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Your Future Self Will Thank You | Connectomics Part II

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Manage episode 358614194 series 2828281
Content provided by Paradromics Inc. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Paradromics Inc or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

We’re back with Part II of our two-part series on Connectomics!

In part one we speculated on the legal and ethical implications of emerging technologies in the connectomics field. In part two, we don our lab coats and take a deep dive into the latest research tools, from fixation protocols for the preservation of neural tissue, to multimodal imaging techniques, to the machine intelligence designed to interpret massive data sets and reconstruct the vast neural circuits that make up the connectome.

Our guests are:

  • Kenneth Hayworth, PhD, President and Co-Founder of the Brain Preservation Foundation, Senior Scientist at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Janelia Farm Research Campus (JFRC)
  • Robert McIntyre, CEO at Nectome
  • Jeremy Maitin-Shepard, PhD, Software Engineer–Connectomics at Google

In this episode, Ken and Robert from part one return to the pub, and we are also joined by Jeremy Maitin-Shepard, an engineer and researcher at Google, who shares insights into some of the machine intelligence modalities being used to decode previously uncharted neural networks. Check out Jeremy’s recent paper on BioRxiv, as well as his published work at Google.

If you missed part one, you can listen and explore the show notes here. Cheers!

Show Notes:

0:00 | Intro

1:03 | Kenneth Hayworth, PhD

1:12 | Robert McKintyre, CEO, Nectome

1:17 | Jeremy Maitin-Shepard, PhD

1:51 | Setting the record straight

3:09 | The nucleotide sequence of bacteriophage φX174

4:22 | Frozen Zoo at San Diego Zoo

12:01| Glutaraldehyde and reduction techniques for immunolabeling

17:39 | SWITCH Framework

19:14 | Population Responses in V1 Encode Different Figures by Response Amplitude

Enhanced mirror neuron network activity and effective connectivity during live interaction among female subjects

Permeabilization-free en bloc immunohistochemistry for correlative microscopy

19:57 | Synaptic Signaling in Learning and Memory

Structure and function of a neocortical synapse

Engineering a memory with LTD and LTP

Synapse-specific representation of the identity of overlapping memory engrams

20:28 | Ultrastructure of Dendritic Spines

Structure–stability–function relationships of dendritic spines

24:25 | Reconstructing the connectome

24:32 | Connectomics Research Team at Google

24:55 | Google x HHMI: Releasing the Drosophila Hemibrain Connectome

28:38 | Serial Block-Face Scanning Electron Microscopy

29:22 | Automated Serial Sections to Tape

29:45 | Mapping connections in mouse neocortex

30:59 | A connectome and analysis of the adult Drosophila central brain

32:14 | Expansion Microscopy

34:37 | The future of connectomics

45:13 | Contribution of apical and basal dendrites to orientation encoding in mouse V1 L2/3 pyramidal neurons

49:49 | Mice and rats achieve similar levels of performance in an adaptive decision-making task

Want More?

Follow Neurotech Pub on Twitter

Follow Paradromics on Twitter, LinkedIn, and Instagram

Follow Matt on LinkedIn and Twitter

  continue reading

18 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 358614194 series 2828281
Content provided by Paradromics Inc. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Paradromics Inc or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

We’re back with Part II of our two-part series on Connectomics!

In part one we speculated on the legal and ethical implications of emerging technologies in the connectomics field. In part two, we don our lab coats and take a deep dive into the latest research tools, from fixation protocols for the preservation of neural tissue, to multimodal imaging techniques, to the machine intelligence designed to interpret massive data sets and reconstruct the vast neural circuits that make up the connectome.

Our guests are:

  • Kenneth Hayworth, PhD, President and Co-Founder of the Brain Preservation Foundation, Senior Scientist at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Janelia Farm Research Campus (JFRC)
  • Robert McIntyre, CEO at Nectome
  • Jeremy Maitin-Shepard, PhD, Software Engineer–Connectomics at Google

In this episode, Ken and Robert from part one return to the pub, and we are also joined by Jeremy Maitin-Shepard, an engineer and researcher at Google, who shares insights into some of the machine intelligence modalities being used to decode previously uncharted neural networks. Check out Jeremy’s recent paper on BioRxiv, as well as his published work at Google.

If you missed part one, you can listen and explore the show notes here. Cheers!

Show Notes:

0:00 | Intro

1:03 | Kenneth Hayworth, PhD

1:12 | Robert McKintyre, CEO, Nectome

1:17 | Jeremy Maitin-Shepard, PhD

1:51 | Setting the record straight

3:09 | The nucleotide sequence of bacteriophage φX174

4:22 | Frozen Zoo at San Diego Zoo

12:01| Glutaraldehyde and reduction techniques for immunolabeling

17:39 | SWITCH Framework

19:14 | Population Responses in V1 Encode Different Figures by Response Amplitude

Enhanced mirror neuron network activity and effective connectivity during live interaction among female subjects

Permeabilization-free en bloc immunohistochemistry for correlative microscopy

19:57 | Synaptic Signaling in Learning and Memory

Structure and function of a neocortical synapse

Engineering a memory with LTD and LTP

Synapse-specific representation of the identity of overlapping memory engrams

20:28 | Ultrastructure of Dendritic Spines

Structure–stability–function relationships of dendritic spines

24:25 | Reconstructing the connectome

24:32 | Connectomics Research Team at Google

24:55 | Google x HHMI: Releasing the Drosophila Hemibrain Connectome

28:38 | Serial Block-Face Scanning Electron Microscopy

29:22 | Automated Serial Sections to Tape

29:45 | Mapping connections in mouse neocortex

30:59 | A connectome and analysis of the adult Drosophila central brain

32:14 | Expansion Microscopy

34:37 | The future of connectomics

45:13 | Contribution of apical and basal dendrites to orientation encoding in mouse V1 L2/3 pyramidal neurons

49:49 | Mice and rats achieve similar levels of performance in an adaptive decision-making task

Want More?

Follow Neurotech Pub on Twitter

Follow Paradromics on Twitter, LinkedIn, and Instagram

Follow Matt on LinkedIn and Twitter

  continue reading

18 episodes

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