Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 12 days 6 hours 19 minutes
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Stephanie Borgland (University of Calgary) discusses peptide regulation of dopamine signals related to motivation in non-homeostatic feeding...
Thursday, January 29, 2015
Heather Read (U of Connecticut, Storrs) discusses issues in large scale modeling of cortical auditory networks.
Duration: 30 minutes
Discussants:(in alphabetical order)
Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA)
Todd Troyer (Assoc Prof, UTSA)
Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA)
acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
Thursday, February 5, 2015
Carmen Canavier (LSU Med Ctr) discusses modeling diverse bursting behavior in dopamine neurons, and the importance of intrinsic dynamics in understanding firing behavior of neurons...
Friday, February 27, 2015
Anthony Grace (University of Pittsburgh School of Med) discusses translational studies of schizophrenia, involving the influence of stress on dopamine network function...
Thursday, March 25, 2015
Anatol Kreizer (UCSF/Gladstone Institutes) discusses his studies on opposing motor properties of the basal ganglia motor circuit within the framework of the prevailing model of basal ganglia circuits delineated by DeLong in 1989. The group critically assesses the current model, and discusses some questions of extrapyramidal functional anatomy that have yet to be worked out in the field...
Thursday, April 9, 2015
Hyoung-gon Lee (Case Western Reserve University) discusses new ideas emerging from his research that pose Alzheimer's Disease as a disease of inappropriate cell-cycle control...
Thursday, August 20, 2015
Sarah Laszlo (Binghamtom University) discusses the dual route model for speech recognition, biometrics, hacking brains, and X-men.
Duration: 44 minutes
Discussants:(in alphabetical order)
Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA)
Nicole Wicha (Assoc Prof, UTSA)
Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA)
acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
Thursday, August 27, 2015
Bharath Chandrasekaran (UT Austin) visits us again to discuss prevailing ideas about differential recruitment of corticostriatal learning systems during speech sound learning...
Thursday, September 3, 2015
Michael Long (New York Univ. School of Medicine) visits us to discuss bird song, HVC neurons, and neuronal codes for movement and movement timing.
Please forgive the distortion. Charlie is still learning the equipment...
Thursday, September 10, 2015
James (Mac) Shine visits us from Stanford to talk about Parkinson’s Disease symptom clusters, visualizing functional networks in the brain using functional MRI, and the brain networks responsible for Parkinson’s disease symptoms, including freezing of gait...