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Neurological Diseases

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neurological diseases

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with neurological diseases across World Wide.
13 curated items11 Seminars1 Position1 ePoster
Updated 2 days ago
13 items · neurological diseases
13 results
Position

Kerstin Ritter

Hertie Institute for AI in Brain Health, Medical Faculty of the University of Tübingen
Tübingen, Germany
Dec 5, 2025

The Department of Machine Learning for Clinical Neuroscience is currently recruiting PhD candidates and Postdocs. We develop advanced machine and deep learning models to analyze diverse clinical data, including neuroimaging, psychometric, clinical, smartphone, and omics datasets. While focusing on methodological challenges (explainability, robustness, multimodal data integration, causality etc.), the main goal is to enhance early diagnosis, predict disease progression, and personalize treatment for neurological and psychiatric diseases in diverse clinical settings. We offer an exciting and supportive environment with access to state-of-the-art compute facilities, mentoring and career advice through experienced faculty. Hertie AI closely collaborates with the world-class AI ecosystem in Tübingen (e.g. Cyber Valley, Cluster of Excellence “Machine Learning in Science”, Tübingen AI Center).

SeminarNeuroscience

Myelin Formation and Oligodendrocyte Biology in Epilepsy

Angelika Mühlebner
Universitair Medisch Centrum Utrecht
Feb 15, 2023

Epilepsy is one of the most common neurological diseases according to the World Health Organization (WHO) affecting around 70 million people worldwide [WHO]. Patients who suffer from epilepsy also suffer from a variety of neuro-psychiatric co-morbidities, which they can experience as crippling as the seizure condition itself. Adequate organization of cerebral white matter is utterly important for cognitive development. The failure of integration of neurologic function with cognition is reflected in neuro-psychiatric disease, such as autism spectrum disorder (ASD). However, in epilepsy we know little about the importance of white matter abnormalities in epilepsy-associated co-morbidities. Epilepsy surgery is an important therapy strategy in patients where conventional anti-epileptic drug treatment fails . On histology of the resected brain samples, malformations of cortical development (MCD) are common among the epilepsy surgery population, especially focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) and tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). Both pathologies are associated with constitutive activation of the mTOR pathway. Interestingly, some type of FCD is morphological similar to TSC cortical tubers including the abnormalities of the white matter. Hypomyelination with lack of myelin-producing cells, the oligodendrocytes, within the lesional area is a striking phenomenon. Impairment of the complex myelination process can have a major impact on brain function. In the worst case leading to distorted or interrupted neurotransmissions. It is still unclear whether the observed myelin pathology in epilepsy surgical specimens is primarily related to the underlying malformation process or is just a secondary phenomenon of recurrent epileptic seizures creating a toxic micro-environment which hampers myelin formation. Interestingly, mTORC1 has been implicated as key signal for myelination, thus, promoting the maturation of oligodendrocytes . These results, however, remain controversial. Regardless of the underlying pathophysiologic mechanism, alterations of myelin dynamics, depending on their severity, are known to be linked to various kinds of developmental disorders or neuropsychiatric manifestations.

SeminarNeuroscience

Myelin Formation and Oligodendrocyte Biology in Epilepsy

Angelika Mühlebner
Universitair Medisch Centrum Utrecht
Oct 18, 2022

Epilepsy is one of the most common neurological diseases according to the World Health Organization (WHO) affecting around 70 million people worldwide [WHO]. Patients who suffer from epilepsy also suffer from a variety of neuro-psychiatric co-morbidities, which they can experience as crippling as the seizure condition itself. Adequate organization of cerebral white matter is utterly important for cognitive development. The failure of integration of neurologic function with cognition is reflected in neuro-psychiatric disease, such as autism spectrum disorder (ASD). However, in epilepsy we know little about the importance of white matter abnormalities in epilepsy-associated co-morbidities. Epilepsy surgery is an important therapy strategy in patients where conventional anti-epileptic drug treatment fails . On histology of the resected brain samples, malformations of cortical development (MCD) are common among the epilepsy surgery population, especially focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) and tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). Both pathologies are associated with constitutive activation of the mTOR pathway. Interestingly, some type of FCD is morphological similar to TSC cortical tubers including the abnormalities of the white matter. Hypomyelination with lack of myelin-producing cells, the oligodendrocytes, within the lesional area is a striking phenomenon. Impairment of the complex myelination process can have a major impact on brain function. In the worst case leading to distorted or interrupted neurotransmissions. It is still unclear whether the observed myelin pathology in epilepsy surgical specimens is primarily related to the underlying malformation process or is just a secondary phenomenon of recurrent epileptic seizures creating a toxic micro-environment which hampers myelin formation. Interestingly, mTORC1 has been implicated as key signal for myelination, thus, promoting the maturation of oligodendrocytes . These results, however, remain controversial. Regardless of the underlying pathophysiologic mechanism, alterations of myelin dynamics, depending on their severity, are known to be linked to various kinds of developmental disorders or neuropsychiatric manifestations.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease and related disorders

Nicole Wolf
Emma Children’s Hospital, Amsterdam University Medical Centre, the Netherlands
Oct 25, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Speech as a biomarker in ataxia: What can it tell us and how should we use it?

Adam Vogel
University of Melbourne, Australia
Jul 5, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Update Metachromatic Leukodystrophy

Samuel Gröschel & Ingeborg Krägeloh-Mann
University Hospital Tübingen, Germany
Jun 14, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

MRI pattern recognition in leukodystrophies

Nicole Wolf
Emma Children’s Hospital, Amsterdam University Medical Centre, the Netherlands
Jun 7, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Benign hereditary choreas

Kathryn Peall
Cardiff University, UK
May 17, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Challenges in Frontotemporal Dementia: clinical, genetic and pathological heterogeneity

Harro Seelaar
Erasmus Medical Center Rotterdam, the Netherlands
Mar 22, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

Multiplexing and Demultiplexing with cerebral organoids for neurological diseases

Elaine Lim
University of Massachusetts Medical School
Dec 1, 2020
ePoster

Neuroprosthetic interventions for orthostatic hypotension in neurological diseases

Suje Amir, Remi Hudelle, Elaine Soriano, Lois Mahe, Nicolas Hankov, Leonie Asboth, Robin Demesmaeker, Viviana Aureli, Edouardo Martin-Moraud, Julien Bally, Quentin Barraud, Bernard Schneider, Erwan Bezard, Stephanie Lacour, Aaron Phillips, Jocelyne Bloch, Jordan Squair, Gregoire Courtine

FENS Forum 2024