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Boston-NeuroTalks Calendar 3.0Boston-NeuroTalks Calendar 3.0

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Fri, May 24, 2013 - 8:27am
«  

May

  »
M T W T F S S
 
 
1
  • 12:00pm - 01:00pm
    Christian Langkammer - Insights into tissue composition and microstructure by postmortem MRI
  • 02:00pm - 03:00pm
    Gabrielle Liverant - Relations among Smoking, Anhedonia, and Reward Learning in Unipolar Sepression
  • 02:30pm - 03:30pm
    Dima Amso - The Utility of Visual Attention: Evidence from Typical and Atypical Development
 
2
  • 05:00pm
    The role of fMRI in Cognitive Science: A discussion with Rebecca Saxe and Brian Scholl
  • 06:00pm - 07:00pm
    Steven Hassan - Sacrificing Freedom of Mind: How We Fall Prey to Cults and Controllers
 
3
  • 01:00pm - 02:00pm
    David Osher - Function Follows Form: How Connectivity Patterns Govern Neural Responses
  • 04:00pm - 05:00pm
    Linda Van Aelst - The role of G proteins in neuronal development and plasticity
 
4
 
5
 
6
  • 10:00am - 11:00am
    Retsina Meyer - Neurobiologically-motivated treatments for post-traumatic stress disorder in an animal model
 
7
  • 12:00pm - 01:00pm
    Leon Bergen - The lexicon in learning and pragmatic inference
  • 04:30pm - 06:00pm
    Rosemary Varley - Language and Thought: evidence from severe aphasia
 
8
  • 08:30am - 05:30pm
    2013 McGovern Institute Symposium: NEURAL CONTROL OF MOVEMENT
  • 12:00pm - 01:00pm
    Chongzhao Ran - Optical Imaging of Amyloidosis of Alzheimer’s Disease and Brown Adipose Tissue
 
9
 
10
 
11
 
12
 
13
  • 12:00pm - 01:00pm
    Joshua Buckholtz - The Causal Biology of Antisocial Behavior
  • 12:00pm - 01:00pm
    Brian Kangas - Touchscreen Technology and the Preclinical Pharmacology of Complex Behavior
  • 05:00pm - 06:30pm
    MIT Workshop: Transforming Science Coverage in the General Media
 
14
  • 12:00pm - 01:00pm
    Laura Schulz's Infant and Childhood Cognition class
  • 04:00pm - 05:00pm
    Joshua Sanes - Wiring up the retina
  • 04:00pm - 05:00pm
    Suzanne Corkin - The Unforgettable Life of the Amnesic Patient, H.M.
 
15
  • 12:00pm - 01:00pm
    Martha Shenton - The Role of Neuroimaging in mTBI, Schizophrenia, and CTE: DTI, MRS, and Emerging PET Tau Imaging in CTE
  • 06:00pm - 07:00pm
    Lawrence Fitzgerald - Opportunities and Challenges in Drug Discovery for Autism Spectrum Disorders
 
16
  • 01:00pm - 02:30pm
    Eric Reiman - Advancing The Preclinical Study and Treatment of Alzheimer's Disease
  • 04:00pm - 05:00pm
    Paul Greengard - Understanding the Molecular Basis of Major Depressive Disorder: A Work in Progress
 
17
  • 10:30am - 12:00pm
    Oded Ghitza - Speech perception, cortical theta oscillations and auditory channel capacity
  • 12:00pm - 01:00pm
    Paul Muentener - Predicting developmental outcomes from infants' early exploratory behaviors
 
18
 
19
 
20
  • 01:00pm - 02:00pm
    Chia-Huei Tseng - Perceptual grouping in visual search
 
21
  • 02:00pm - 03:00pm
    Krista Ehinger - Visual Features for Scene Recognition and Reorientation
 
22
  • 12:00pm - 01:00pm
    Evelina Fedorenko - A novel framework for a neural architecture of language
 
23
 
24
  • 10:30am - 12:00pm
    Hideki Kawahara
  • 03:00pm
    Nonie Finlayson - The effects of depth information on visual search
 
25
 
26
 
27
 
28
  • 04:30pm - 05:30pm
    Sharon Thompson-Schill - Costs and benefits of cognitive control for language processing
 
