All
Events
-
-
NextGen Epilepsy Seminars – Justin Botterill, PhD
Justin Botterill, PhD, a postdoc in Helen Scharfman's lab at Nathan Kline / NYU, will present his latest epilepsy-related research. This event is part of the NextGen Epilepsy Seminar Series which features postdocs and graduate students. This event is sponsored by the Epilepsy Research Center and the Department of Anatomy & Neurobiology.
Free -
Stress, Social Relationships, and Pathways to Mental and Physical Health
Dr. Doom will discuss findings using longitudinal data demonstrating associations between early unpredictability, harshness, and deprivation and later mental and physical health. She will discuss the understudied role of micronutrient deficiencies in understanding cognitive, emotional, behavioral pathways to later health. Finally, she will discuss work on social buffering suggesting that there may be developmental changes…
Free -
NextGen Epilepsy Seminars – Rosalia Paterno, PhD
Rosalia Paterno, PhD, a postdoc in Scott Baraban's lab at UCSF, will present her latest epilepsy-related research. This event is part of the NextGen Epilepsy Seminar Series which features postdocs and graduate students. This event is sponsored by the Epilepsy Research Center and the Department of Anatomy & Neurobiology.
Free -
-
NextGen Epilepsy Seminars – Joanna Mattis, MD, PhD
Joanna Mattis, MD, PhD, a Neurology Resident in Ethan Goldberg's lab at CHOP / UPenn, will present her latest epilepsy-related research. This event is part of the NextGen Epilepsy Seminar Series which features postdocs and graduate students. This event is sponsored by the Epilepsy Research Center and the Department of Anatomy & Neurobiology.
Free -
-
NextGen Epilepsy Seminars – Emily Ling-Lin Pai, MD, PhD
Emily Ling-Lin Pai, MD, PhD, a postdoc in John Rubenstein's lab at UCSF, will present her latest epilepsy-related research. This event is part of the NextGen Epilepsy Seminar Series which features postdocs and graduate students. This event is sponsored by the Epilepsy Research Center and the Department of Anatomy & Neurobiology.
Free -
Read aloud and meet the author/scientist
Theanne Griffith, Ph.D. is a neuroscientist and children’s book author who will read aloud from her book “The Magnificent Makers #2: Brain Trouble”. Sponsored by the Dana Foundation, Dr. Griffith will then talk about being a scientist and answer questions. Want to read along with Dr. Griffith? Click here to purchase your own copy.
Free -
SCYNA Virtual Symposium
The Southern California Youth Neuroscience Association(SCYNA) hosts its first ever Virtual Symposium. The Symposium will feature interesting and creative presentations by SCYNA members (high schoolers from SoCal) on various neuroscience topics.
Free -
4C the Future: Compassion
Join UCI Brain virtually for our inaugural UCI Brain Dialogue Series, 4C the Future. UCI faculty from across the UCI campus will discuss Compassion. Featured speakers for this event are: Nancy Guerra, Dean of the School of Social Ecology and Professor of Psychological Science Sherine Hamdy, Associate Professor of Anthropology Richard Matthew, Professor & Director of…
Free -
-
NextGen Epilepsy Seminars – Trina Basu, PhD
Trina Basu, PhD, a postdoc in Jamie Maguire's lab at Tufts University, will present her latest epilepsy-related research. This event is part of the NextGen Epilepsy Seminar Series which features postdocs and graduate students. This event is sponsored by the Epilepsy Research Center and the Department of Anatomy & Neurobiology.
Free -
Neuromatch Academy: Democratizing computational neuroscience education through interactive, intensive instruction
Abstract: Neuromatch Academy (NMA) was founded in spring 2020 in response to two catalysts: (1) the recognition that traditional intensive summer programs in computational neuroscience are expensive and exclusive, leaving out a large proportion of qualified and deserving trainee participants; and (2) the COVID-19 pandemic canceled these in-person summer schools anyway. We founded NMA with…
Free -
CNLM Virtual Colloquium with Kate M. Wassum, Ph.D.
Amygdala-cortical circuitry in reward learning and pursuit To make adaptive decisions we must cast ourselves into the future and consider the outcomes of our potential choices. This prospective consideration is informed by our memories. I will discuss our lab’s recent work investigating the neural circuits responsible for encoding, updating, and retrieving reward memories for use…
Free -
Sleep to feel, to think, and to remember
We spend nearly one-third of our lives asleep. Despite its universal nature and apparent necessity, why we sleep remains largely a mystery. Sleep to feel, to think, and to remember is a virtual panel discussion featuring three UCI experts studying how sleep affects our emotions and the way we think, and how stress impacts a…
Free
