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Pheromone

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pheromone

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with pheromone across World Wide.
6 curated items4 Seminars2 ePosters
Updated about 4 years ago
6 items · pheromone
6 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Molecular, receptor, and neural bases for chemosensory-mediated sexual and social behavior in mice

Kazushige Touhara
University of Tokyo
Jun 28, 2021

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.

SeminarNeuroscience

Generating and personalizing social behavior

Lisa Stowers
Scripps Research
May 3, 2021

Dr. Stowers obtained her PhD at Harvard University and remained there to undertake the study of olfactory-mediated behavior with Catherine Dulac. During this time she completed experiments identifying vomeronasal organ neurons as sensors for mouse pheromones. In 2002 she began independent work at The Scripps Research Institute where she remains today. Her lab is leveraging the olfactory system to identify and study the information code that underlies emotion-linked innate behavior. She has been a Pew Scholar and a Senior Scholar in Neuroscience from the Ellison Medical Foundation.

SeminarNeuroscience

Leveraging olfaction to understand how the brain and the body generate social behavior

Lisa Stowers
Scripps research institute
Nov 29, 2020

Courtship behavior is an innate model for many types of brain computations including sensory detection, learning and memory, and internal state modulation. Despite the robustness of the behavior, we have little understanding of the underlying neural circuits and mechanisms. The Stowers’ lab is leveraging the ability of specialized olfactory cues, pheromones, to specifically activate and therefore identify and study courtship circuits in the mouse. We are interested in identifying general circuit principles (specific brain nodes and information flow) that are common to all individuals, in order to additionally study how experience, gender, age, and internal state modulate and personalize behavior. We are solving two parallel sensory to motor courtship circuits, that promote social vocal calling and scent marking, to study information processing of behavior as a complete unit instead of restricting focus to a single brain region. We expect comparing and contrasting the coding logic of two courtship motor behaviors will begin to shed light on general principles of how the brain senses context, weighs experience and responds to internal state to ultimately decide appropriate action.

ePoster

A potential role of larval Drosophila melanogaster cuticular pheromones in feeding and aggression behaviour

Sari Anschütz, Jens P. Weber, Caroline Murawski

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Role of ionotropic glutamate receptors in multimodal learning of pheromone locations

Shruti Dattatray Marathe, Meenakshi Pardasani, Nixon M. Abraham

FENS Forum 2024