News

Symposium on the 37th Annual Meeting of the Japan Neuroscience Society

13. 09. 2014
Quarter Century after the Direct and Indirect Pathways: Towards Comprehensive Understandings of the Basal Ganglia
Chairs: Atsushi Nambu (Division of System Neurophysiology National Institute for Physiological Sciences), Fumino Fujiyama (Laboratory of Neural Circuitry, Graduate School of Brain Science, Doshisha University)

Cell type-specific plasticity of striatal projection neurons in parkinsonism and L-DOPA-induced dyskinesia
Dalton James Surmeier, Jr. ( Department of Physiology, Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, USA)

Anatomical aspect of the basal ganglia circuitry, in relation to cortical projection
Fuyuki Karube, Fumino Fujiyama (Graduate School of Brain Science, Doshisha University, Kyoto, Japan / CREST, JST, Tokyo, Japan)

Motor and reward information in direct and indirect pathway neurons
Yoshikazu Isomura (Tamagawa University, Japan / JST CREST, Tokyo, Japan)

What does dopamine tell striatal neurons through D1 and D2 receptors?
Satomi Chiken (Div Syst Neurophysiol, Natl Inst Physiol Sci, and Grad Univ Adv Studies, Okazaki, Japan)

Neuro-computational modeling of synaptic plasticity in multiple basal ganglia pathways
Fred Hamker (Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany / Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience, Germany), Javier Baladron Pezoa (Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany), Henning Schroll (Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany / Neurology, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany / Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience, Germany)

Workshop: A Quarter Century after the Direct and Indirect Pathways Model of the Basal Ganglia and Beyond

10. 09. 2014
Members of the workshop As part of the German - Japanese Collaboration in Computational Neuroscience an International Workshop on "A Quarter Century after the Direct and Indirect Pathways Model of the Basal Ganglia and Beyond" took place at the National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Okazaki, JAPAN from September 7th (Sunday) - 9th (Tuesday), 2014.

Funktionsstörungen des Gehirns auf der Spur

Professur Künstliche Intelligenz der TU Chemnitz erforscht gemeinsam mit Partnern aus Berlin und Japan die Verschaltungen in den Basalganglien des Gehirns
(Pressemeldung der TU Chemnitz vom 2. 7. 2013)