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X-WR-CALNAME:Bordeaux Neurocampus
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr
X-WR-CALDESC:Évènements pour Bordeaux Neurocampus
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TZID:Europe/Paris
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TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20200329T010000
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DTSTART:20201025T010000
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200229
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200307
DTSTAMP:20260427T032234
CREATED:20191115T140216Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191119T145546Z
UID:113020-1582934400-1583539199@www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr
SUMMARY:Neubias 2020
DESCRIPTION:Venues: \n– Centre Broca Nouvelle-Aquitaine \n– EINSERB – MATMECA \nOrganized by Florian Levet (IINS) and Fabrice Cordelières (BIC) \n\nNEUBIAS2020 is a new series of annual international conferences organized by NEUBIAS \nThe NEUBIAS conference is a forum to exchange the newest findings\, applications\, and cutting-edge developments in Bioimage Analysis\, machine learning\, data mining\, and storage. European Bioimage Analysts organize this event bringing together an international\, interdisciplinary community of about 250 leading scientists in the life and computer sciences. The 3-days Symposium reflects the need to foster the networking between image analysis Developers and their end-users. The interest and needs for image processing in life sciences are heavily growing\, a reality that is reflected by the success of earlier events of NEUBIAS in Lisbon (2017)\, Szeged (2018) and Luxembourg (2019). \nThe organizing committee is assembling a balanced program featuring both academic and industry presenters which will include image restoration\, storage & management\, 3D & 4D image analysis\, tools for high content analysis\, data mining\, machine learning approaches and open source developments. Aside from plenary talks and abstract presentations\, we will have dedicated “Call4Help” sessions to team up tool providers with life scientists facing roadblocks in their image analysis\, and two satellite « training schools » for « early career scientists » and « advanced bioimage analysts ». The NEUBIAS symposium will also feature the latest updates on open source software tools\, components\, and packages\, in plenary talks and during the  « Open Source Software Lounge » session which has been a great success in Lisbon and Szeged\, and where participants can meet developers and power users of a wide range of Open tools for bioimage analysis in hands-on demonstrations. \n\nInvited Speakers\nEmma Lundberg\, KTH Royal Institute of Technology (Sweden) \nSuliana Manley\, EPFL (Switzerland) \nKristin Branson\, HHMI Janelia Research Campus (USA) \nTammy Riklin Raviv\, Ben Gurion University (Israel) \nLaure Blanc-Féraud\, CNRS\, Sophia Antipolis (France) \nPete Bankhead\, Edinburgh University (UK) \nEdward Cohen\, Imperial College (UK) \nFabrice de Chaumont\, Institut Pasteur (France) \nMarcel Müller\, KU Leuven (Belgium) \nJuan Nuñez-Iglesias\, Monash University (Australia) \nSpecial Sessions\nBioImage Analyst Satellite Meeting (Tue pm\, March 3)\n \nC4H: Call for Help Session (Thu pm\, Mar 5)\n \nOSSL: Open-Source Software Lounge (Wed pm\, March 4)\n \nIndustry Contributions (Wed-Thu\, March 4-5) \nPanel Discussion (TBD) \nNEUBIAS Booths (permanent\, March 4-6) \nKey Information\nSYMPOSIUM: \nOral communications: abstracts submission deadline: Jan. 13th\, 2020. \nPoster & Open source Software Lounge abstracts deadline:  Feb. 1st\, 2020. \nRegistration closes on Feb. 14th\, 2020. \n\n>Registration Page HERE \n>Abstracts Submissions HERE \nMore details\neubias.org \n
URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/event/neubias-2020/
CATEGORIES:A la une,Symposiums
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20200306T113000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20200306T113000
DTSTAMP:20260427T032234
CREATED:20190318T110008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200316T133439Z
UID:104917-1583494200-1583494200@www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr
SUMMARY:Conférence mensuelle (PhD seminar series) - Paul A.M. Smeets
DESCRIPTION:Lieu : Centre Broca Nouvelle-Aquitaine \n \nPaul A.M. Smeets\nUniversity Medical Center Utrecht\nBrain Center Rudolf Magnus\nWageningen University\, Division of Human Nutrition and Health \nhttps://www.isi.uu.nl/people/paul-smeets/ \nhttps://www.vcard.wur.nl/Views/Profile/View.aspx?id=24791&ln=eng \n\nAbstract\nFood intake is regulated by the brain\, which integrates multiple neural and hormonal signals to maintain homeostasis and ensure sufficient energy intake. Our current food environment is abundant and undeniably facilitates overconsumption and subsequent weight gain. Consequently\, the global obesity epidemic is far from declining. Given the easy and wide availability of palatable energy-rich foods one can argue that most of our eating is non-homeostatic\, so not driven by depletion of energy reserves. This means that many other factors are driving our eating decisions and thereby energy and nutrient intake\, including but not limited to environmental factors such as food availability and portion size\, and personal characteristics like reward sensitivity and food-related cognitions. We all know we should eat healthy but apparently many don’t put this into practice. Much research has focussed on the determinants of unhealthy eating and obesity including putative ‘malfunction’ of the reward system. I will take an opposite approach and explore the (brain) characteristics of healthy food choice and weight loss success and how these may translate into strategies that promote healthy eating. \n\n  \nSelected publications\nGood practice in food-related neuroimaging\nSmeets\, Paul A M\, Dagher\, Alain\, Hare\, Todd A\, Kullmann\, Stephanie\, van der Laan\, Laura N\, Poldrack\, Russell A\, Preissl\, Hubert\, Small\, Dana\, Stice\, Eric\, Veldhuizen\, Maria G Mar 2019 in American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 109 (3)\, p. 491-503 \nDevelopment and body mass inversely affect children’s brain activation in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex during food choice\nI.Family Consortium Nov 2019 in NeuroImage 201 \nConsidering healthiness promotes healthier choices but modulates medial prefrontal cortex differently in children compared with adults\nvan Meer\, F\, van der Laan\, LN\, Viergever\, MA\, Adan\, Roger\, Smeets\, PAM\, On behalf of the I.Family Consortium Oct 2017 in NeuroImage 159 p. 325-333 \nHealth interest modulates brain reward responses to a perceived low-caloric beverage in females\nRijn\, Inge van\, Wegman\, Joost\, Aarts\, Esther\, de Graaf\, Cees\, Smeets\, Paul A M Jan 2017 in Health Psychology 36 (1)\, p. 65-72 \nDevelopmental differences in the brain response to unhealthy food cues: An fMRI study of children and adults\nvan Meer\, Floor\, van der Laan\, Laura N\, Charbonnier\, Lisette\, Viergever\, Max A\, Adan\, Roger Ah\, Smeets\, Paul Am\, I.Family Consortium Nov 2016 in American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 104 (6)\, p. 1515-1522 \nSweet lies: neural\, visual\, and behavioral measures reveal a lack of self-control conflict during food choice in weight-concerned women\nvan der Laan\, L.N.\, de Ridder\, D.T.D.\, Charbonnier\, L.\, Viergever\, M.A.\, Smeets\, P.A.M. 2014 in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience [E] 8 p. 184 \n\n  \nInvité par Bordeaux Neurocampus et la NBA\n \n
URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/event/conference-mensuelle-phd-seminar-series-paul-a-m-smeets/
CATEGORIES:A la une,Conférences mensuelles,Pour les scientifiques
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