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February 01, 2010
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Date:10WednesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Majority Dynamics and the Retention of Information
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Omer Tamuz
Organizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact -
Date:11ThursdayJuly 2013Lecture
Antibody mixtures: a novel strategy to target tumor heterogeneity and tumor plasticity
More information Time 14:00 - 14:00Location Max and Lillian Candiotty BuildingLecturer Dr. Ivan D. Horak
Chief Scientific and Medical Officer Symphogen Inc. DenmarkOrganizer Department of Immunology and Regenerative BiologyContact -
Date:14SundayJuly 2013Conference
Optogenetics: from cells to circuits and behavior
More information Time 08:00 - 18:00Location The David Lopatie Conference CentreChairperson Ofer YizharHomepage Contact -
Date:14SundayJuly 2013Lecture
Determinants of hepatitis C virus interspecies tropism
More information Time 12:00 - 12:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Prof. Alexander Ploss
Dept. of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, USAOrganizer Department of Molecular GeneticsContact -
Date:15MondayJuly 201317WednesdayJuly 2013Conference
Molecular Basis of Cancer: The 4th Weizmann-McGill Joint Symposium
More information Time 08:00 - 16:30Location The David Lopatie Conference CentreChairperson Ari ElsonHomepage Contact -
Date:16TuesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Moduli of complex structures and Ratner theory
More information Time 16:00 - 16:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Misha Verbitsky
HSE University of MoscowOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact -
Date:17WednesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Hall algebras and their primitive generators
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Prof. Jacob Greenstein
University of California RiversideOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact -
Date:17WednesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Absence of percolation for critical Bernoulli percolation on planar slabs
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Hugo Duminil-Copin
Organizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact -
Date:17WednesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Unraveling gene promoter and 3’end effects on expression strength and noise using many designed sequences
More information Time 12:00 - 12:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Dr. Eilon Sharon and Dr. David van Dijk
From Eran Segal's labOrganizer Faculty of BiologyHomepage Contact -
Date:17WednesdayJuly 2013Cultural Events
Hatikva
More information Time 20:30 - 20:30Title with Dr. Astrith BaltsanLocation Michael Sela AuditoriumContact -
Date:18ThursdayJuly 2013Cultural Events
Zehava and the Three Bears
More information Time 17:30 - 17:30Title Children TheaterLocation Michael Sela AuditoriumContact -
Date:23TuesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Women in Science 2013 Award Ceremony
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Title Lecture by Prof. Susan Gasser on Shutting down the genome heterochromatin in developmentLocation Dolfi and Lola Ebner AuditoriumHomepage Contact -
Date:23TuesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Determining Form for 2D Navier-Stokes equations
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Rostyslav Kravchenko
The University of ChicagoOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact -
Date:23TuesdayJuly 2013Lecture
"F- Catalytic Rearrangements of Silsesequioxanes (SQs) and Analogs: New Cage Sizes and Unusual Reactive Properties".
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Title Department of Organic Chemistry seminarLocation Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman BuildingLecturer Richard M. Laine
Professor and Director Macromolecular Sci. & Eng. from the University of MichiganOrganizer Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials ScienceContact -
Date:24WednesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Spatial Dynamics of Double strand breaks: roles in DNA repair
More information Time 10:00 - 10:00Location Dolfi and Lola Ebner AuditoriumOrganizer Department of Molecular Cell BiologyHomepage Contact -
Date:24WednesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Hall algebras and their primitive generators
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Prof. Jacob Greenstein
University of California RiversideOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact -
Date:27SaturdayJuly 2013Cultural Events
Laszlo not rest
More information Time 21:30 - 21:30Title Laszlo's new entertainment showLocation Michael Sela AuditoriumContact -
Date:29MondayJuly 2013Cultural Events
Peter Pan
More information Time 17:30 - 17:30Title Children's TheaterLocation Michael Sela AuditoriumContact -
Date:30TuesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Mechanisms of vocal learning in songbirds and humans
More information Time 12:30 - 12:30Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Dr. Dina Lipkind
Department of Psychology Hunter College, City University of New YorkOrganizer Department of Brain SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Abstract: Songbirds are a great model for studying how the b...» Abstract: Songbirds are a great model for studying how the brain solves the challenges of vocal imitation, because, like human infants, young songbirds learn to produce complex vocal sequences that are exact copies of those of adult conspecifics. To study how this feat is accomplished, we experimentally induce birds to perform song learning tasks, by exposing them sequentially to two different songs and recording their entire vocal output during the process. Applying this methodology to vocal combinatorial learning, we trained juvenile zebra finches to swap syllable order in their song, or insert a new syllable into a string. Birds solved these permutation tasks gradually, by a series of steps in which novel pair-wise transitions between syllables were acquired one by one. This effect was confirmed in the development of vocal babbling in human infants, suggesting the existence of a common generative process of acquiring vocal combinatorial ability that is conserved across species.
We next used the same methodology to study the conversion of an auditory memory of a target song into a motor program performing the same song, a long-standing hypothesis in vocal learning. To do this, we induced birds to change both global song structure (syllable order) and its local structure (pitch of individual syllables). We found that birds matched the pitch of syllables to the most acoustically similar target in the tutor song, regardless of global context, resulting in an intermediate-stage song in which the correct syllables were sung in the wrong order. These results refute a sensory-motor learning mechanism where a target song memory is recalled by temporal order, and suggest that instead, parts of the song memory are recalled in a motor driven way, according to their similarity to sung syllables.
Consequently, two distinct mechanisms are required to accomplish the learning of a vocal sequence: 1. Local matching of the acoustic structure of individual units in the sequence; and 2. Global matching of sequence order. Our results present the first experimental evidence of how an internal sensory template is used to guide the development of the motor program for song.
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Date:31WednesdayJuly 2013Lecture
A characterization of amenability and infinite clusters in the social network model.
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location The David Lopatie Hall of Graduate StudiesLecturer Jonathan Hermon
Berkeley UniversityOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact
