Lectures are open to everyone.
Venue: CARF
Program
September 30 – 11:00am Alexander Flügel (University Medical Center Göttingen, Germany)
Intravital 2-photon microscopy of CNS autoimmunity.
October 1 – 9:00am Anna-Sophia Wahl (LMU Munich, Germany)
High-resolution 2photon imaging in-vivo to unveil key principles of neuronal repair.
October 1 – 11:00am Dmitri Rusakov (University College, UK)
Principles and neuroscience applications of time-resolved fluorescence microscopy.
October 2 – 9:00am Florian Engert (Havard University, USA)
Dissection of a zebrafish integrator circuit through correlated light and electron microscopy.
October 2 – 11:00am Moritz Helmstaedter (MPI for Brain Research, Germany)
Cerebral Cortex Connectomics.
October 5 – 11:00am Jan Huisken (Georg-August University Göttingen, Germany)
Flamingo: Fast and gentle volumetric imaging inside and outside the optics lab.
October 10 – 9:00am Christophe Zimmer (Institut Pasteur, France)
Deep learning: principles and applications to biomedical imaging.
October 12 – 9:00am Francesca Odoardi (Georg-August University Göttingen, Germany)
Intravital imaging in neuroimmunology: limitations and challenges.
October 14 – 9:00am Johann Danzl (Institute of Science and Technology Austria, Austria)
Reconstructing brain tissue with light microscopy.
October 15 – 9:00am Laurent Groc (Bordeaux University, France)
Using single molecule imaging to unveil membrane protein organization and extracellular space in the brain.
October 15 – 11:00am Hans-Ulrich Dodt (Medical University of Vienna, Austria)
From mice to man – new results of ultramicroscopy of cleared sample.
October 17 – 9:00am Valentin Närgel (Bordeaux University, France)
STED imaging of living brain microstructures.