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How Brain Circuits Function

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

How Brain Circuits Function in Health and Disease: Understanding Brain-wide Current Flow

Kanaka Rajan

PhD

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York

Schedule
Wednesday, April 14, 2021

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Wednesday, April 14, 2021

6:00 PM Europe/Berlin

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Host: BCCN Berlin lectures series

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BCCN Berlin lectures series

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70.00 minutes

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Abstract

Dr. Rajan and her lab design neural network models based on experimental data, and reverse-engineer them to figure out how brain circuits function in health and disease. They recently developed a powerful framework for tracing neural paths across multiple brain regions— called Current-Based Decomposition (CURBD). This new approach enables the computation of excitatory and inhibitory input currents that drive a given neuron, aiding in the discovery of how entire populations of neurons behave across multiple interacting brain regions. Dr. Rajan’s team has applied this method to studying the neural underpinnings of behavior. As an example, when CURBD was applied to data gathered from an animal model often used to study depression- and anxiety-like behaviors (i.e., learned helplessness) the underlying biology driving adaptive and maladaptive behaviors in the face of stress was revealed. With this framework Dr. Rajan's team probes for mechanisms at work across brain regions that support both healthy and disease states-- as well as identify key divergences from multiple different nervous systems, including zebrafish, mice, non-human primates, and humans.

Topics

Current-Based DecompositionCurrent-Based Decomposition (CURBD)adaptive behavioursbrain circuitscomputational neuroscienceexcitatory inputinhibitory inputlearned helplessnessmaladaptive behavioursneural network modelsneural paths

About the Speaker

Kanaka Rajan

PhD

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.mountsinai.org/profiles/kanaka-rajan

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