Toward a better understanding of the brain
Genome-editing pioneer Feng Zhang hopes his work will shed light on neurological disorders.
Genome-editing pioneer Feng Zhang hopes his work will shed light on neurological disorders.
REGISTRATION FOR THIS EVENT IS NOW CLOSED TITLE: “Computations: from synapses to systems” DATE: Monday May 9, 2016 TIME: 8:30am – 5:00pm LOCATION: MIT Bldg 46-3002 (Singleton Auditorium) QUESTIONS? Naomi Berkowitz | naomiber@mit.edu | 617.715.5396 Registration is required and space is limited. PROGRAM 8:30 am Continental breakfast served in atrium 9:00 am – […]
Gene required for the control of behavioral state is also found in humans, may be linked to autism.
Bargmann wins 2016 Scolnick Prize for her work on the genetic and neural mechanisms that control behavior in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans.
In this presentation for the World Economic Forum, Ed Boyden explains strategies such as valuing interdisciplinary expertise and being willing to leave comfort zones.
New genetic study out of Guoping Feng’s lab raises hope that autism behaviors may be reversible, even in adulthood.
Marcus Meister of Caltech will deliver the 2016 Sharp Lecture in Neural Circuits on March 8, 2016.
In the Chinese calendar, 2016 is the Year of the Monkey.
A new study may explain why women who suffer a severe infection while pregnant are much more likely to have a child with autism.
Three neuroscientists share biomedicine prize for development of optogenetics.