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Dr
University of Tokyo
Showing your local timezone
Schedule
Wednesday, June 30, 2021
2:40 AM Asia/Tokyo
Domain
NeuroscienceHost
IBRO-RIKEN CBS Summer Program
Duration
80 minutes
For many animals, the sense of olfaction plays a major role in controlling sexual behaviors. Olfaction helps animals to detect mates, discriminate their status, and ultimately, decide on their behavioral output such as courtship behavior or aggression. Specific pheromone cues and receptors have provided a useful model to study how sensory inputs are converted into certain behavioral outputs. With the aid of recent advances in tools to record and manipulate genetically defined neurons, our understanding of the neural basis of sexual and social behavior has expanded substantially. I will discuss the current understanding of the neural processing of sex pheromones and the neural circuitry which controls sexual and social behaviors and ultimately reproduction, by focusing on rodent studies, mainly in mice, and the vomeronasal sensory system.
Kazushige Touhara
Dr
University of Tokyo
neuro
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