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If you will need disability-related accommodations in order to participate, please email the contact person for the event. Early requests are strongly encouraged to allow sufficient time to meet your access needs.

Announcements for the week of Oct. 27, 2024

Neuroscience Events

"Love, death, and cochlear implants," by Dr. Robert C. Froemke, Skirball Foundation Professor of Genetics Neuroscience Institute and Department of Otolaryngology, New York University School of Medicine

Neuroplasticity is important for learning the meaning of different sounds. Here I will discuss neuroplasticity and behavioral adaptations in rodents, first in new mother mice learning to care for pups, and then in deafened rats learning to use cochlear implants to hear again. 

Oct. 29, 2024 4 p.m. • Beckman Institute 1005

Howard Gritton • Neuroscience Program

"Memories in motion: using virtual reality to examine representational drift," by Jason R. Climer, PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology, School of Molecular and Cellular Biology, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Some findings suggest that representations of the world in the brain are not fixed, however, these results remain controversial. We used a multisensory virtual reality system to control for changes in behavior and sensory experience and found that hippocampal representations of space do indeed drift over time. These results have implications for our understanding of how memories are stored.

Nov. 5, 2024 4 p.m. • Beckman Institute 1005

Xinzhu Yu • Neuroscience Program

Seminars of Interest

Carle Illinois Advancing Imaging Seminar: Bruce Damon

Bruce Damon, Stephens Family Clinical Research Institute, will lecture.

Speaker

  • Bruce Damon, Stephens Family Clinical Research Institute

Oct. 28, 2024 4 p.m. • Carle Mills Breast Cancer Institute, third floor conference room

Aaron Anderson • The Biomedical Imaging Center & The Stephens Family Clinical Research Institute at Carle Health

Linking Life Sciences and Humanities

IGB-HRI Distinguished Public Lecture Series                        

"Linking Life Sciences and Humanities"
Jennifer Raff, PhD
Associate Professor of Anthropology
University of Kansas

Jennifer Raff is an award-winning author and associate professor of anthropology at the University of Kansas (KU).

Her research focuses on understanding human history through the lens of genetics. She works with Indigenous communities and tribes across North America who wish to use ancient and contemporary DNA as a tool for investigating questions of recent and more distant histories.

Her first book, “Origin: A genetic history of the Americas” was a critical success, described as “an authoritative tale from the trenches told by a fearless scientist,” a “necessary and elegant text,” and by The New York Times as “the book anyone interested in the peopling of the Americas must read.” Origin, which was a New York Times bestseller for two weeks, received multiple awards including the Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science (2023).

Raff has also written numerous articles on genetics, history, and human variation for the general public, emphasizing not only the translation of complicated scientific concepts into accessible language, but also the ethics and complicated history of research on these subjects. She was described by the New York Times as “at the forefront of a culture change in our science.”

In 2024 she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship (General Nonfiction) to support work on her second book, “The Ancients: The untold story of how we became human” under contract with Twelve Books.

She received a PhD in 2008 from Indiana University, with a double major in Molecular, Cellular, Developmental Biology (with a focus on genetics) and Biological Anthropology. She completed postdoctoral work at the University of Utah, Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism, and Molecular Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University at Chicago, and the University of Texas at Austin, before accepting a position at the University of Kansas in the Anthropology Department, receiving tenure in 2020.

She currently lives in Lawrence Kansas with her husband, Colin McRoberts, their son Oliver, her mother Kathleen Burke, and Alu The Dog, a 120 pound German Shepherd/Rottweiler mix.

Speaker

  • Jennifer Raff, PhD; Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of Kansas

Oct. 28, 2024 4 p.m. • Alice Campbell Alumni Center, 601 S. Lincoln Avenue, Urbana

Angela Patrick • Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology and Humanities Research Institute

Saint Louis University Institute for Translational Neuroscience 3rd Annual Research Symposium

We are happy to announce that the Saint Louis University Institute for Translational Neuroscience 3rd Annual Research Symposium, (Neuroday) will take place in person on Friday, November 1st, 2024. Our keynote speaker is Dr. Michael Salter, a Senior Scientist at The Hospital for Sick Children and Professor in the Department of Physiology at the University of Toronto. In addition to the keynote address, there will be talks by several prominent Saint Louis-based researchers, a poster session and reception. Abstract Submission is now open for talks & poster presentations (Closes October 11th). We are happy to accept posters & talks for ALL trainee levels (undergraduates, graduate/medical students, and postdoctoral fellows). This event is free and open to the public, make sure to register before October 18th!

Nov. 1, 2024 12 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. • SLU IL Monastero, 3050 Olive St, St. Louis, MO 63103

Ask the Director - Grants Edition

Curious about what happens behind the scenes for the IGB to be awarded our grants?

The large and prestigious grants IGB is known for take a coordinated effort from many contributors. Hear the exclusive stories and ask your own questions of IGB Director Gene Robinson about how we get our grants, what it takes to maintain them, or anything else you might be curious about. 

Open to Staff, Students, and Postdocs. Submit your questions here or live during the discussion.

Speaker

  • Gene Robinson, IGB Director

Nov. 1, 2024 2 p.m. • 612 Conference Center Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology

Angela Patrick • Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology

Dr. Shelly Flagel, University of Michigan "Exploiting individual differences to identify the neural mechanisms underlying inhibitory control"

"Exploiting individual differences to identify the neural mechanisms underlying inhibitory control"
The Flagel lab studies the genetic, environmental and neurobiological factors that contribute to individual differences in reward learning and susceptibility to mental illness, including addiction. Specifically, they focus on the psychological mechanisms that underlie and influence appetitive Pavlovian learning and the neural circuitry involved in these processes.
Their ultimate goal is to identify novel pharmacological targets for the treatment of addiction and other mental illnesses.
The lab combines behavioral, pharmacological, molecular and chemogenetic tools to better understand the genetic, environmental, and neurobiological factors that contribute to an individual’s responsiveness to rewards and susceptibility to mental illness.
Examples of current research include:
Studying the role of the brain chemical dopamine
Understanding how neural circuitry systems called cortico-thalamo-striatal pathways influence appetitive Pavlovian learning
Describing how the intersection of the hypothalamus, the pituitary gland and the adrenal gland might contribute to individual differences in emotionality and response to stressful events.
https://medicine.umich.edu/dept/mni/shelly-b-flagel-phd


                        
                

Speaker

  • Shelly Flagel, Ph.D.

Nov. 7, 2024 11 a.m. • Charles Miller Auditorium, B102, CLSL

Julie Moore • MIP Seminar Committee

Dates and Deadlines