World Wide relies on analytics signals to operate securely and keep research services available. Accept to continue, or leave the site.
Review the Privacy Policy for details about analytics processing.
Prof
NYU Neuroscience Institute, Langone Medical Center
Showing your local timezone
Schedule
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
12:00 PM Europe/Lisbon
Seminar location
No geocoded details are available for this content yet.
Recording provided by the organiser.
Format
Recorded Seminar
Recording
Available
Host
Champalimaud Colloquia
Seminar location
No geocoded details are available for this content yet.
Historically, research on the brain has been working its way in from the outside world, hoping that such systematic exploration will take us some day to the middle and on through the middle to the output. Ever since the time of Aristotle, philosophers and scientists have assumed that the brain (or, more precisely, the mind) is initially a blank slate filled up gradually with experience in an outside-in manner. An alternative, brain-centric view, the one I am promoting, is that self-organized brain networks induce a vast repertoire of preformed neuronal patterns. While interacting with the world, some of these initially ‘nonsensical’ patterns acquire behavioral significance or meaning. Thus, experience is primarily a process of matching preexisting neuronal dynamics to events in the world. I suggest that perpetually active, internal dynamic is the source of cognition, a neuronal operation disengaged from immediate senses.
Gyorgy Buzsaki
Prof
NYU Neuroscience Institute, Langone Medical Center
neuro
neuro
The development of the iPS cell technology has revolutionized our ability to study development and diseases in defined in vitro cell culture systems. The talk will focus on Rett Syndrome and discuss t
neuro
Pluripotent cells, including embryonic stem (ES) and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, are used to investigate the genetic and epigenetic underpinnings of human diseases such as Parkinson’s, Alzhe