View allAll Photos Tagged Neuron

In Naked Knotted Neurons, a group of protesters, some injured, some choking on tear gas, escape violent confrontation with police and other forces by staggering into a safe house they find in the midst of chaos. Strangers to one another, they soon discover they are from different worlds: all were involved in protests, but in different places and times. A trio of dieties, Fate, Chance and Destiny, have gathered them together to charge them with a task: to create a new Hero to solve the world’s most intractable, knotted problems. How to get this message across? Puppets, riddles, and audience participation reveal the secrets the protesters need to fulfill this task.

 

Following their run at the International Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland, the Penn Theatre Ensemble presented the company-devised piece Naked Knotted Neurons at Annenberg Center Live on September 4th and 5th, 2015.

 

theatre.sas.upenn.edu

 

In Naked Knotted Neurons, a group of protesters, some injured, some choking on tear gas, escape violent confrontation with police and other forces by staggering into a safe house they find in the midst of chaos. Strangers to one another, they soon discover they are from different worlds: all were involved in protests, but in different places and times. A trio of dieties, Fate, Chance and Destiny, have gathered them together to charge them with a task: to create a new Hero to solve the world’s most intractable, knotted problems. How to get this message across? Puppets, riddles, and audience participation reveal the secrets the protesters need to fulfill this task.

 

Following their run at the International Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland, the Penn Theatre Ensemble presented the company-devised piece Naked Knotted Neurons at Annenberg Center Live on September 4th and 5th, 2015.

 

theatre.sas.upenn.edu

 

In Naked Knotted Neurons, a group of protesters, some injured, some choking on tear gas, escape violent confrontation with police and other forces by staggering into a safe house they find in the midst of chaos. Strangers to one another, they soon discover they are from different worlds: all were involved in protests, but in different places and times. A trio of dieties, Fate, Chance and Destiny, have gathered them together to charge them with a task: to create a new Hero to solve the world’s most intractable, knotted problems. How to get this message across? Puppets, riddles, and audience participation reveal the secrets the protesters need to fulfill this task.

 

Following their run at the International Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland, the Penn Theatre Ensemble presented the company-devised piece Naked Knotted Neurons at Annenberg Center Live on September 4th and 5th, 2015.

 

theatre.sas.upenn.edu

 

Gero Misenböck gives a talk about optogenetics.

 

Strangely, this is the inorganic chemistry building, but those formulas on the blackboard are very organic.

In Naked Knotted Neurons, a group of protesters, some injured, some choking on tear gas, escape violent confrontation with police and other forces by staggering into a safe house they find in the midst of chaos. Strangers to one another, they soon discover they are from different worlds: all were involved in protests, but in different places and times. A trio of dieties, Fate, Chance and Destiny, have gathered them together to charge them with a task: to create a new Hero to solve the world’s most intractable, knotted problems. How to get this message across? Puppets, riddles, and audience participation reveal the secrets the protesters need to fulfill this task.

 

Following their run at the International Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland, the Penn Theatre Ensemble presented the company-devised piece Naked Knotted Neurons at Annenberg Center Live on September 4th and 5th, 2015.

 

theatre.sas.upenn.edu

 

In Naked Knotted Neurons, a group of protesters, some injured, some choking on tear gas, escape violent confrontation with police and other forces by staggering into a safe house they find in the midst of chaos. Strangers to one another, they soon discover they are from different worlds: all were involved in protests, but in different places and times. A trio of dieties, Fate, Chance and Destiny, have gathered them together to charge them with a task: to create a new Hero to solve the world’s most intractable, knotted problems. How to get this message across? Puppets, riddles, and audience participation reveal the secrets the protesters need to fulfill this task.

 

Following their run at the International Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland, the Penn Theatre Ensemble presented the company-devised piece Naked Knotted Neurons at Annenberg Center Live on September 4th and 5th, 2015.

 

theatre.sas.upenn.edu

 

In Naked Knotted Neurons, a group of protesters, some injured, some choking on tear gas, escape violent confrontation with police and other forces by staggering into a safe house they find in the midst of chaos. Strangers to one another, they soon discover they are from different worlds: all were involved in protests, but in different places and times. A trio of dieties, Fate, Chance and Destiny, have gathered them together to charge them with a task: to create a new Hero to solve the world’s most intractable, knotted problems. How to get this message across? Puppets, riddles, and audience participation reveal the secrets the protesters need to fulfill this task.

 

Following their run at the International Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland, the Penn Theatre Ensemble presented the company-devised piece Naked Knotted Neurons at Annenberg Center Live on September 4th and 5th, 2015.

