Litcius/Paper detail

Critical mass: The rise of a touchscreen technology community for rodent cognitive testing

Julie R. Dumont, Ryan P. Salewski, Flávio H. Beraldo

2020Genes Brain & Behavior41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The rise in the number of users and institutions utilizing the rodent touchscreen technology for cognitive testing over the past decade has prompted the need for knowledge mobilization and community building. To address the needs of the growing touchscreen community, the first international touchscreen symposium was hosted at Western University. Attendees from around the world attended talks from expert neuroscientists using touchscreens to examine a vast array of questions regarding cognition and the nervous system. In addition to the symposium, a subset of attendees was invited to partake in a hands-on training course where they received touchscreen training covering both hardware and software components. Beyond the two touchscreen events, virtual platforms have been developed to further support touchscreen users: (a) Mousebytes.ca, which includes a data repository of rodent touchscreen tasks, and (b) Touchscreencognition.org, an online community with numerous training and community resources, perhaps most notably a forum where members can ask and answer questions. The advantages of the rodent touchscreen technology for cognitive neuroscience research has allowed neuroscientists from diverse backgrounds to test specific cognitive processes using well-validated and standardized apparatus, contributing to its rise in popularity and its relevance to modern neuroscience research. The commitment of the touchscreen community to data, task development and information sharing not only ensures an expansive future of the use of rodent touchscreen technology but additionally, quality research that will increase translation from preclinical studies to clinical successes.

Topics & Concepts

TouchscreenRodentCognitionRodent modelPsychologyComputer scienceCognitive psychologyHuman–computer interactionNeuroscienceMedicineBiologyEcologyInternal medicinePhotoreceptor and optogenetics researchNeural dynamics and brain functionMemory and Neural Mechanisms
Critical mass: The rise of a touchscreen technology community for rodent cognitive testing | Litcius