Reminder: CSHL Vision Course Applications Due March 31st

23 views
Skip to first unread message

Farran Briggs

unread,
Mar 22, 2017, 4:49:21 AM3/22/17
to visio...@visionscience.com, systems-ne...@googlegroups.com, Andrew Huberman, Onkar Dhande, Lindsey Diane Salay, Farran Briggs
[Apologies for cross-postings]

**********************************************************
Greetings!

We are currently seeking applications for a Summer Vision Course: “Vision: A platform for linking circuits, perception and behavior”

Hosted by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

June 15 - 29, 2017

Application deadline: March 31, 2017

Course co-directed and organized by Andrew Huberman, Farran Briggs, and Onkar Dhande.

We have an amazing lineup of speakers for the 2017 course to add to an already terrific history of this course.

Information about the course, including speaker list, schedule, and application instructions, is available on the course website: 

https://meetings.cshl.edu/courses.aspx?course=C-VISION&year=17

Please note that actual costs per student will be offset by funds from NEI and additional sponsors. Course registration scholarships are available for US and international student attendees.

Please forward this email to students and postdocs who may be interested in the course.

Thank you!

Farran, Andy, and Onkar

Course description (from website):

The purpose of this course is to bring together students and faculty for in depth and high level discussions of modern approaches for probing how specific cell types and circuits give rise to defined categories of perception and action. It is also designed to address novel strategies aimed at overcoming diseases that compromise sensory function.

The visual system is the most widely studied sensory modality. Recently, three major shifts have occurred in the field of neuroscience. First, owing to the large array of genetic techniques available in mice and the relative ease of imaging and recording from the cortex of small rodents, the mouse visual system has become a premiere venue for attacking the fundamental unresolved question of how specific cells and circuits relate to visual performance at the receptive field and whole-animal level. Second, genetic and viral methods have evolved to the point where neurophysiologists can directly probe the role of defined circuits in species such as macaque monkeys, thus bridging the mechanism-cognition gap. Third, the field of visual neuroscience is rapidly paving the way for widespread clinical application of stem cell, gene therapy and prosthetic devices to restore sensory function in humans.

The time is ripe to build on the classic paradigms and discoveries of visual system structure, function and disease, in order to achieve a deep, mechanistic understanding of how receptive fields are organized and filter sensory information, how that information is handled at progressively higher levels of neural processing, and how different circuits can induce defined categories of percepts and behaviors in the healthy and diseased brain.


*************************************************
See official CSHL mailing below:
June 15 - 29, 2017
Applications due: March 31
Instructors
 
Farran Briggs, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth
Andrew Huberman, Stanford University 


Co-Instructor

Onkar Dhande, Stanford University

The purpose of this course is to bring together students and faculty for in-depth and high level discussions of modern approaches for probing how specific cell types and circuits give rise to defined categories of perception and action. It is also designed to address novel strategies aimed at overcoming diseases that compromise sensory function. 

The visual system is the most widely studied sensory modality. Recently, three major shifts have occurred in the field of neuroscience. First, owing to the large array of genetic techniques available in mice and the relative ease of imaging and recording from the cortex of small rodents, the mouse visual system has become a premiere venue for attacking the fundamental unresolved question of how specific cells and circuits relate to visual performance at the receptive field and whole-animal level. Second, genetic and viral methods have evolved to the point where neurophysiologists can directly probe the role of defined circuits in species such as macaque monkeys, thus bridging the mechanism-cognition gap. Third, the field of visual neuroscience is rapidly paving the way for widespread clinical application of stem cell, gene therapy and prosthetic devices to restore sensory function in humans. 

The time is ripe to build on the classic paradigms and discoveries of visual system structure, function and disease, in order to achieve a deep, mechanistic understanding of how receptive fields are organized and filter sensory information, how that information is handled at progressively higher levels of neural processing, and how different circuits can induce defined categories of percepts and behaviors in the healthy and diseased brain.

2017 Speakers

Felice Dunn, University of California, San Francisco
Botond Roska, Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research
Lynne Kiorpes, New York University
Jonathan Horton, University of California, San Francisco
Judith Hirsch, University of Southern California
Marty Usrey, University of California, Davis
Jude Mitchell, University of Rochester
Sonja Hofer, University of Basel
David Fitzpatrick, Max Planck Florida Institute
Tony Movshon, New York University
Joe Carroll, Medical College of Wisconsin 
Bevil Conway, Wellesley College
Doris Tsao, California Institute of Technology 
Dan Salzman, Columbia University
Anne Churchland, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 
Rich Krauzlis, National Institute of Health 
Tirin Moore, Stanford University 
Jack Gallant, University of California, Berkeley
Jackie Gottlieb, Columbia University 
Murray Sherman, University of Chicago 
Steven Becker, National Institute of Health 
Tom Greenwell, National Institute of Health
Neeraj Agarwal, National Institute of Health 

 
 
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Meetings & Courses | 1 Bungtown Road Cold Spring Harbor, 11724
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1 Bungtown Road, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11743

Farran Briggs, PhD
Assistant Professor, Physiology and Neurobiology
Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages