Episodes
Professor Krishna Shenoy, Professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford, discusses how Brain Machine Interfaces (BMIs) converts movement intentions from neurons in the brain into control signals for guiding prosthetic arms and computer cursors.
Published 03/01/17
Dr. William Newsome, Harman Family Provostial Professor, Vincent V. C. Woo Director of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute, and Professor of Neurobiology, delivered the closing remarks for the 2016 Symposium of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute.
Published 11/16/16
Professor William Newsome welcomes everyone to the 2016 Symposium of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute.
Published 11/16/16
Dr. Helen Bronte-Stewart is the John E Cahill Family Professor in the department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences at Stanford give a talk about recent advances in wearable physiosensors and sensing neurostimulators which are enabling us to study the brain’s effect on Parkinson’s disease motor signs, such as tremor, bradykinesia and rigidity, in real time in freely moving human subjects.
Published 11/16/16
Dr. Connie Cepko, the Bullard Professor of Genetics and Neuroscience at Harvard Medical School and an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, gives a great talk the diversity and number of cell types that one finds in the central nervous system of vertebrates which provokes many questions regarding the mechanisms used to generate them.
Published 11/16/16
Dr. Tom Dean, a research scientist at Google in Mountain View, discusses the idea of an intermediate or meso-scale computational theory that connects a molecular (micro-scale) account of neural function to a behavioral (macro-scale) account of animal cognition and environmental complexity.
Published 11/16/16
Keith Humphreys is a Professor and the Section Director for Mental Health Policy in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University. He is also a Senior Research Career Scientist at the VA Health Services Research Center in Palo Alto. His research addresses the prevention and treatment of addictive disorders, and, public policy information. In his talk he talks about how public policy is necessary to manage human interaction with potent psychoactive substances and...
Published 11/16/16
Tony Wyss-Coray is a professor of Neurology and Neurological Sciences at Stanford University, the Co-Director of the Stanford Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center, and the Associate Director of the Center for Tissue Regeneration, Repair and Restoration at the Palo Alto VA. In this talk he talks about blood borne factors from young mice or humans are sufficient to slow aspects of brain aging and improve cognitive function in old mice, and vice versa, factors from old mice are detrimental for...
Published 11/16/16
Anne Brunet, Professor of Genetics at Stanford University, is interested in understanding agin based on the integration of model organisms with diverse lifespans.
Published 10/28/15
Professor Steven Hyman, Director of the Stanley center for Psychiatric Research at the Board Institute, reviews the genetic analysis of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and autism spectrum disorders and discusses why we are pursuing genetic analysis to completion.
Published 10/28/15
Dr. Ann Arvin, Vice Provost and Dean of Research at Stanford University and Professor of Pediatrics and Professor of Pediatrics and Microbiology and Immunology, delivered the closing remarks for the 2015 Symposium of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute.
Published 10/28/15
David Tank, Professor of neuroscience and molecular biology at Princeton University, focused on the mechanisms of persistent neural activity and the development and application of rodent virtual reality systems, large-scale optical recording and electrophysiology to study neural circuit dynamics during navigation.
Published 10/28/15
Nikolaus Kriegeskorte, Programme Leader at the Medical Research Council's Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit in Cambridge, UK, describes a framework for testing such massively multivariate brain-activity data.
Published 10/28/15
Rachel I. Wilson, Professor of Basic Research in the Field of Neurobiology at Harvard Medical School, discussed the fundamental neural computations underlying sensory processing in the Drosophila central nervous system, as well as the biophysical mechanisms that implement those computations.
Published 10/28/15
Professor William Newsome welcomes everyone to the Symposium of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute.
Published 10/28/15
Nerve damage in the brain and the spinal cord is almost always permanent. But treatments to promote functional and behavioral healing are on the horizon as researchers begin to understand the molecules at play behind neuronal growth. https://neuroscience.stanford.edu/
Published 01/18/15
What about our brains allows us be one person at the office and a very different person at home? Professor William Newsome explains how a constant rewiring of neural connectivity enables the "socially sensitive" production of behavior. https://neuroscience.stanford.edu/
Published 01/18/15
In my lifetime, there has never been a moment like this one… in terms of the speed and acceleration of discovery.” William Newsome, director of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute, says new technologies are allowing researchers to make significant progress in understanding the brain. https://neuroscience.stanford.edu/
Published 01/18/15
Researchers are working on new ways of restoring plasticity in the brain after it’s damaged by stroke. https://neuroscience.stanford.edu/
Published 01/18/15
How do we learn and remember? What technologies might allow us to peer into the brain and even manipulate its function? How could a deeper understanding of the brain influence public policy, education and the law? In this session of Open Office Hours, William Newsome, professor of neurobiology and director of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute, discusses the big questions that brain researchers are still trying to answer. https://neuroscience.stanford.edu/
Published 01/18/15
Karl Deisseroth at the Inaugural Symposium of Stanford Neurosciences Institute. https://neuroscience.stanford.edu Part of the Inaugural Symposium of Stanford Neurosciences Institute recorded on October 10, 2014.
Published 11/25/14
Stanford President John Hennessy delivers the final remarks of the Symposium. He discusses the future of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute and of the Stanford University at large.
Published 10/21/14
Closing Remarks delivered by William Newsome, Director of Stanford Neurosciences Institute at the Stanford Neurosciences Inaugural Symposium.
Published 10/21/14
Dr. Thomas Südhof, Professor in the School of Medicine at Stanford University, discusses function of neurexins and their ligands, which are essential for synapse function and determine the properties and nature of synapses. Mutations in these molecules have been associated with autism, schizophrenia and intellectual disability, suggesting that the functions of these molecules are relevant for insight into these devastating disorders.
Published 10/21/14