Center for Biophysics and Quantitative Biology Master Calendar
86 matches found
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"Evaluating and working along environmental gradients to develop frameworks for understanding nuisance rodent ecology" Danielle Lee, PhD Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, Assistant Professor of Biology
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This workshop will examine the rise of workplace bullying and its’ association with blame, privilege, and victimization.
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Agnieszka Lewandowska, Senior Research Scientist, Chemistry
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"Lessons on Parenting from Poison Frogs" Dr. Eva Fischer Assistant Professor, Ecology, Evolution and Behavior
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Professor, Department of Clinical Biochemistry and Medicine
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Brian Cunningham, PhD University of Illinois; Intel Alumni Endowed Chair, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering; Director of the Center for Genomic Diagnostics "Digital Resolution Liquid Biopsy at the Point of Care"
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Vascular changes in the brain can impact the development and course of depression in older adults. This seminar will summarize the neurobiological factors that place Black older adults at risk for vascular depression, which is a more disabling and treatment resistant subtype of depression.
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Title: “Targeted agents, new and old. A story of epigenetic-mediated resistance and development of a holistic RNA delivery vehicle”
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“New generations transforming the food culture” Dina Fernandez, Global Director, Protein Nutrition Solutions, Archer Daniels Midland Company
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Join us for the Sylvia M. Stoesser Lecture in Chemistry with Dr. Regina Easley for her lecture: Journeys in Chemical Oceanography and Metrology.
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Assistant Professor, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics
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Learn how the analysis of cancers in pet dogs and cats can help identify promising new anticancer drugs for humans. Dr. Timothy Fan, a veterinary oncologist, and cancer researcher, will walk us through the work being done at the Comparative Oncology Research Laboratory on a subject that has far-reaching implications for the human and animal worlds.
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Join us for a half-day workshop to explore the development of cross-disciplinary interest and collaborations in the emerging field of “Spatial Omics” featuring short presentations about current and emerging technologies in molecular biology, “user perspectives” to glean new insights from spatially resolved measurements, and “analytics” talks to fill the analysis gap in the
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Alessandra Eustaquio, PhD University of Illinois Chicago; Assistant Professor, College of Pharmacy "From DNA to natural products via reverse genetics and synthetic biology"
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Bats modify directional aim & timing of sonar calls as they inspect targets and obstacles, & importantly, these inspection behaviors provide a direct readout of their attention to objects. Multichannel recordings from the midbrain superior colliculus and hippocampus of the free-flying bat reveal that neural coding of space is dynamic and modulated by sonar-guided attention
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Chandana Gopalakrishnappa, Graduate Research Assistant, Physics
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Assistant Professor, Department of Developmental Molecular and Chemical Biology
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Mattia Gazzola, PhD University of Illinois; Assistant Professor, Mechanical Science and Engineering "The intelligence of the (soft) body"
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The spatial organization of cells and molecules is closely tied to their functional network. My group develops a multiscale, multimodal imaging platform to study how individual molecules and cells work together to perform systems-level functions. Our platform can be used to study the spatial architecture of brains at high resolution.
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Dr. Megha Gulati, Scientific Editor at Molecular Cell | Cell Press
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"Zeiss Sigma VP 3View - Serial Block Face - SEM, Sample Prep & Applications" Kingsley Boateng, Senior Research Specialist Carl R Woese Institute for Genomic Biology Featured Instrument: Serial Block Face - SEM
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Professor, Department of Internal Medicine and Nutrition
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Stacey Lowery Bretz, professor of chemistry and biochemistry at Miami University, shares how learning in STEM courses requires students to become fluent in the symbolic language of the particular discipline and developing expertise requires moving beyond manipulating symbols to creating explanations using particulate models of matter for observations in the lab.