Neuroscience Colloquium 2011
Type of class Colloquium
Schedule Fridays, 4pm, April 8th to July 15th
ECTS points 1
Course material
- 8th April
Cornelius Schwarz (Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research, Universität Tübingen)
Action and perception using whiskers
- 15th April
Craig Garner (Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Center for Research and Treatment of Down Syndrome, Stanford University)
Molecular mechanisms underlying synaptic dysfunction in Alzheimer’s disease and Phelan-McDermid syndrome
- 6th May
Dirk Feldmeyer (Dept. of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, RWTH Aachen University)
Signal processing in neocortical layer 4
- 13th May
Robin Hiesinger (Department of Physiology and Green Center for Systems Biology UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX)
Intracellular trafficking in brain development: A look through the fly’s eye
- 20th May
Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz (Cell Biology and Metabolism Program, NICHD, NIH)
Nanoscopic imaging with photoactivatable fluorescent proteins: windows into molecular organization and dynamics within cells
- 30th May
Jon Kaas (Department of Cell Biology, Vanderbilt University)
Behavioral recovery and somatosensory system reorganization after sensory loss in primates
- 3rd June
Annette Schenck (Department of Human Genetics,Nijmegen Centre for Molecular Life Science (NCMLS))
Modelling Intellectual Disability in Drosophila – targeted and systematic approaches
- 17th June
Gilad Silberberg (Institute of Experimental Immunology, University Hospital of Zurich)
Feedback and feedforward inhibition in the striatal microcircuitry
- 24th June
Nathalie Rouach (Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Biology, CNRS UMR 7241/ INSERM U1050, College de France)
Unraveling the role of astroglial connexin30 in synaptic strength
- 1st July
Mark Ansorge (New York State Psychiatric Institute, Columbia University)
Serotonin signaling during development: impact on brain maturation and behavior
- 8th July
Shigeo Takamori (Faculty of Life and Medical Sciences, Doshisha University, Kyoto)
Molecular mechanism of glutamate transport into synaptic vesicles
- 15th July
Rachel Wong (Department of Biological Structure, University of Washington)
Developmental strategies underlying the wiring patterns of retinal neurons
(see also the pdf above or the NeuroColloquium’s homepage)
