New PBS program: What’s your brain’s role in creating space and time?
https://youtu.be/OV9MnAZLmMQ New Program by PBS: Drawing from figures and comments by ourselves and others they give a thorough introduction to space and time in the brain!
https://youtu.be/OV9MnAZLmMQ New Program by PBS: Drawing from figures and comments by ourselves and others they give a thorough introduction to space and time in the brain!
Congratulations to Marisol for defending her PhD thesis on 2/21/2023! She now continues her journey to become a physician-scientist. Congratulations to Manu, who completed his postdoc and will have is own lab in Barcelona - you will be dearly missed here in NYC!
Anna Maslarova for receiving a two-year fellowship from the Deutsche Forschunggemeinschaft (Federal Republic of Germany) Noam Nitzan for receiving a two-year fellowship from the Swiss National Foundation and Christopher Lafferty for receiving a three-year Junior Fellowship in the Simons Society of Fellows (Simons Foundation, NY). Chris will join us in July 2023.
For 'time cells' in the brain, what matters is what happens in the moment. Listen to the 4 minutes news section on NPR on how the brain keeps track of time with an interview with György Buzsáki. https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2022/12/20/1139780745/brain-time-cells-memories
Neuroscientists have struggled for decades to fully understand how the brain takes in information from the outside world and makes near instantaneous decisions. Dr. György Buzsáki is the Biggs Professor of Neuroscience in the Department of Neuroscience and Physiology and professor in the Department of Neurology at NYU. He joins host Krys Boyd to discuss his research into the way the brain computes signals in order to better understand human decision making. [...]
Buzsáki, G. The Brain from Inside Out - In Chinese Is there a right way to study how the brain works? Following the empiricist’s tradition, the most common approach involves the study of neural reactions to stimuli presented by an experimenter. This ‘outside-in’ method fueled a generation of brain research and now must confront hidden assumptions about causation and concepts that may not hold neatly for systems that act and react. György [...]
Logarithmic nature of the brain In this video, Artem talks about the fundamental role of the lognormal distribution. First, he derives it through the Central Limit Theorem and then explores how it supports brain operations on many scales - from cells to perception. Our literature on lognormal distributions inspired the video.
Podcast by Quanta Magazine's Science Podcast Podcast available here.
Check the below link for more information: https://www.sfn.org/initiatives/awards/2021-awards-announcement-week
A preview in Neuron written by Liset de la Prida and Giorgio Ascoli, of our recently published CellExplorer paper. CellExplorer: A framework for visualizing and characterizing single neurons Peter C. Petersen, Joshua H. Siegle, Nicholas A. Steinmetz, Sara Mahallati, György Buzsáki. Neuron, September 2021. [PDF] [Link]