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Restoration

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restoration

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with restoration across World Wide.
30 curated items19 Seminars9 ePosters2 Positions
Updated 2 days ago
30 items · restoration
30 results
Position

Radu Timofte

Center for Artificial Intelligence and Data Science (CAIDAS), University of Wurzburg
University of Wurzburg, Germany
Dec 5, 2025

University of Wurzburg, the newly established Center for Artificial Intelligence and Data Science (CAIDAS) has two Faculty openings: (1) Applied Super-Resolution Professorship (Full W3 or Associate W2 with tenure track W3). Possible research areas are: super-resolution, inverse problems, restoration, spectral imaging, machine learning for microscopy/telescopy, machine learning for photogrammetry. (2) Digital Media Processing Professorship (Junior W1 with tenure track W2). Possible research areas are: inverse problems, super-resolution, restoration, computational photography, compression, mobile/edge AI, Augmented/Mixed Reality, machine learning for photogrammetry.

Position

Radu Timofte

Center for Artificial Intelligence and Data Science (CAIDAS), University of Wurzburg
University of Wurzburg, Germany
Dec 5, 2025

At the newly established Center for Artificial Intelligence and Data Science (CAIDAS) from University of Wurzburg, Germany, we have two Faculty openings. The salaries and the packages are competitive. (1) Applied Super-Resolution Professorship (Full W3 or Associate W2 with tenure track W3). Possible research areas are: super-resolution, inverse problems, restoration, spectral imaging, machine learning for microscopy/telescopy, machine learning for photogrammetry. (2) Digital Media Processing Professorship (Junior W1 with tenure track W2). Possible research areas are: inverse problems, super-resolution, restoration, computational photography, compression, mobile/edge AI, Augmented/Mixed Reality, machine learning for photogrammetry.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Restoring Sight to the Blind: Effects of Structural and Functional Plasticity

Noelle Stiles
Rutgers University
May 21, 2025

Visual restoration after decades of blindness is now becoming possible by means of retinal and cortical prostheses, as well as emerging stem cell and gene therapeutic approaches. After restoring visual perception, however, a key question remains. Are there optimal means and methods for retraining the visual cortex to process visual inputs, and for learning or relearning to “see”? Up to this point, it has been largely assumed that if the sensory loss is visual, then the rehabilitation focus should also be primarily visual. However, the other senses play a key role in visual rehabilitation due to the plastic repurposing of visual cortex during blindness by audition and somatosensation, and also to the reintegration of restored vision with the other senses. I will present multisensory neuroimaging results, cortical thickness changes, as well as behavioral outcomes for patients with Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP), which causes blindness by destroying photoreceptors in the retina. These patients have had their vision partially restored by the implantation of a retinal prosthesis, which electrically stimulates still viable retinal ganglion cells in the eye. Our multisensory and structural neuroimaging and behavioral results suggest a new, holistic concept of visual rehabilitation that leverages rather than neglects audition, somatosensation, and other sensory modalities.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Vision Unveiled: Understanding Face Perception in Children Treated for Congenital Blindness

Sharon Gilad-Gutnick
MIT
May 1, 2024
SeminarNeuroscience

Restoring function in advanced disease with photoreceptor cell replacement therapy

Rachael Pearson
King's College London
Jun 12, 2023
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Genetic-based brain machine interfaces for visual restoration

Serge Picaud
Institute Vision Paris
Apr 12, 2022

Visual restoration is certainly the greatest challenge for brain-machine interfaces with the high pixel number and high refreshing rate. In the recent year, we brought retinal prostheses and optogenetic therapy up to successful clinical trials. Concerning visual restoration at the cortical level, prostheses have shown efficacy for limited periods of time and limited pixel numbers. We are investigating the potential of sonogenetics to develop a non-contact brain machine interface allowing long-lasting activation of the visual cortex. The presentation will introduce our genetic-based brain machine interfaces for visual restoration at the retinal and cortical levels.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Mutation targeted gene therapy approaches to alter rod degeneration and retain cones

Maureen McCall
University of Louisville
Mar 27, 2022

My research uses electrophysiological techniques to evaluate normal retinal function, dysfunction caused by blinding retinal diseases and the restoration of function using a variety of therapeutic strategies. We can use our understanding or normal retinal function and disease-related changes to construct optimal therapeutic strategies and evaluate how they ameliorate the effects of disease. Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a family of blinding eye diseases caused by photoreceptor degeneration. The absence of the cells that for this primary signal leads to blindness. My interest in RP involves the evaluation of therapies to restore vision: replacing degenerated photoreceptors either with: (1) new stem or other embryonic cells, manipulated to become photoreceptors or (2) prosthetics devices that replace the photoreceptor signal with an electronic signal to light. Glaucoma is caused by increased intraocular pressure and leads to ganglion cell death, which eliminates the link between the retinal output and central visual processing. We are parsing out of the effects of increased intraocular pressure and aging on ganglion cells. Congenital Stationary Night Blindness (CSNB) is a family of diseases in which signaling is eliminated between rod photoreceptors and their postsynaptic targets, rod bipolar cells. This deafferents the retinal circuit that is responsible for vision under dim lighting. My interest in CSNB involves understanding the basic interplay between excitation and inhibition in the retinal circuit and its normal development. Because of the targeted nature of this disease, we are hopeful that a gene therapy approach can be developed to restore night vision. My work utilizes rodent disease models whose mutations mimic those found in human patients. While molecular manipulation of rodents is a fairly common approach, we have recently developed a mutant NIH miniature swine model of a common form of autosomal dominant RP (Pro23His rhodopsin mutation) in collaboration with the National Swine Resource Research Center at University of Missouri. More genetically modified mini-swine models are in the pipeline to examine other retinal diseases.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Decoding finger movements from human posterior parietal cortex