 

theatre.sas.upenn.edu

 

CRISPR/Cas9 engineering was used in mouse embryonic stem cells to insert a GFP tag in frame with the motor-neuron-specific transcription factor HB9. These cells were differentiated into motor neurons. The resulting motor neuron nuclei are labeled with the GFP reporter (green) and counterstained with antibodies against the neuronal marker Tuj1 (red). Credit: T. Macfarlan, NICHD

In Naked Knotted Neurons, a group of protesters, some injured, some choking on tear gas, escape violent confrontation with police and other forces by staggering into a safe house they find in the midst of chaos. Strangers to one another, they soon discover they are from different worlds: all were involved in protests, but in different places and times. A trio of dieties, Fate, Chance and Destiny, have gathered them together to charge them with a task: to create a new Hero to solve the world’s most intractable, knotted problems. How to get this message across? Puppets, riddles, and audience participation reveal the secrets the protesters need to fulfill this task.

 

Following their run at the International Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland, the Penn Theatre Ensemble presented the company-devised piece Naked Knotted Neurons at Annenberg Center Live on September 4th and 5th, 2015.

 

theatre.sas.upenn.edu

 

(1)

Connectome

connectomes.org/

 

In their words:

"A connectome is a synapse-resolution mapping of connections between

all neurons in a model organism's brain. In other words, a

synapse-resolution circuit diagram of the brain. Current approaches to

mapping the connectomes of model organisms employ serial block face

scanning electron microscopy (SBF-SEM) and transmission electron

microscopy (TEM). The only connectome that has been mapped out to date

has been from the flatworm, C. elegans, which has only around 300

neurons."

 

(2)

ConnectomeViewer

www.connectomeviewer.org/

 

In their words:

"The field of Connectomics research benefits from recent advances in

structural neuroimaging technologies on all spatial scales. The need

for software tools to visualize and analyse the emerging data is

urgent. ... The Connectome Viewer application was developed to meet

the needs of basic and clinical neuroscientists, as well as complex

network scientists, providing an integrative, extensible platform to

visualize and analyze Connectomics data.With the Connectome File

Format, interlinking different datatypes such as networks, surface

data, and volumetric data is easy and might provide new ways of

analyzing and interacting with data."

 

In addition to the viewer, this site also provides quite a variety of

datasets

that can be used to test different features and functions.

 

(3)

Human Connectome Project

humanconnectome.org/

 

In their words:

"The HCP will map the human connectome as accurately as possible in a

large number of normal adults and will make this data freely available

to the scientific community using a powerful, user-friendly

informatics platform."

"Successful charting of the human connectome in normal adults will be

enormously informative. Even more importantly, it will pave the way

for studies that reveal how brain circuitry changes during development

and aging and how it differs in numerous neurological and psychiatric

disorders. In short, it will transform our understanding of the human

brain in health and disease."

 

(4)

BrainMaps

brainmaps.org/

 

In their words:

"Brain atlases have traditionally been one resolution and

non-interactive. The next-generation brain atlas is multiresolution,

highly interactive, and fully integrated with the latest research

literature. This is BrainMaps.org, a complete online brain atlas

founded on the principle that a brain atlas is a dynamic, interactive,

multiresolution research and didactic tool that facilitates brain

exploration and knowledge discovery."

 

As if that isn't enough, BrainMaps also has an API for

developers and and open source /

OpenGL-based 3D

viewer!

 

(5)

BrainMeta

brainmeta.com/

 

In their words:

"BrainMeta was established for the purpose of accelerating the

development of neuroscience through web-based initiatives, which

include the development, implementation and support of a wide range of

neuroinformatics tools, services, and databases."

 

(6)

Allen Institute for Brain Science: Brain Atlas

www.brain-map.org/

 

In their words:

"A growing collection of online public resources integrating extensive

gene expression and neuroanatomical data, complete with a novel suite

of search and viewing tools."

 

(7)

Brain Museum: Comparative Mammalian Brain Collections

www.brainmuseum.org/index.html

 

In their words:

"This web site provides browsers with images and information from one

of the world's largest collection of well-preserved, sectioned and

stained brains of mammals. Viewers can see and download photographs of

brains of over 100 different species of mammals (including humans)

representing over 20 Mammalian Orders."

 

(8)

MSU: Brain Biodiversity Bank

www.msu.edu/~brains/index.html

 

In their words:

"The Brain Biodiversity Bank refers to the repository of images of and

information about brain specimens contained in the collections

associated with the National Museum of Health and Medicine at the

Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington, DC. These

collections include, besides the Michigan State University Collection,

the Welker Collection from the University of Wisconsin, the

Yakovlev-Haleem Collection from Harvard University, the Meyer

Collection from the Johns Hopkins University, and the Huber-Crosby and

Crosby-Lauer Collections from the University of Michigan.