29
  • 02:00pm - 03:00pm
    Amanda Tarullo - Developmental Consequences of Early Deprivation: Neural Function, Diurnal Cortisol Activity, and Social Behavior in Post-institutionalized Children
 
30
 
31
 
 
 

Keywords:

Cognitive Control Evolution Schizophrenia Neuroimaging Dopamine Motor HRC Brainmap Depression Neuphi Diseases Oscillations Thesis Defense Circuits Development Martinos Center Object Recognition MEG HMS-CHB Neural Development Categorization Scene Statistics Rhythms Audition SERI Attention fMRI Stress Drugs Emotion Brain Disorders Stem Cells CBB_sem-list Vision Memory BrainLunch Neuroplasticity Neurodegeneration Visionlabtalks-list IGCC2011 MBC-Talks Artificial Intelligence Hearing Episodic Memory Genetics CDASR Functional Connectivity Neurophilosophy Genes ICCNS11 Brain-Machine Interface Pain Faces Cochlear Implant Decision Making Prefrontal Cortex Working Memory CogLunch Neural Plasticity Neurogenesis MRI Language Social Cognition Bayesian Spatial Navigation Computational Modeling McLean BIC Speech Motion Reinforcement HMS Neuroscience Conference Cognition Molecules Neurochemistry Visual Search Parietal Cortex CBS Connectome Learning Neural Architecture Neural Networks Synapses Hippocampus Sleep Autism Bcs-talks Consciousness Basal Ganglia Motor Control Aging Neural Codes CELEST Optogenetics Alzheimer's Disease EEG PET Neurodegenerative Disorders Perception
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Hottest talks

Today:
REMINDER: HRC Seminar TOMORROW w/ Hideki Kawahara
SEVENTEENTH INTERNATIONAL
Nonie Finlayson - The effects of depth information on visual search
Hideki Kawahara
Charles Limb - Hip-hop and the brain
This week:
REMINDER: HRC Seminar TOMORROW w/ Hideki Kawahara
SEVENTEENTH INTERNATIONAL
Nonie Finlayson - The effects of depth information on visual search
Christian Langkammer - Insights into tissue composition and microstructure by postmortem MRI
Hideki Kawahara
This month:
REMINDER: HRC Seminar TOMORROW w/ Hideki Kawahara
SEVENTEENTH INTERNATIONAL
Nonie Finlayson - The effects of depth information on visual search
Christian Langkammer - Insights into tissue composition and microstructure by postmortem MRI
Hideki Kawahara
This year:
REMINDER: HRC Seminar TOMORROW w/ Hideki Kawahara
SEVENTEENTH INTERNATIONAL
McGovern Institute Symposium: Inhibition & Neural Circuit Function
Riitta Hari - Time scales of human brain function: Insights from behavioral measures and neuromagnetic recordings
Gaura Rader - Is Reductionism Necessary for the Unity of Science?
Collective intelligence of world-leading neuroscientists

Upcoming:

  • 2 hours 2 min from now:
    Hideki KawaharaHideki Kawahara (Wakayama University)

    http://www.bu.edu/dbin/hrc/calendar
  • 6 hours 32 min from now:
    Nonie Finlayson - The effects of depth information on visual searchMore information here: http://projects.iq.harvard.edu/bexlab/news/lab-talk-visitor-nonie-finlayson
  • 4 days 8 hours from now:
    Sharon Thompson-Schill - Costs and benefits of cognitive control for language processingSharon Thompson-Schill (University of Pennsylvania)

    Abstract:

