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Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a neurological disorder that affects 6 hundred thousand to more than 1 million people in the United States, or over 6 million worldwide, making it the second most prevalent brain disease behind Alzheimer’s. This disease presents differently in every individual but is typically marked by motor symptoms such as resting tremors,

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From behavioral studies on learning and memory to sleep-wakefulness, 2023 was a year full of researchers uncovering…

Melissa Martin

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Image: Data courtesy of Jones Parker lab – Northwestern University. Efforts to develop more effective drugs for treating…

Jonathan Zapata

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Pregnancy and childbirth are extraordinary experiences that profoundly change a mother’s life. But did you know that the…

Yasaman Farshchi

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In this post, we discuss a modern challenge of neuroscience: Data storage. We discuss the issue of current storage formats and propose a new DE FACTO standard: The HDF5 file. We hope to initiate an interesting debate on this important issue and are looking forward to your feedback. Any introductory class to Neuroscience will start

Jerome Lecoq

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An exploration of the complexities of defining neuronal identity and why function is its final arbiter Neuroscience Everywhere These are phenomenal times for neuroscience. Fueled by revolutionary technologies, neuroscience has caught the public’s attention like never before. From Barack Obama’s BRAIN initiative, to the investor buzz on Sand Hill Road, to this February’s issue of

Dr. Pushkar Joshi

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Despite formidable odds, this year was a good one for life science innovation. The double punch of the government-wide belt tightening, known as the sequester, and the two-week federal government shutdown deflated institutional budgets and sowed uncertainty among investors. But new and exciting products still made their way into the marketplace. And with more than

Inscopix

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Earlier this year, researchers at Stanford University for the first time recorded 1,000 neurons working together in a living brain for a month. The brain cells blinked like Christmas tree lights as a test mouse moved freely around its cage. They soon were able to pinpoint the mouse’s location just by watching its brain cells.

Inscopix

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The images appearing on the computer screen were almost too detailed and fast-moving to take in, Misha B. Ahrens remembers. He and colleague Philipp J. Keller were recording the activity of about 80,000 neurons in a live zebrafish brain, the first time something on this scale had been done. Cross-sectional pictures of the young fish’s

Inscopix

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Deciphering the Neural Circuit Basis of Brain Disease via In Vivo Imaging and Optogenetics OPEN TO PUBLIC At Neuroscience 2013 Inscopix is pleased to host an esteemed group of speakers sharing insights on recent developments in in vivo brain imaging and optogenetics that are together poised to enable breakthroughs in the understanding of brain diseases.

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