Charles Guan
California Institute of Technology
Dec 1, 2021

Restoring hand function is a top priority for individuals with tetraplegia. This challenge motivates considerable research on brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), which bypass damaged neural pathways to control paralyzed or prosthetic limbs. Here, we demonstrate the BCI control of a prosthetic hand using intracortical recordings from the posterior parietal cortex (PPC). As part of an ongoing clinical trial, two participants with cervical spinal cord injury were each implanted with a 96-channel array in the left PPC. Across four sessions each, we recorded neural activity while they attempted to press individual fingers of the contralateral (right) hand. Single neurons modulated selectively for different finger movements. Offline, we accurately classified finger movements from neural firing rates using linear discriminant analysis (LDA) with cross-validation (accuracy = 90%; chance = 17%). Finally, the participants used the neural classifier online to control all five fingers of a BCI hand. Online control accuracy (86%; chance = 17%) exceeded previous state-of-the-art finger BCIs. Furthermore, offline, we could classify both flexion and extension of the right fingers, as well as flexion of all ten fingers. Our results indicate that neural recordings from PPC can be used to control prosthetic fingers, which may help contribute to a hand restoration strategy for people with tetraplegia.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Gene therapy for Optic Neuropathies

José-Alain Sahel
University of Pittsburgh
Jul 26, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Assessing and improving vision restoration using ex vivo retina

Günther Zeck
EMCE Institute, TU Wien (Vienna University of Technology)
Jun 21, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Multisensory development and the role of visual experience

Brigitte Röder
University of Hamburg
Jun 16, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Visual restoration from prosthesis to optogenetic therapy

Serge Picaud
Institut de la Vision
Jun 7, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

Photovoltaic Restoration of Sight in Age-related Macular Degeneration

Daniel Palanker
Department of Ophthalmology, School of Medicine, Stanford University / Hansen Experimental Physics Laboratory (HEPL), ​Stanford University
Jun 1, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

On the acquisition of visual functions following early-onset and prolonged visual deprivation

Udi Zohary
Hebrew University
Apr 12, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

New Strategies and Approaches to Tackle and Understand Neurological Disorder

Mauro Costa-Mattioli
The Memory & Brain Research Center (MBRC), Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA
Mar 17, 2021

Broadly, the Mauro Costa-Mattioli laboratory (The MCM Lab) encompasses two complementary lines of research. The first one, more traditional but very important, aims at unraveling the molecular mechanisms underlying memory formation (e.g., using state-of-the-art molecular and cell-specific genetic approaches). Learning and memory disorders can strike the brain during development (e.g., Autism Spectrum Disorders and Down Syndrome), as well as during adulthood (e.g., Alzheimer’s disease). We are interested in understanding the specific circuits and molecular pathways that are primarily targeted in these disorders and how they can be restored. To tackle these questions, we use a multidisciplinary, convergent and cross-species approach that combines mouse and fly genetics, molecular biology, electrophysiology, stem cell biology, optogenetics and behavioral techniques. The second line of research, more recent and relatively unexplored, is focused on understanding how gut microbes control CNS driven-behavior and brain function. Our recent discoveries, that microbes in the gut could modulate brain function and behavior in a very powerful way, have added a whole new dimension to the classic view of how complex behaviors are controlled. The unexpected findings have opened new avenues of study for us and are currently driving my lab to answer a host of new and very interesting questions: - What are the gut microbes (and metabolites) that regulate CNS-driven behaviors? Would it be possible to develop an unbiased screening method to identify specific microbes that regulate different behaviors? - If this is the case, can we identify how members of the gut microbiome (and their metabolites) mechanistically influence brain function? - What is the communication channel between the gut microbiota and the brain? Do different gut microbes use different ways to interact with the brain? - Could disruption of the gut microbial ecology cause neurodevelopmental dysfunction? If so, what is the impact of disruption in young and adult animals? - More importantly, could specific restoration of selected bacterial strains (new generation probiotics) represent a novel therapeutic approach for the targeted treatment of neurodevelopmental disorders? - Finally, can we develop microbiota-directed therapeutic foods to repair brain dysfunction in a variety of neurological disorders?