    There is no doubt that cognitive control and language processing are intertwined: Prefrontal cortical regions that support the ability to resolve competition between multiple, incompatible representations are recruited for both language production and language comprehension. In this talk, I will explore a somewhat less intuitive hypothesis, namely that cognitive control has both benefits and costs for language processing. After introducing the motivation for this hypothesis, I will provide evidence from three experiments in which we manipulated frontally-mediated cognitive control processes using noninvasive brain stimulation (transcranial direct current stimulation; TDCS) and observed the consequences for different aspects of language processing. I will present results from one experiment that shows a benefit of cognitive control (a categorization task), a second that shows a cost of cognitive control (a different categorization task), and a third that shows both costs and benefits (a word production task).
  • 5 days 5 hours from now:
    Amanda Tarullo - Developmental Consequences of Early Deprivation: Neural Function, Diurnal Cortisol Activity, and Social Behavior in Post-institutionalized ChildrenPart of the Center for Depression, Anxiety and Stress Research
    Speaker Series (CDASR) 2012 – 2013.
  • 1 week 3 days from now:
    Rhythmic Dynamics and CognitionThe Cognitive Rhythms Collaborative, with

    McGovern Institute for Brain Research (MIT)
    The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory (MIT)
    Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging (MGH)
    Hariri Institute for Computing and Computational Science & Engineering (BU)
    Center for Computational Neuroscience and Neural Technology (BU)

    is pleased to present a symposium on

    Rhythmic Dynamics and Cognition

    Speakers are:

    Peter Brown (University of Oxford)
    Elizabeth Buffalo (Emory University)
    Pascal Fries, (Ernst Strungmann Institute, Frankfurt)
    Robert Knight (UC Berkeley)
    Fiona LeBeau (Newcastle University)
    Earl Miller (MIT)
    Charles Schroeder (Nathan Kline Institute)
    Markus Siegel (University of Tbingen)
    Peter Uhlhaas (University of Glasgow)
    Christa van Dort (Mass. General Hospital)
    Charles Wilson (University of Texas, San Antonio),

    with a session emphasizing analysis of rhythmic data:

    Rosalyn Moran (Virginia Tech)
    Liam Paninski (Columbia University)
    Bijan Pesaran (New York University)
    Astrid Prinz (Emory University)

    For more information, please see
    http://cogrhythms.bu.edu/conference.htm
    Registration: http://crc_conference.eventbrite.com/
  • 1 week 3 days from now:
    17th International Conference on Cognitive and Neural Systemshttp://cns.bu.edu/cns-meeting/conference.html

    Please note that the financial support from NSF is still pending final agency approval, and that the conference web site is under construction.

    SEVENTEENTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
    ON COGNITIVE AND NEURAL SYSTEMS

    Sponsored by the Boston University
    Center for Adaptive Systems,
    Center for Computational Neuroscience and Neural Technology (CompNet),
    and
    Center of Excellence for Learning in Education, Science, and Technology (CELEST)
    with financial support from the National Science Foundation

    This interdisciplinary conference is attended each year by approximately 300 people from 30 countries around the world. As in previous years, the conference will focus on solutions to the questions:

    HOW DOES THE BRAIN CONTROL BEHAVIOR?

    HOW CAN TECHNOLOGY EMULATE BIOLOGICAL INTELLIGENCE?

    The conference is aimed at researchers and students of computational neuroscience, cognitive science, neural networks, neuromorphic engineering, and artificial intelligence. It includes invited lectures and contributed lectures and posters by experts on the biology and technology of how the brain and other intelligent systems adapt to a changing world. The conference is particularly interested in exploring how the brain and biologically-inspired algorithms and systems in engineering and technology can learn. Single-track oral and poster sessions enable all presented work to be highly visible. Three-hour poster sessions with no conflicting events will be held on two of the conference days. Posters will be up all day, and can also be viewed during breaks in the talk schedule.

