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C'ERA UNA VOLTA UN NEURONE... STORIA DI UN GROVIGLIO CHIAMATO CERVELLO.
Venerdì 17 marzo
Partenza ore 20:00 - 21:00 - 22:00 (ultima corsa riservata agli under 30)
Con Federico Luzzati, NICO - Neuroscience Institute Cavalieri Ottolenghi e Dipartimento Scienze della Vita e Biologia dei Sistemi Università di Torino e Ilaria Stoppa, Associazione CentroScienza Onlus.
Gli organismi animali, come le meduse, i pesci, i bradipi o gli esseri umani, sono quasi tutti dotati di alcune cellule speciali: i neuroni. Queste cellule amano comunicare: sono connesse tra loro e si sono specializzate nel trasmettere ed elaborare gli stimoli interni ed esterni. Dalla loro comparsa, circa 600 milioni di anni fa, i neuroni sono diventati sempre più numerosi e in alcune specie hanno iniziato a raggrupparsi in intricatissimi grovigli di connessioni capaci di eseguire compiti sempre più complessi. Correre, saltare, percepire gli odori, o elaborare un'idea o un progetto: tutto passa attraverso l'intricata rete di neuroni che chiamiamo cervello. Ma come funziona un neurone? Scopriamolo viaggiando a bordo del tram della scienza tra esperimenti e inganni per mettere alla prova il nostro cervello!
The CARMEN, Rural Life Centre for mobilization and expression of neurons.
I'm hoping it means something less scary in the original Portuguese. This is where we had the conference (and potentially where I had my neurons realigned)
Kryptowährungen handeln und Bitcoin traden und Gewinne erzielen
bitcoin-generator.de/investieren-bitcoin-ethereum-kryptow...
#trading #daytrading #handel #crypto #forex #geld
More paintings by Corina Chirila on
www.facebook.com/artist.corina.chirila
desene-fluorescente.weebly.com/
This in vivo 2-photon image was created using viral vectors from the viral gene transfer core, a facility established in 2008 by the Picower Institute and the McGovern Institute to make viral vectors accessible to the MIT neuroscience community.
Image courtesy of Sam Clark, McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT
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.
J Neurophysiol. 1996 Sep;76(3):1904-23.
Electrotonic architecture of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons based on three-dimensional reconstructions.
Mainen ZF, Carnevale NT, Zador AM, Claiborne BJ, Brown TH.
J Neurophysiol. 1996 Sep;76(3):1904-23.
Electrotonic architecture of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons based on three-dimensional reconstructions.
Mainen ZF, Carnevale NT, Zador AM, Claiborne BJ, Brown TH.
J Neurophysiol. 1996 Sep;76(3):1904-23.
Electrotonic architecture of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons based on three-dimensional reconstructions.
Mainen ZF, Carnevale NT, Zador AM, Claiborne BJ, Brown TH.
J Neurophysiol. 1996 Sep;76(3):1904-23.
Electrotonic architecture of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons based on three-dimensional reconstructions.
Mainen ZF, Carnevale NT, Zador AM, Claiborne BJ, Brown TH.
© Alicia LEFEBVRE ADAGP PARIS 2021
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Site web: www.emotionsyn.com
Voir les classeurs d'album photo FlickR organisés: www.flickr.com/photos/emotionsyn/collections
Sculpture work by Roxy Pain
part of 17th Sydney Biennale Sydney
"In an interesting combination of his two primary ways of working, Roxy Paine uses both mechanical means and the innate logic of natural forms to create his "Dendroid" tree-like sculptures. Paine's meticulous research and observation of a variety of tree species help him to understand the "language" of how a tree grows, and from there he creates fictional tree species that grow to a logic of their own. Paine has said: "I've processed the idea of a tree and created a system for its form. I take this organic majestic being and break it down into components and rules. The branches are translated into pipe and rod.".[6] Employing the language that he has invented pertaining to each of these fictive species, Paine's trees are "grown" through a laborious process of welding together the cylindrical piping and rods of diminishing size."
Reference: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roxy_Paine
J Neurophysiol. 1996 Sep;76(3):1904-23.
Electrotonic architecture of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons based on three-dimensional reconstructions.
Mainen ZF, Carnevale NT, Zador AM, Claiborne BJ, Brown TH.
J Neurophysiol. 1996 Sep;76(3):1904-23.
Electrotonic architecture of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons based on three-dimensional reconstructions.
Mainen ZF, Carnevale NT, Zador AM, Claiborne BJ, Brown TH.
J Neurophysiol. 1996 Sep;76(3):1904-23.
Electrotonic architecture of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons based on three-dimensional reconstructions.
Mainen ZF, Carnevale NT, Zador AM, Claiborne BJ, Brown TH.
J Neurophysiol. 1996 Sep;76(3):1904-23.
Electrotonic architecture of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons based on three-dimensional reconstructions.
Mainen ZF, Carnevale NT, Zador AM, Claiborne BJ, Brown TH.
Intricate webs in a field at Forest 44 Conservation Area look like the intricate neuron connections of the brain in the early morning sunlight.
This in vivo 2-photon image was created using viral vectors from the viral gene transfer core, a facility established in 2008 by the Picower Institute and the McGovern Institute to make viral vectors accessible to the MIT neuroscience community.
Image courtesy of Sam Clark, McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT
Inside every adolescent brain, 86 billion neurons connect and collide to produce the most frustrating, chaotic and exhilarating changes that will ever happen to us.
#LYTMindYourHead
Lyceum Youth Theatre and Traverse Young Writers present Mind Your Head, a double bill of performances which examines the hot topic of mental wellbeing for young people today.
Each evening show will feature Brainstorm, exploring the complexities of the adolescent brain in a unique performance conceived by a playwright, a neuroscientist and partially devised by the LYT cast themselves.
Brainstorm will be paired with a selection of short scenes by the Traverse Young Writers who have responded to themes of the science and biology behind emotions, and nature verses nurture
What does happiness mean? Is it material or emotional? Controlled by circumstances or temperament?
Find out more at: lyceum.org.uk/whats-on/production/1061
Photography by Ryan Buchanan