Our purpose here is to provide some examples of ways in which images

and information from the Collections, in digital format, can be used

in educational, research and commercial enterprises. Millions of

beautifully stained sections from hundreds of different brains,

assembled in many locations over the past century can be made

available for a broad variety of purposes."

 

Want more pics?

 

Wikipedia: List of neuroscience databases

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_neuroscience_databases

 

Want more neuro imaging software?

 

UCLA: Laboratory of Neuro-Imaging

www.loni.ucla.edu/

labelled via retrovirus/gfp

Hard at work making neurons

Wide ruled, 9 3/4in. x 7 1/2in., 100 Paged Notebook covered and spray painted lime green. Stenciled with a black neuron. Stencil is a one of a kind, hand drawn paper cut.

Drone européen Neuron.

Salon du Bourget 2011 - Paris Air Show 2011

These ones are lined up to form a synapse. Because I am that nerdy!

Infection of neurons (red) by the PRV α-herpesvirus (green) induces axonal swellings (arrows) that serve as exit sites for the virus to infect neighboring cells. (JCB 174(2) TOC2)

 

This image is available to the public to copy, distribute, or display under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

 

Reference: De Regge et al. (2006) J. Cell Biol. 174:267-275.

Published on: July 10, 2006.

Doi: 10.1083/jcb.200510156.

 

Read the full article at:

jcb.rupress.org/cgi/content/full/174/3/267.

Cortical Neuron culture. Photo taken by KG Pratt

EXPLORE, EXPERIENCE AND WONDER

 

Activities to stimulate, inspire and amuse your little grey cells....

 

Art and Science on the Brain

Wonder Street Fair 7-9 April 2013

Barbican Centre, London

  

Festival of Neuroscience - BNA 2013

A unique experience with outstanding speakers presenting the latest developments in research into the brain and CNS organised by British Neuroscience Association and supported by Wellcome Trust

You don't see trees and sky like this so much in the west.

Neuron connections in mouse and fly retinas have been mapped

Blocking a newly-discovered protein reduces damage from sunburn in mice

A compound found in burnt sugar can treat muscular dystrophy in fly models

A brain-to-brain interface allows mind control of a rat’s tail without any surgical implants

Hormone treatment in mice prevents the weak immune system that follows spinal injury

A new category of drug is shown to fight tuberculosis in mice

www.goalfinder.com/product.asp?productid=68

Animated Neuronal transmission : It is one of the most important function of the body. What we call our senses are impulses travelling from various parts of the body to brain. Unknow to us however there are billions of connections made to transfer info from internal organs to the brain. It is the intricate neuron cellular network that keeps our body alive. This neuronal transmission animation gives in-depth information about how our nervous system functions.

 

What is brain made up of?

What is the structure of neuron?

Axon and their function

How information transfers through neuron?

How do neurons, a biological entity, create an electric signal?

What is action potential?

Complete mechanism of action potential generation and transfer including Na - K interaction

How electric signal pass through one neuron to another neuron, as there is tiny gap between two neurons?

Complete mechanism of presynaptic terminal to postsynaptic membrane signal transfer

What are neurotransmitters?

(1)

Connectome

connectomes.org/

 

In their words:

"A connectome is a synapse-resolution mapping of connections between

all neurons in a model organism's brain. In other words, a

synapse-resolution circuit diagram of the brain. Current approaches to

mapping the connectomes of model organisms employ serial block face

scanning electron microscopy (SBF-SEM) and transmission electron

microscopy (TEM). The only connectome that has been mapped out to date

has been from the flatworm, C. elegans, which has only around 300

neurons."

 

(2)

ConnectomeViewer

www.connectomeviewer.org/

 

In their words:

"The field of Connectomics research benefits from recent advances in

structural neuroimaging technologies on all spatial scales. The need

for software tools to visualize and analyse the emerging data is

urgent. ... The Connectome Viewer application was developed to meet

the needs of basic and clinical neuroscientists, as well as complex

network scientists, providing an integrative, extensible platform to

visualize and analyze Connectomics data.With the Connectome File

Format, interlinking different datatypes such as networks, surface

data, and volumetric data is easy and might provide new ways of

analyzing and interacting with data."

 

In addition to the viewer, this site also provides quite a variety of

datasets

that can be used to test different features and functions.

 

(3)

Human Connectome Project

humanconnectome.org/

 

In their words:

"The HCP will map the human connectome as accurately as possible in a

large number of normal adults and will make this data freely available

to the scientific community using a powerful, user-friendly

informatics platform."

"Successful charting of the human connectome in normal adults will be

enormously informative. Even more importantly, it will pave the way

for studies that reveal how brain circuitry changes during development

and aging and how it differs in numerous neurological and psychiatric

disorders. In short, it will transform our understanding of the human

brain in health and disease."