    CONFIRMED INVITED SPEAKERS
    Marisa Carrasco (New York University) - Effects of attention on early vision
    Robert Desimone [Plenary Speaker] (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) - Prefrontal-visual cortex interactions in attention
    Azir Ghazanfar (Princeton University) - TBD
    Stephen Grossberg (Boston University) - Behavioral economics and neuroeconomics: Cooperation, competition, preference, and decision-making
    Joy Hirsch (Columbia University) - Neural circuits for conflict resolution
    Roberta Klatzky (Carnegie Mellon University) - Multi-modal interactions within and between senses
    Kevin LaBar (Duke University) - Neural systems for fear generalization
    Randi Martin (Rice University) - Memory retrieval and interference during language comprehension
    Andrew Meltzoff (University of Washington) - How to build a baby with social cognition: Accelerating learning by generalizing across self and other
    Earl Miller (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) - Brain rhythms and cognition
    Javier Movellan (University of California, San Diego) - Optimal control approaches to the analysis and synthesis of social behavior
    Mary Potter (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) - Recognizing briefly presented pictures: Feedforward processing?
    Pieter Roelfsema (The Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience) - Neuronal mechanisms for perceptual organization
    Daniel Salzman (Columbia University) - Cognitive signals in the amygdala
    Daniel Schacter [Plenary Speaker] (Harvard University) - Constructive memory and imagining the future
    Wolfram Schultz (University of Cambridge) - Neuronal reward and risk signals
    Helen Tager-Flusberg (Boston University) - Identifying early neurobiological risk markers for autism spectrum disorder in the first year of life
    James Todd (Ohio State University) - The perception of 3D shape from texture
    Leslie Ungerlieder (National Institutes of Health) - Functional architecture for face processing in the primate brain
    Jeremy Wolfe (Brigham and Women's Hospital) - How selective and non-selective pathways contribute to visual search in scenes
  • 1 week 5 days from now:
    Stacey Doan - The Biopsychosocial Context of Adolescent Behavioral ProblemsPart of the Center for Depression, Anxiety and Stress Research
    Speaker Series (CDASR) 2012 – 2013.
  • 2 weeks 5 days from now:
    Bhisma Chakrabarti - Reward and Empathy: Connections, DisconnectionsBhisma Chakrabarti, Ph.D.
    Assistant Professor in Neuroscience, School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading, UK

    Abstract:

    Description: At the heart of the social nature of our species, lies empathy, i.e. the ability to understand others' emotions and mental states, and respond appropriately to them. But what underlies this spontaneous and largely automatic ability to empathise with our conspecifics? In my talk I will present an emerging body of evidence that suggests that empathy is directly related to the functioning of the reward system, and discuss potential consequences of a disruption in the link between empathy and reward.

    The first clue for this emerging view come from animal models, which show that pharmacological blockades and anatomical lesions of the reward system cause disruptions in social behaviour. The second clue comes from a recent meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies, which shows a significant overlap between the brain regions involved in reward and empathy. The third set of clues come from our recent experiments on spontaneous mimicry (SM) in humans, which indexes a key component of empathy. Using functional MRI and facial EMG, we measure individual differences in the link between reward and empathy, and demonstrate how autistic traits modulate this link.

    Results from these studies and the existing body of evidence from animal models and social psychological studies suggest a strong connection between reward and empathy. This evidence provides a new perspective on the debate about a mirror systems deficit in autism. Our studies, although conducted in the general population, suggest that the autistic deficit may lie in an atypical modulation of the mirror system activity by the reward value of the stimulus.

    http://web.mit.edu/scsb/
  • 3 weeks 3 hours from now:
    Jorg Scholvin - Three-dimensional and High-Density Microelectrode Technologies for Studying Neural Circuit Dynamics in Autistic Model MiceJorg Scholvin, Ph.D.
    Simons Fellow, Synthetic Neurobiology Group

    http://web.mit.edu/scsb/SCSBlunch.html
  • 4 weeks 6 days from now:
    12th Annual Eastern Auditory Retreat12th Annual Eastern Auditory Retreat @ Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, MA

    This is a regional meeting whose mission is to promote collaboration and cooperation between auditory research labs that are reasonably close to each other. Past meetings in Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Maryland have had attendees spanning the region from Maryland to Boston.

    Deadline for abstract submission and registration for presenters - June 12, 2013
    Registration deadline for meeting (no presentation) - June 17, 2013

    Website for the meeting and registration is being constructed: http://earmeeting.org
  • 5 weeks 3 hours from now:
    Neville Sanjana - Using genome engineering to model autism in human pluripotent stem cells and neuronsNeville Sanjana, Ph.D.
    Simons Fellow, Zhang Lab and Broad Institute

    http://web.mit.edu/scsb/SCSBlunch.html
  • 9 weeks 22 hours from now:
    Understanding Functions of the Amygdala: Emerging Concepts and ImplicationsGordon Research Conference: Amygdala in Health & Disease

    http://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?year=2013&program=grs_amyg