A Brief History of the PhD
/As students across the country graduate, let’s take a quick look at the degree that most of us at Neuwrite West either already have or wish to have: the PhD.
Read MoreHome of the Stanford Neuroblog. Scientists writing about science, for a general audience.
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As students across the country graduate, let’s take a quick look at the degree that most of us at Neuwrite West either already have or wish to have: the PhD.
Read MoreThis spring, I supervised three students from the California College of Arts (CCA) who were taking a course called Biological Design. This new course aims to give artists insight into biological structures and evolutionary principles, to provide biologists with new ways of looking at their data, and to "explore the synergies between biology, design and art" according to the course curriculum. One issue I discussed with my students was vaccination, and how it can be challenging for people to decide if vaccination is the right thing for them. If you haven’t suffered from flu for the last few years, why should you race to CVS in September and roll up your sleeve for your shot? Watch the video I made using my students' artwork to explore this qustion.
Read MorePatients suffering from complete anterograde amnesia are (luckily) very scarce, but their condition is very interesting as it helps us understand how memories are formed. As a consequence, these patients tend to become very famous in the scientific world because of the numerous experiments they participate in.
A particularly famous example is Henry Molaison; over the years Henry’s participation in research led to many insights (and new questions) about the processes that underlie the fate of our beloved memories. Because of all the attention Henry receives, in textbooks and classrooms alike, you might think that he was the only amnesiac that affected neuroscientific theories.
This is not true.
The recently deceased Kent Cochrane has meant a lot to memory research as well, because of his own particular amnesia.
Image Source: Medical Art Service, Munich; Wellcome Images
Read MoreThis week on Brains and Bourbon, science journalist Greg Miller talks about the psychological cost of drone warfare, DIY brain stimulation, science journalism, and a lot more! Greg Miller spent 11 years as a reporter for Science magazine and is now a senior writer at WIRED magazine.
This week on Brains and Bourbon, science journalist Greg Miller talks about the psychological cost of drone warfare, DIY brain stimulation, science journalism, and a lot more!
Greg Miller spent 11 years as a reporter for Science magazine and is now a senior writer at WIRED magazine.
You can find Greg's article on the psychological impact of drone warfare here: Drone Wars
You can also find Greg's series on treating mental illness in developing countries here: The Unseen: Mental Illness's Global Toll
And you can read his article about DIY brain stimulation here: Inside the Strange New World of DIY Brain Stimulation.
The drought that afflicted Calfornia this winter was in no way mirrored in the publications authored by members of the Stanford Neurosciences PhD Program.
This Winter/Spring saw 10 PhD students publishing first-author papers (Lief and Joanna, Egle, Kira, Sergio and Corbett, David K, Poh Hui, Mridu and Nathan). They were joined in authorial success by an additional 13 graduate researchers who were 2nd-nth authors (Aslihan, Logan, Kelly, Ivan, Astra, Greg, Izumi, Georgia, Nick Steinmetz, Jake, Tina, Hannah and Mark; not to mention Kira and Poh Hui who also had 2nd-nth author papers).
Witness the majestic variety of neuroscience research being done by the Stanford Neurosciences Graduate Community. The Diesseroth lab makes genetically encoded tools that use Boolean logic. The science partnership of Corbett Bennett and Sergio Arroyo continues with a review article on nicotinic modulation of cortical circuits. Paul Buckmaster's lab publishes a study of epileptic sea lions off the California coast. And so much more...
Continue below for a full list of the articles (complete with links and abstracts).
Read MoreThis week on Brains and Bourbon, we talk with Maral Tajerian about brains and pain, secret experiments, and putting the "science" back in "scientifically accurate video games." Dr. Tajerian is a postdoc in David Clark’s lab here at Stanford, and the co-founder of Thwacke! science media consulting.
This week on Brains and Bourbon, we talk with Maral Tajerian about brains and pain, secret experiments, and putting the "science" back in "scientifically accurate video games."
Dr. Tajerian is a postdoc in David Clark’s lab here at Stanford, and the co-founder of Thwacke! science media consulting.
Brains and Bourbon airs every Wednesday at 1pm on KZSU 90.1FM.
This week on Neurotalk, we chat with Daniel Colón-Ramos about how glia directs synapse formation, how synaptic positions are maintained as the body and brain grows, and how his science networking site Ciencia Puerto Rico has changed science education in Puerto Rico. Dr. Colón-Ramos is an associate professor of cell biology at Yale University, and is the founder of Ciencia Puerto Rico: http://www.cienciapr.org/
This week on Neurotalk, we chat with Daniel Colón-Ramos about how glia directs synapse formation, how synaptic positions are maintained as the body and brain grows, and how his science networking site Ciencia Puerto Rico has changed science education in Puerto Rico.
Dr. Colón-Ramos is an associate professor of cell biology at Yale University.
This is the last Neurotalk of the academic year, and we will return at the end of September. Thanks for listening!
This week on Neurotalk, we chat with Li-Huei Tsai about her transition from cancer research to neuroscience, chromatin remodeling, Alzheimer's disease, and more! Dr. Tsai is a professor of neuroscience and the director of the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory at MIT. Note to listeners: we had a few technical difficulties with the audio quality, so some portions of the interview may be difficult to hear.
In this exciting new episode of Neurotalk, we chat with Li-Huei Tsai about her transition from cancer research to neuroscience, chromatin remodeling, Alzheimer's disease, and more!
Dr. Tsai is a professor of neuroscience and the director of the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory at MIT.
Note to listeners: we had a few technical difficulties with the audio quality, so some portions of the interview may be difficult to hear.
Check out a live event sponsored by NeuWriteWest:
NerdNite Silicon Valley presents: Brain Power!
www.nerdnitesv3.nerdnite.com
The event features 3 awesome speakers talking about Neuroscience in downtown Palo Alto on June 2nd at 7:30pm.
What is the brain's energy budget? Ada Yee discusses three possible ways of assessing how the brain distributes its resources: first, by direct measurement of oxygen flow and glucose uptake; second, by examining what processes the brain sacrifices when energy gets low; and third, by calculation from known simple properties of neurons.
Photo Credit: N. Seery, Wellcome Images
Read MoreHome of NeuWrite West and the Stanford Neuroblog.
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Note: The NeuWrite West team consists of research scientists. Therefore, we can not provide answers to questions of a medical nature; we are not medical doctors.
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