CAMRI:JournalClub: Difference between revisions

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Previous Speakers
Previous Speakers
Year: 2016 <br />
Year: 2016 <br />
9/8/16    '''NB: special day/time Thursday 4 - 5 p.m.  Brad Lega, UT Southwestern. Strategies for a cognitive brain machine interface: DARPA's Restoring Active Memory study and beyond''' <br />
9/8/16    '''Brad Lega, UT Southwestern. Strategies for a cognitive brain machine interface: DARPA's Restoring Active Memory study and beyond''' <br />
9/14/16  <br />
9/14/16  <br />
9/21/16  <br />
9/21/16  <br />

Revision as of 06:40, 30 December 2016

Brain picture
CAMRI



Wednesdays from 11 am - noon in the CAMRI Conference Room, Smith 104G (unless noted otherwise below)

CAMRI has a weekly CAMRI Neuroscience Seminar Series and Journal Club (CNJC). The Seminar Series features leaders in the field of human neuroscience discussing their latest research. The series is a mixture of physical and virtual seminars given over Skype. On weeks with no seminar series, there will be a journal club whose purpose is to discuss high impact, insightful articles from all areas of human neuroscience, especially functional and anatomical MRI. The format is an interactive, open forum with a primary presenter and the full participation of the audience. This journal club will provide a learning environment for the critical analysis of journal articles, presentation skills, and experimental design. It is affiliated with the Neuroscience Graduate Program of the Neuroscience Department and has a home page here: https://www.bcm.edu/departments/neuroscience/education/journalclubs/cnjc

Date/Name/Affiliation
1/4/17 Andreas Keil, University of Florida
1/11/17 Elia Formisano, University of Maastricht
1/18/17 Jonathan Winawer, New York University
1/25/17 Christopher Baker, National Institute of Mental Health Intramural Research Program
2/1/17 WCBR
2/8/17 Benjamin Tamber-Rosenau, University of Houston
2/15/17 Olivier Collignon, University of Louvain, University of Trento
2/22/17 Journal Club
3/1/17 Eli Merriam, NIH
3/8/17 Charles Schroeder, Columbia University
3/15/17 Spring Break
3/22/17 Bradley Voytek, University of California, San Diego
3/29/17 Julie Golomb, The Ohio State University
4/5/17 Marius Peelen, University of Trento
4/12/17 Christopher Honey, Johns Hopkins University
4/19/17 Marian Aly, Princeton University
4/26/17 Keith Schneider, University of Delaware
5/3/17 Catie Chang, NIH
5/10/17 Yale Cohen, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
5/17/17 John Serences, University of California, San Diego
5/24/17 IMRF

Summer Break

9/6/17 Tom Liu, University of California, San Diego
9/13/17 Brice Kuhl, University of Oregon
9/20/17 Bradford Mahon, University of Rochester
9/27/17
10/4/17 Avniel Ghuman, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
10/11/17
10/18/17
10/25/17 Kate Watkins, University of Oxford
11/1/17
11/8/17
11/15/17 SFN
11/22/17
11/29/17
12/6/17
Holiday Break


Previous Speakers Year: 2016
9/8/16 Brad Lega, UT Southwestern. Strategies for a cognitive brain machine interface: DARPA's Restoring Active Memory study and beyond
9/14/16
9/21/16
9/28/16 Dorian Pustina, University of Pennsylvania. The future of aphasia: from traditional lesion-to-symptom analyses to stacked multimodal predictions with structural and functional data.
10/5/16 Rice Neuroengineering Symposium
10/12/16 Journal Club: Fixing the stimulus-as-fixed-effect fallacy in task fMRI. Beauchamp Lab presenting.
10/19/16 No Meeting
10/26/16 Bart Krekelberg, Rutgers University. Transcranial Current Stimulation: Myths and Mechanisms.
11/2/16 Ione Fine, University of Washington. Auditory processing in individuals who are blind.
11/9/16 Niko Kriegeskorte, University of Cambridge. Testing complex brain-computational models to understand how the brain works.
11/16/16 SFN
11/23/16 Thanksgiving Week
11/30/16 Kyle Simmons, Laureate Institute for Brain Research. The Interoceptive Insula: From Visceral Sensation to Psychiatric Illness.
12/7/16 Katharina Von Kriegstein, Max Planck Institute and Humboldt University. Human communication: from cerebral cortex to sensory thalamus
12/9/16 Joana Loureiro, Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics. Structural and Functional Imaging of the Human Superior Colliculus at 9.4T