@article {152, title = {An Open Resource for Non-human Primate Optogenetics}, journal = {Neuron}, year = {2020}, month = {January 10, 2020}, type = {NeuroResource}, abstract = {

Optogenetics has revolutionized neuroscience in small laboratory animals, but its effect on animal models more closely related to humans, such as non-human primates (NHPs), has been mixed. To make evidence-based decisions in primate optogenetics, the scientific community would benefit from a centralized database listing all attempts, successful and unsuccessful, of using optogenetics in the primate brain. We contacted members of the community to ask for their contributions to an open science initiative. As of this writing, 45 laboratories around the world contributed more than 1,000 injection experiments, including precise details regarding their methods and outcomes. Of those entries, more than half had not been published. The resource is free for everyone to consult and contribute to on the Open Science Framework website. Here we review some of the insights from this initial release of the database and discuss methodological considerations to improve the success of optogenetic experiments in NHPs.

}, issn = {08966273}, doi = {10.1016/j.neuron.2020.09.027}, url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0896627320307510}, author = {Tremblay, Sebastien and Acker, Leah and Afraz, Arash and Albaugh, Daniel L. and Amita, Hidetoshi and Andrei, Ariana R. and Angelucci, Alessandra and Aschner, Amir and Balan, Puiu F. and Basso, Michele A. and Benvenuti, Giacomo and Bohlen, Martin O. and Caiola, Michael J. and Calcedo, Roberto and Cavanaugh, James and Chen, Yuzhi and Chen, Spencer and Chernov, Mykyta M. and Clark, Andrew M. and Dai, Ji and Debes, Samantha R. and Deisseroth, Karl and Desimone, Robert and Dragoi, Valentin and Egger, Seth W. and Eldridge, Mark A.G. and El-Nahal, Hala G. and Fabbrini, Francesco and Federer, Frederick and Fetsch, Christopher R. and Fortuna, Michal G. and Friedman, Robert M. and Fujii, Naotaka and Gail, Alexander and Galvan, Adriana and Ghosh, Supriya and Gieselmann, Marc Alwin and Gulli, Roberto A. and Hikosaka, Okihide and Hosseini, Eghbal A. and Hu, Xing and {\"u}er, Janina and Inoue, Ken-ichi and Janz, Roger and Jazayeri, Mehrdad and Jiang, Rundong and Ju, Niansheng and Kar, Kohitij and Klein, Carsten and Kohn, Adam and Komatsu, Misako and Maeda, Kazutaka and Martinez-Trujillo, Julio C. and Matsumoto, Masayuki and Maunsell, John H.R. and Mendoza-Halliday, Diego and Monosov, Ilya E. and Muers, Ross S. and Nurminen, Lauri and Ortiz-Rios, Michael and {\textquoteright}Shea, Daniel J. and Palfi, {\'e}phane and Petkov, Christopher I. and Pojoga, Sorin and Rajalingham, Rishi and Ramakrishnan, Charu and Remington, Evan D. and Revsine, Cambria and Roe, Anna W. and Sabes, Philip N. and Saunders, Richard C. and Scherberger, {\"o}rg and Schmid, Michael C. and Schultz, Wolfram and Seidemann, Eyal and Senova, Yann-Suhan and Shadlen, Michael N. and Sheinberg, David L. and Siu, Caitlin and Smith, Yoland and Solomon, Selina S. and Sommer, Marc A. and Spudich, John L. and Stauffer, William R. and Takada, Masahiko and Tang, Shiming and Thiele, Alexander and Treue, Stefan and Vanduffel, Wim and Vogels, Rufin and Whitmire, Matthew P. and Wichmann, Thomas and Wurtz, Robert H. and Xu, Haoran and Yazdan-Shahmorad, Azadeh and Shenoy, Krishna V. and DiCarlo, James J. and Platt, Michael L.} }