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The thalamus that speaks to the cortex: spontaneous activity in the developing brain

Guillermina Lopez Bendito
Instituto de Neurociencias, Alicante (Spain)
Jun 21, 2020

Our research team runs several related projects studying the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in the development of axonal connections in the brain. In particular, our aim is to uncover the principles underlying thalamocortical axonal wiring, maintenance and ultimately the rewiring of connections, through an integrated and innovative experimental programme. The development of the thalamocortical wiring requires a precise topographical sorting of its connections. Each thalamic nucleus receives specific sensory information from the environment and projects topographically to its corresponding cortical. A second level of organization is achieved within each area, where thalamocortical connections display an intra-areal topographical organization, allowing the generation of accurate spatial representations within each cortical area. Therefore, the level of organization and specificity of the thalamocortical projections is much more complex than other projection systems in the CNS. The central hypothesis of our laboratory is that thalamocortical input influences and maintains the functional architecture of the sensory cortices. We also believe that rewiring and plasticity events can be triggered by activity-dependent mechanisms in the thalamus. Three major questions are been focused in the laboratory: i) the role of spontaneous patterns of activity in thalamocortical wiring and cortical development, ii) the role of the thalamus and its connectivity in the neuroplastic cortical changes following sensory deprivation, and iii) reprogramming thalamic cells for sensory circuit restoration. Within these projects we are using several experimental programmes, these include: optical imaging, manipulation of gene expression in vivo, cell and molecular biology, biochemistry, cell culture, sensory deprivation paradigms and electrophysiology. The results derived from our investigations will contribute to our understating of how reprogramming of cortical wiring takes place following brain damage and how cortical structure is maintained.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Toward a High-fidelity Artificial Retina for Vision Restoration

E.J. Chichilnisky
Stanford University
Jun 16, 2020

Electronic interfaces to the retina represent an exciting development in science, engineering, and medicine – an opportunity to exploit our knowledge of neural circuitry and function to restore or even enhance vision. However, although existing devices demonstrate proof of principle in treating incurable blindness, they produce limited visual function. Some of the reasons for this can be understood based on the precise and specific neural circuitry that mediates visual signaling in the retina. Consideration of this circuitry suggests that future devices may need to operate at single-cell, single-spike resolution in order to mediate naturalistic visual function. I will show large-scale multi-electrode recording and stimulation data from the primate retina indicating that, in some cases, such resolution is possible. I will also discuss cases in which it fails, and propose that we can improve artificial vision in such conditions by incorporating our knowledge of the visual system in bi-directional devices that adapt to the host neural circuitry. Finally, I will introduce the Stanford Artificial Retina Project, aimed at developing a retinal implant that more faithfully reproduces the neural code of the retina, and briefly discuss the implications for scientific investigation and for other neural interfaces of the future.

ePoster

Advancing optogenetic hearing restoration through cross-modal optimization

Anna Vavakou, Bettina Wollf, Kathrin Kusch, Thomas Mager, Patrick Ruther, Alexander Ecker, Tobias Moser

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

CCL5 promotes neuronal restoration after brain injury

Szu-Yi Chou, Man-Hau Ho, Barry Hoffer

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Dissecting the requirements for biological repair and restoration of walking following increasingly severe spinal cord injuries at different timepoints

Alexandra de Coucy, Jordan Squair, Matthieu Gautier, Michael Skinnider, Viviana Aureli, Achilleas Laskaratos, Quentin Barraud, Alan Teo, Jocelyne Bloch, Bernard Schneider, Zhigang He, Michael Sofroniew, Gregoire Courtine, Mark Anderson

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Evaluation of optogenetic gene therapy for hearing restoration in in vivo rodent models of sensorineural hearing loss

Victoria Hunniford, Maria Zerche, Bettina Wolf, Kathrin Kusch, Thomas Mager, Tobias Moser

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Exploring the phenotypic impact of constitutive or late restoration of Nav1.1 in GABAergic neurons in a reversible mouse model of Dravet syndrome

Martina Mainardi, Claudia Di Berardino, Vania Broccoli, Gaia Colasante

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

REST as a target for vision restoration

Dmytro Shmal, Giulia Mantero, Lorenzo Ciano, Giulia Tarricone, Thomas Floss, José Fernando Maya-Vetencourt, Fabio Benfenati

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Sex-dependent effects of voluntary physical exercise on object recognition memory restoration after traumatic brain injury in middle-aged rats

David Costa, Meritxell Torras-Garcia, Odette Estrella, Isabel Portell-Cortés, Gemma Manich, Beatriz Almolda, Berta González, Margalida Coll-Andreu

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Sonogenetics: From the mechano-sensitive channel to brain stimulation for visual restoration

Erwan Dessailly, Ignacio Alcala, Matthieu Provencal, Audrey Leong, Rafik Arab, Pierre Pouget, Fabrice Arcizet, Serge Picaud

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Unveiling the potential of HBK-15 as a dual-action drug candidate for mood and cognition restoration in mouse depression model

Kinga Sałaciak, Klaudia Lustyk, Karolina Pytka

FENS Forum 2024