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PRODID:-//Bordeaux Neurocampus - ECPv4.9.10//NONSGML v1.0//EN
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X-WR-CALNAME:Bordeaux Neurocampus
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/en/
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Bordeaux Neurocampus
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DTSTART:20221030T010000
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221219
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230619
DTSTAMP:20260405T174224
CREATED:20221215T174158Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230214T143012Z
UID:153788-1671408000-1687132799@www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr
SUMMARY:Exposition: Illusions
DESCRIPTION:Lieu : Cap Siences \n\n\n\nEt si le cerveau était un véritable terrain de jeu… Qu’est-ce qu’une illusion ? Comment et pourquoi sommes-nous trompés ? \n\n\n\n\nSi l’illusion naît de nos sens\, elle s’élabore dans le cerveau. Nous voyons\, entendons\, touchons « avec notre cerveau ». Une perception est rarement uni-sensorielle. Plusieurs sens se combinent pour produire une interprétation du monde qui nous entoure : c’est le rôle du cerveau de produire du sens. Il utilise le passé pour s’adapter au présent et dans de nombreux cas compenser le manque d’informations dont il dispose. \nLe cerveau Il tient compte de ce qu’il “sent”\, mais aussi de ce qu’il sait déjà\, de ce que nous avons vécu\, mémorisé. Ce qui nous rend bien des services au quotidien pour prendre des décisions et réagir rapidement ! Mais aussi sophistiqué soit-il\, cet outil peut cependant être trompé par certaines situations… \nCette exposition\, propose une approche interactive à la découverte de nos sens et de nos perceptions. Les manipulations\, des plus simples aux plus impressionnantes troublent les perceptions dans une expérience déroutante. \n\n\n\n\nLe cerveau devient alors un terrain de jeu : Alors\, prêts pour une nouvelle expérience de la réalité ? \n  \n\n\n
URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/en/event/exposition-illusions/
CATEGORIES:Events for all,not-calendar,Semaine du cerveau 2023
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230609T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230609T120000
DTSTAMP:20260405T174225
CREATED:20230603T075914Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230603T075932Z
UID:160035-1686304800-1686312000@www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr
SUMMARY:Rencontre ddPCR Bio-Rad
DESCRIPTION:Vendredi 9 juin 2023\, de 10h à 12h \nCGFB – Salle de conférence \n\nOrganisée par la Plateforme PUMA Transcriptome du Neurocentre Magendie \nL’expert Bio-Rad sera présent pour aborder différents sujets : \n\nLes avantages de la ddPCR.\nPrésentations des systèmes QX200\, QX600\, QX One\nDigital Assays: mutations\, CNV\, édition de génome\nPoint sur les différents types d’analyses du logiciel( ABS\, RED\, CNV\, GED )\nExemples d’applications\nSéance Questions/Réponses\n\nVous souhaitez en savoir plus ? \nInscrivez-vous maintenant ! \nContact\nSebastien_le-maitre@bio-rad.com  / 06 07 18 83 18 \nIl sera présent au Neurocentre Magendie jusqu’à 15h. \n  \n
URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/en/event/rencontre-ddpcr-bio-rad/
CATEGORIES:For scientists,home-event,Industrial seminar or booth
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230609T113000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230609T113000
DTSTAMP:20260405T174225
CREATED:20230123T103902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230321T140912Z
UID:154796-1686310200-1686310200@www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr
SUMMARY:Seminar - Manuel Valero
DESCRIPTION:Venue: Centre Broca \n\nManuel Valero\nManuel Valero\nPostdoctoral fellow in Buzsaki lab\nNYU Neuroscience Institute\, New York University\nhttps://valeroneuroscience.com/\nhttps://twitter.com/MValero87\n \nInvited by Mario Martin-Fernandez\nNeurocentre Magendie (Team: Herry) \nTitle\nThe role of inhibition in hippocampal coding \nSummary\nThe fundamental computation a single neuron performs is to integrate incoming excitatory and inhibitory inputs to decide whether to fire an action potential and feedback its activity into the network. Investigation of this synaptic computation requires access to the neuron subthreshold dynamics\, whose state-of-art methodologies have remained unaltered for decades and are unrealistic for cell assemblies and behaving animals.