 

(4)

BrainMaps

brainmaps.org/

 

In their words:

"Brain atlases have traditionally been one resolution and

non-interactive. The next-generation brain atlas is multiresolution,

highly interactive, and fully integrated with the latest research

literature. This is BrainMaps.org, a complete online brain atlas

founded on the principle that a brain atlas is a dynamic, interactive,

multiresolution research and didactic tool that facilitates brain

exploration and knowledge discovery."

 

As if that isn't enough, BrainMaps also has an API for

developers and and open source /

OpenGL-based 3D

viewer!

 

(5)

BrainMeta

brainmeta.com/

 

In their words:

"BrainMeta was established for the purpose of accelerating the

development of neuroscience through web-based initiatives, which

include the development, implementation and support of a wide range of

neuroinformatics tools, services, and databases."

 

(6)

Allen Institute for Brain Science: Brain Atlas

www.brain-map.org/

 

In their words:

"A growing collection of online public resources integrating extensive

gene expression and neuroanatomical data, complete with a novel suite

of search and viewing tools."

 

(7)

Brain Museum: Comparative Mammalian Brain Collections

www.brainmuseum.org/index.html

 

In their words:

"This web site provides browsers with images and information from one

of the world's largest collection of well-preserved, sectioned and

stained brains of mammals. Viewers can see and download photographs of

brains of over 100 different species of mammals (including humans)

representing over 20 Mammalian Orders."

 

(8)

MSU: Brain Biodiversity Bank

www.msu.edu/~brains/index.html

 

In their words:

"The Brain Biodiversity Bank refers to the repository of images of and

information about brain specimens contained in the collections

associated with the National Museum of Health and Medicine at the

Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington, DC. These

collections include, besides the Michigan State University Collection,

the Welker Collection from the University of Wisconsin, the

Yakovlev-Haleem Collection from Harvard University, the Meyer

Collection from the Johns Hopkins University, and the Huber-Crosby and

Crosby-Lauer Collections from the University of Michigan.

Our purpose here is to provide some examples of ways in which images

and information from the Collections, in digital format, can be used

in educational, research and commercial enterprises. Millions of

beautifully stained sections from hundreds of different brains,

assembled in many locations over the past century can be made

available for a broad variety of purposes."

 

Want more pics?

 

Wikipedia: List of neuroscience databases

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_neuroscience_databases

 

Want more neuro imaging software?

 

UCLA: Laboratory of Neuro-Imaging

www.loni.ucla.edu/

I thought that these looked rather like stained dendrites!

Excitatory pyramidal neuron of cortex highlighting structure of soma and apical dendrite, the leading branch that reaches from cell body to higher layers of cortex..

 

Render by Amy Sterling from reconstructions by Seung Lab, Princeton Neuroscience Institute using images acquired by The Allen Institute. Funded by IARPA MICrONS. Rendered in Cinema 4D using Otoy Octane GPU renderer.

Network of neurons in the brain cortex. © IMP

A motor neuron can die when nitrated HSP90 binds to P2x7. (Graphic courtesy of Oregon State University)

  

Maturation of presynaptic transmitter secretion machinery is a critical step in synaptogenesis. Here we report that a brief train of presynaptic action potentials rapidly converts early nonfunctional contacts between cultured hippocampal neurons into functional synapses by enhancing presynaptic glutamate release. The enhanced release was confirmed by a marked increase in the number of depolarization-induced FM4-64 puncta in the presynaptic axon. This rapid presynaptic maturation can be abolished by treatments that interfered with presynaptic BDNF and Cdc42 signaling or actin polymerization. Activation of Cdc42 by applying BDNF or bradykinin mimicked the effect of electrical activity in promoting synaptic maturation. Furthermore, activity-induced increase in presynaptic actin polymerization, as revealed by increased concentration of actin-YFP at axon boutons, was abolished by inhibiting BDNF and Cdc42 signaling. Thus, rapid presynaptic maturation induced by neuronal activity is mediated by presynaptic activation of the Cdc42 signaling pathway.

 

Neural stem cells must balance self renewal with differentiation into either neurons (red) or glial cells (blue and green). Nagao et al. show that this is coordinated by the protooncoprotein Myc and the tumor suppressor p19(ARF). (JCB 183(7) TOC2)

 

This image is available to the public to copy, distribute, or display under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

 

Reference: Nagao et al. (2008) J. Cell Biol. 183:1243-1257.

Published on: December 29, 2008.

Doi: 10.1083/jcb.200807130.

 

Read the full article at:

jcb.rupress.org/cgi/content/full/183/7/1243

 

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