine the region of origin of these effects without ambiguity. In a reanalysis of human fMRI data from subcortical structures from one of our previously published studies (13), we find that pattern signals in regions of the thalamus which receive inputs from the superior colliculus do also to some extent distinguish between different numbers of visual items, although this study was not optimized to achieve best signal in the subcortex and did not precisely focus on distinguishing discrimination of numbers of items per se from differences in other visual features.
In this project, we therefore aim to benefit from the enhanced signal-to-noise ratio offered by functional imaging at ultra-high magnetic fields (14), to conduct more focused high-resolution acquisitions in subcortical areas of interest (superior colliculus and different parts of the thalamus) in addition to parietal cortex, and to understand how those regions represent numbers of objects across changes in non-numerical quantities and types of features defining the objects. The experiments will make use of fMRI at 7 or 11.7 Tesla (15). Given the prevalent focus on the cerebral cortex in human cognitive neuroscience, the idea that evolutionarily older subcortical areas should still have functional relevance for numerical abilities in humans may appear unconventional, but could also be seen as timely given recent reports of a role of regions like the superior colliculus in aspects of higher-level cognition (16). If confirmed, our hypothesis has the potential to profoundly change current ways of thinking about human number cognition, and possibly on the longer term contribute novel explanatory accounts of disturbed number processing (as in dyscalculia).
This project takes place within the Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit (UNICOG) located at the NeuroSpin center in the greater Paris area. The UNICOG laboratory has been a leader in the cognitive neuroscience of number processing and other areas of human cognition for many years and offers a stimulating international work environment. NeuroSpin is France’s most advanced neuroimaging center housing a multi-disciplinary combination of researchers, from experts in data acquisition methods to neuroscientists and clinicians. The center has in recent years developed the Iseult 11.7T human MRI scanner, the highest field strength currently available for human studies in the world. This project will be one of the first to attempt to exploit this system to answer relevant questions about the neural basis of cognition.
References
1. A. Nieder, Neuroethology of number sense across the animal kingdom. Journal of Experimental Biology 224, jeb218289 (2021).
2. J. Halberda, M. M. M. Mazzocco, L. Feigenson, Individual differences in non-verbal number acuity correlate with maths achievement. Nature 455, 665–668 (2008).
3. M. Piazza, et al., Developmental trajectory of number acuity reveals a severe impairment in developmental dyscalculia. Cognition 116, 33–41 (2010).
4. E. Castaldi, A. Mirassou, S. Dehaene, M. Piazza, E. Eger, Asymmetrical interference between number and item size perception provides evidence for a domain specific impairment in dyscalculia. PLoS ONE 13, e0209256 (2018).
5. M. Piazza, E. Eger, Neural foundations and functional specificity of number representations. Neuropsychologia 83, 257–273 (2016).
6. T. Isa, E. Marquez-Legorreta, S. Grillner, E. K. Scott, The tectum/superior colliculus as the vertebrate solution for spatial sensory integration and action. Curr Biol 31, R741–R762 (2021).
7. R. Veale, Z. M. Hafed, M. Yoshida, How is visual salience computed in the brain? Insights from behaviour, neurobiology and modelling. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 372, 20160113 (2017).
8. B. J. White, et al., Superior colliculus neurons encode a visual saliency map during free viewing of natural dynamic video. Nat Commun 8, 14263 (2017).
9. P. Luu, et al., Neural Basis of Number Sense in Larval Zebrafish. [Preprint] (2024). Available at: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.08.30.610552v1 [Accessed 4 September 2024].
10. J.-S. Joly, G. Recher, A. Brombin, K. Ngo, V. Hartenstein, A Conserved Developmental Mechanism Builds Complex Visual Systems in Insects and Vertebrates. Current Biology 26, R1001–R1009 (2016).
11. M. Bengochea, et al., Numerical discrimination in Drosophila melanogaster. Cell Rep 42, 112772 (2023).
12. E. Collins, J. Park, M. Behrmann, Numerosity representation is encoded in human subcortex. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. (2017).
13. S. Czajko, A. Vignaud, E. Eger, Human brain representations of internally generated outcomes of approximate calculation revealed by ultra-high-field brain imaging. Nat Commun 15, 572 (2024).
14. W. van der Zwaag, A. Schäfer, J. P. Marques, R. Turner, R. Trampel, Recent applications of UHF-MRI in the study of human brain function and structure: a review. NMR Biomed (2015).
15. N. Boulant, et al., In vivo imaging of the human brain with the Iseult 11.7-T MRI scanner. Nat Methods 1–4 (2024).
16. B. Peysakhovich, et al., Primate superior colliculus is causally engaged in abstract higher-order cognition. Nat Neurosci 1–10 (2024).