\nThese experiments disclosed a reciprocal interaction between inhibition and excitation along the place fields of CA1 and demonstrated that the same exact perturbation can bring about opposite responses during exploration and transient SPW-Rs. \nBiosketch\n\n I am especially interested in the neural interplay of excitatory and inhibitory activity in cortical networks and how these dynamics create neural representations and memories. My long–term goal is to uncover the precise mechanisms that permit the maintenance of a balanced\, prewired network\, while allowing for degrees of imbalance to generate the plasticity that leads to memory. During my PhD (2013–2017) in Menéndez de la Prida ́s Lab (CSIC\, Spain) I used a wide set of tools – single–cell recordings in freely–moving rodents\, simultaneous intracellular and extracellular recordings\, large–scale multi–site electrophysiology and optogenetic manipulations\n– to unveil the fundamental rules that govern cell recruitment during memory consolidation. I discovered the network motifs underlying the cell–selective firing during the hippocampal sharp– wave ripples\, and how deviations from balanced excitatory–inhibitory dynamics lead to (or rescue from) memory deficits. These results were published as two scientific articles (Nature Neuroscience [2015] and Neuron [2017]) and a review (Current Opinion of Biology [2018]) as the first author contributor. For my postdoctoral period (2018–2022) and funded by the EMBO and the HFSP I established my own research lines in the laboratory of György Buzsáki (NYU\, US) on high–resolution optogenetics and novels promotor–specific transgenic strategies. I described a unique population of inhibitory interneurons\, uniquely active during sleep down–states and able to gate memory consolidation (Nature Neuroscience [2021])\, and I created a method to probe the subthreshold dynamics of hundreds of cells in freely moving animals  optogenetically. With this method\, I demonstrated that place cells emerge by transient disinhibition\, a long–standing question in our field (Science [2022]\, as the first author and corresponding author; and Cell Reports [2022]). Over the course of my career\, I have published 26 articles\, including 7 as the first author and 3 as the corresponding author\, mentoring 7 PhD on the process.\n
URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/en/event/seminar-manuel-valero/
CATEGORIES:For scientists,home-event,Seminars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230609T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230609T140000
DTSTAMP:20260405T174225
CREATED:20230512T115240Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230601T083401Z
UID:159408-1686319200-1686319200@www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr
SUMMARY:Seminar - Hélène Vulser
DESCRIPTION:Venue: Centre Broca \n\nHélène Vulser\nDre Hélène Vulser\nMaître de Conférence – Praticien Hospitalier (MCU-PH)\nResponsable du Centre du Neurodéveloppement Adulte Service de Psychiatrie Adulte\nHôpital Pitié-Salpêtrière\, Paris \nInvited by Hervé Lemaître (GIN – IMN) \nTitle\nStructural and functional neuroanatomy of Autism Spectrum in women \nAbstract\nThe gender unbalance in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) – 4:1\, males to females – has led studies to focus mainly on males leaving one part of the population mostly unstudied. Explanations for such an imbalance have suggested a potential male bias resulting in females being historically under-recognized\, or alternatively\, that females harbor a protective effect making them less likely to develop autism. For example\, female could engage in “compensation” showing fewer or less severe symptoms. In this case\, studying autistic traits at a subclinical level could unreveal part of the behavioral aspect of ASD\, particularly in women. Autistic traits have been defined as restricted activities/stereotypical behaviors and deficits in interaction and social communication as in ASD but at a subclinical level. The degree of these autistic traits is also referred to as the broader autism phenotype that can also be distributed along a continuum in the general population.\nThe neuroimaging field has also been affected by this gender unbalance and only few studies has tackled the question of brain correlates of ASD in women and even less in the framework of broad autism phenotype. However\, structural and functional neuroanatomy studies in women with ASD are needed to uncover part of the heterogeneity due to gender within the neurobiology of ASD. Moreover\, exploring autistic traits in women could help to understand how subclinical level of ASD interact with these brain correlates and if they might be used to predict clinical outcome or to adapt intervention in another framework than a clear cut between ASD and neurotypical individuals. \nBiosketch\nI am an Associate Professor of Psychiatry\, and my work (in research\, clinic and teaching) is focused on autism in adults. I am in charge of a clinical unit specialized in the diagnosis and care of adults with autism and/or other neurodevelopmental disorders. I am also PI in the Control-Interoception-Attention Team of the Paris Brain Institute (ICM). I have a broad background in adult psychiatry\, with specific training and expertise in autism\, neurodevelopmental disorders\, depression and consultation-liaison psychiatry. During my PhD and my postdoctoral position\, I worked on structural and microstructural neuroimaging within the IMAGEN consortium\, an European\, multicenter and longitudinal study that combines neuropsychological characterization\, functional and structural neuroimaging and genome-wide association data in more than 2\,000 14-year old adolescents from the general population. As an Assistant Professor\, I focused on clinic and research in the field of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry and psychosomatic medicine. As an Associate Professor\, my future work aims to combine clinical and scientific research in the field of autism and neurodevelopmental disorder in adults. Notably\, one of my most important project is to study longitudinal brain changes associated with autistic traits during adolescence and young adulthood using IMAGEN data. \n
URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/en/event/seminar-helene-vulser/
CATEGORIES:For scientists,home-event,Impromptu seminar
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230609T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230610T181500
DTSTAMP:20260405T174225
CREATED:20230601T093322Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230606T120302Z
UID:159797-1686326400-1686420900@www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr
SUMMARY:Les Échappées inattendues du CNRS
DESCRIPTION:Lieu : Forum des Arts et de la Culture de la ville de Talence. \n\nLa première édition des Échappées inattendues en Nouvelle-Aquitaine se tiendra les 9 et 10 juin au Forum des Arts et de la Culture de la ville de Talence. Ce nouvel événement\, ludique et gratuit\, représente une véritable invitation à l’exploration et à la découverte à travers la rencontre avec des scientifiques. \nCette manifestation marque le lancement d’une programmation de médiation scientifique à l’échelle de la Nouvelle-Aquitaine\, pérenne et durable\, qui sera en parallèle déployée partout en France. \nVous aurez ainsi l’occasion d’assister à deux des formats inédits des Échappées Inattendues\, les micro-conférences et les conférences démo\, ainsi qu’à un village des arts et des sciences avec de stands présentant des ateliers ludiques et interactifs sur la place Alcala. \nDes personnels de Bordeaux Neurocampus seront présents : \n\nFlorian Pécune\, SANPSY : micro-conférence « Vivant et numérique\, au cœur de la santé de demain »\nCatherine Marneffe\, IINS (doctorante de Christophe Mulle) : micro-conférence « La mémoire sous toutes ses formes »\nMarc Auriacombe\, SANPSY : débat grand format « Addictions et plaisirs\, qu’est ce qui les différencient ? » (pour des scolaires le vendredi 9 juin)\nEtienne Herzog\, IINS : débat grand format « Addictions et plaisirs\, qu’est ce qui les différencient ? »\nSerge Ahmed \, INCIA : débat grand format « Addictions et plaisirs\, qu’est ce qui les différencient ? »\nJean-Louis Guillou\, INCIA : Cinémasciences Vice-Versa (pour des scolaires le jeudi 8 juin)\nRose-Marie Voiumba\, INCIA : Cinémasciences Vice-Versa\nAdrien Boissenin\, IMN : Stand « Oscillations cérébrales dans les tâches cognitives »\nNikolaos Vardalakis\, IMN : Stand « Oscillations cérébrales dans les tâches cognitives »\nMathias Imezgaren\, IMN : Stand « Oscillations cérébrales dans les tâches cognitives »\n\nEn savoir plus\nVoir le programme sur www.aquitaine.cnrs.fr/ \n
URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/en/event/les-echappees-inattendues/
CATEGORIES:Events for all,home-event
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